Reddit reviews Super Freakonomics: Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes, and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance
We found 8 Reddit comments about Super Freakonomics: Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes, and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
William Morrow Company
I've looked at this a lot and am convinced that the Crisis was invented by Stephen Davies in Sep 2004 to argue against industry regulation [1]. Yes, manure was an issue, but no crisis of 1894, no 1898 urban planning conference, and no Times prediction about manure in the streets.
In addition to the alleged Times quote, the article claims the worlds first international conference on urban planning was held in 1898, was scheduled for 10 days, but broke up after 3 due to being stymied by the problem of manure. Several red flags mostly regarding the conference. Conferences have names, dates, and most importantly proceedings, but Davies does not supply or cite any.
Multiple sources list America’s first urban planning conference as the First National Conference on City Planning, held May 21-22, 1909, in Washington, DC. [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8]. Proceedings can be found online (URL: https://archive.org/details/proceedingsoffir00nati) [9]. The proceedings do not mention an 1898 conference, nor discuss manure as a problem.
Britain’s first urban planning conference was the Town Planning Conference, held October 10-15, 1910, in London [6, 7]. Transactions can be found online (URL: https://archive.org/details/transactions00town) [10]. The transactions do not mention an 1898 conference, nor do they discuss manure as a problem.
Searches with dates set prior to Sep 2004 result in no reference to the 1894 crisis or to the 1898 conference. (Note: there are some pages published prior to 2004 with comments added after Sep 2004). Similarly, no references to a Times quote about streets buried in manure can be found online prior to Sep 2004. The quote has no citation, no date, and no author. I doubt the quote was ever published in the Times or anywhere else.
If anyone can provide a credible reference to the conference name, dates, location, or proceedings please post and I would be happy to admit my error.
This story has been retold countless times, largely due to the attention it received from Eric Morris [12] and then Stephen D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner [13]. It has a life of its own. I've left comments at the HistoricUK link you listed, but that is actually a tourist site, not an historical site. There does not appear to be any way to contact the authors or editors.
The references at the fee.org article [1] and [11] below may have solid information of use to your writing.
References:
https://fee.org/.../the-great-horse-manure-crisis-of-1894/
https://www.britannica.com/.../The-era-of-industrialization
https://archive.org/details/proceedingsoffir00nati
https://archive.org/details/transactions00town
(Mods: My first post -- hope I did ok!)
They're writing another book
SuperFreakonomics is only 12 bucks on Amazon. The first book is only about 9 bucks. I enjoyed the first but haven't read the second.
A bit longer, but all are solid suggestions, and although I could add two dozen more, I'm sure others will take up the cause.
God is Not Great, by Christopher Hitchens
Superfreakonomics.
Go with what ya know.
What good is it to someone who wants to learn to simply here "random; innate; no lessons here"? Read Chapter 2 to learn how much the effect of "natural" game is overstated in all walks of life.
Seconded on Freakonomics... also a recomendation on the sequel Superfreakonomics. It's even better than the first one.
The second book was very good.