The Half-life of Facts: Why Everything We Know Has an Expiration Date
Samuel Arbesman (Author)
New insights from the science of science
Facts
change all the time. Smoking has gone from doctor recommended to
deadly. We used to think the Earth was the center of the universe and
that Pluto was a planet. For decades, we were convinced that the
brontosaurus was a real dinosaur. In short, what we know about the world
is constantly changing.
But it turns out there’s
an order to the state of knowledge, an explanation for how we know what
we know. Samuel Arbesman is an expert in the field of
scientometrics—literally the science of science. Knowledge in most
fields evolves systematically and predictably, and this evolution
unfolds in a fascinating way that can have a powerful impact on our
lives.
Doctors with a rough idea of when their
knowledge is likely to expire can be better equipped to keep up with
the latest research. Companies and governments that understand how long
new discoveries take to develop can improve decisions about allocating
resources. And by tracing how and when language changes, each of us can
better bridge generational gaps in slang and dialect.
Just
as we know that a chunk of uranium can break down in a measurable
amount of time—a radioactive half-life—so too any given field’s change
in knowledge can be measured concretely. We can know when facts in
aggregate are obsolete, the rate at which new facts are created, and
even how facts spread.
Arbesman takes us through a
wide variety of fields, including those that change quickly, over the
course of a few years, or over the span of centuries. He shows that much
of what we know consists of “mesofacts”—facts that change at a middle
timescale, often over a single human lifetime. Throughout, he offers
intriguing examples about the face of knowledge: what English majors can
learn from a statistical analysis of The Canterbury Tales, why
it’s so hard to measure a mountain, and why so many parents still tell
kids to eat their spinach because it’s rich in iron.
The Half-life of Facts
is a riveting journey into the counterintuitive fabric of knowledge. It
can help us find new ways to measure the world while accepting the
limits of how much we can know with certainty.
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