From the author of Zero, comes this "admirable salvo against
quantitative bamboozlement by the media and the government" (The Boston
Globe)
In Zero, Charles Seife presented readers with a thrilling account of
the strangest number known to humankind. Now he shows readers how the
power of skewed metrics-or "proofiness"- is being used to alter
perception in both amusing and dangerous ways. Proofiness is behind such
bizarre stories as a mathematical formula for the perfect butt and
sprinters who can run faster than the speed of sound. But proofiness
also has a dark side: bogus mathematical formulas used to undermine our
democracy-subverting our justice system, fixing elections, and swaying
public opinion with lies. By doing the real math, Seife elegantly and
good-humoredly scrutinizes our growing obsession with metrics while
exposing those who misuse them.