The Guardian reviews Freakonomics (and Levitt's ego): Allen Lane writes:
In  the summer of 2003 the New York Times sent the journalist Stephen J Dubner to  interview the heralded maverick economist Steven D Levitt. What were the chances  of two men with extraneous initials being attracted to one another? Higher than  you might think. Levitt recognised in Dubner a man with a gift for hagiography,  while Dubner knew a meal ticket when he saw it...
If morality is the way we would like the world to work, then economics is how it  actually does work. Freakonomics works on a number of premises. 1) Incentives  are the cornerstone of modern life. 2) Conventional wisdom is often wrong. 3)  Experts use their informational advantage to serve their own agenda. 4) Readers'  gullibility should never be underestimated...
Levitt is  a noetic butterfly that no one has pinned down, but is claimed by all.
What do schoolteachers and sumo wrestlers have in common? They all cheat. I know  this will come as a terrible shock but dreary data proves it is true.
Levitt is one of the most caring men in the universe.
Why do so many drug dealers live with their mom? Amazingly, I can prove that  most of them earn far less than you might imagine.
Levitt is genial, low-key and unflappable...
Levitt is about to revolutionise our understanding of black culture. Even for  Levitt this is new turf.
Black parents often give their children different names. A boy called Deshawn is  less likely to get a job interview than someone called Steven. Maybe Deshawn  should change his name.
The digested read ... digested:
What is the probability that a collection of often trivial and obvious data will  be passed off as brilliance? Regrettably high.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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