Interesting discussion here:
A lot of this is devoted to why the prevalence of randomness makes it important to limit our hubris about predictions from our social science and long-term forecasting models of inherently random events. It's important background information when we discuss COVID protocols, long term economic forecasting, and how much leniency to give experts on certain subjects, all things we've discussed a lot here.
But it also touches on the fundamental randomness that determines so much in our own lives. We bombed Hiroshima, instead of Kyoto, with the first A-bomb because a couple took a vacation to Kyoto in the '20s and fell in love with the city. The husband ended up being our Sec. of War overseeing the Targeting Committee for the bomb, and convinced the administration to bypass Kyoto.
I thought it would be interesting for posters to describe how randomness might have affected their own lives, too. For me, the first thing that comes to mind is this: freshman year at IU I had a seminar where we read the Great Books. It was one of my favorite classes in college. I became friends with a pretty blonde girl from Texas. She was unlike any other girl I had ever met--she had 22 credits already from AP courses (my high school didn't even have one) and had her life planned out--graduate IU in 3 years, go to law school at Univ. of Texas, and then on to DC to work for a Senator and into politics. I asked her why UT, and not Harvard, if she was shooting so high? She said UT had just as good a faculty, was much cheaper, and a better base for political work in Texas. Wow, OK. Fast forward 3 years, and I decided to go to law school and applied to UT because of her. Never would have considered it if she hadn't talked it up so much. And so I move to Austin, lived in Texas for 6 years, met my eventual wife there, have many of my best friends still there, etc. My entire life would, no doubt, be different had I not randomly had this class with this girl (and she wasn't as pretty or as cool as she was).
How has randomness affected your life?
If Life Is Random, Is It Meaningless? (with Brian Klaas) - Econlib
How did a husband-and-wife vacation end up saving a city from the atomic bomb while destroying another? And how did a century-old murder of one family bring another into existence? Easily, explains political scientist Brian Klaas of University College London, who points out that history is...
www.econtalk.org
A lot of this is devoted to why the prevalence of randomness makes it important to limit our hubris about predictions from our social science and long-term forecasting models of inherently random events. It's important background information when we discuss COVID protocols, long term economic forecasting, and how much leniency to give experts on certain subjects, all things we've discussed a lot here.
But it also touches on the fundamental randomness that determines so much in our own lives. We bombed Hiroshima, instead of Kyoto, with the first A-bomb because a couple took a vacation to Kyoto in the '20s and fell in love with the city. The husband ended up being our Sec. of War overseeing the Targeting Committee for the bomb, and convinced the administration to bypass Kyoto.
I thought it would be interesting for posters to describe how randomness might have affected their own lives, too. For me, the first thing that comes to mind is this: freshman year at IU I had a seminar where we read the Great Books. It was one of my favorite classes in college. I became friends with a pretty blonde girl from Texas. She was unlike any other girl I had ever met--she had 22 credits already from AP courses (my high school didn't even have one) and had her life planned out--graduate IU in 3 years, go to law school at Univ. of Texas, and then on to DC to work for a Senator and into politics. I asked her why UT, and not Harvard, if she was shooting so high? She said UT had just as good a faculty, was much cheaper, and a better base for political work in Texas. Wow, OK. Fast forward 3 years, and I decided to go to law school and applied to UT because of her. Never would have considered it if she hadn't talked it up so much. And so I move to Austin, lived in Texas for 6 years, met my eventual wife there, have many of my best friends still there, etc. My entire life would, no doubt, be different had I not randomly had this class with this girl (and she wasn't as pretty or as cool as she was).
How has randomness affected your life?