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The Wisdom of Crowds

Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations

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The Wisdom of Crowds

By: James Surowiecki
Narrated by: Grover Gardner
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About this listen

In this endlessly fascinating book, New Yorker columnist James Surowiecki explores a deceptively simple idea that has profound implications: large groups of people are smarter than an elite few, no matter how brilliant. Groups are better at solving problems, fostering innovation, coming to wise decisions, even predicting the future.

This seemingly counterintuitive notion has endless and major ramifications for how businesses operate, how knowledge is advanced, how economies are (or should be) organized, and how we live our daily lives. With seemingly boundless erudition and in delightfully clear prose, Surowiecki ranges across fields as diverse as popular culture, psychology, economic behaviorism, artificial intelligence, military history, and political theory to show just how this principle operates in the real world.

Despite the sophistication of his arguments, Surowiecki presents them in a wonderfully entertaining manner. The examples he uses are all down-to-earth, surprising, and fun to ponder. Why is the line in which you're standing always the longest? Why is it that you can buy a screw anywhere in the world and it will fit a bolt bought ten-thousand miles away? Why is network television so awful? If you had to meet someone in Paris on a specific day but had no way of contacting them, when and where would you meet? Why are there traffic jams? What's the best way to win money on a game show? Why, when you walk into a convenience store at 2:00 A.M. to buy a quart of orange juice, is it there waiting for you? What do Hollywood mafia movies have to teach us about why corporations exist?

The Wisdom of Crowds is a brilliant but accessible biography of an idea, one with important lessons for how we live our lives, select our leaders, conduct our business, and think about our world.

©2004 James Surowiecki (P)2004 Books on Tape
Consumer Behavior & Market Research Organisational Behavior Social Psychology & Interactions Sociology
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Critic reviews

"Surowiecki's style is pleasantly informal, a tactical disguise for what might otherwise be rather dense material. He offers a great introduction to applied behavioral economics and game theory." ( Publishers Weekly)
"The author has a knack for translating the most algebraic of research papers into bright expository prose..." ( The New York Times Book Review)

What listeners say about The Wisdom of Crowds

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Classic anti-elitism tract

Classic work on The Wisdom of Crowds, well read by the gravelly Grover Gardner and an optimistic counterweight to the more fashionable Madness of Crowds books, inspired by new-fangled behavioural economics, in turn inspired by Freud. More work needed on the value of asking the crowds though.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

Great book -- terrible audio quality

This is an excellent book but is let down by the very poor quality of the audio. I downloaded in a high quality format but both parts of the book sounded like old AM radio. A great pity

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2 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

All of us are smarter than any of us

Some readers seem to feel that Surowiecki stretches this idea further than it really deserves thus leading to some repetition or padding. It didn't feel that way to me. Using genuinely interesting examples the author makes a case for how and why the wisdom of crowds works before going on to clarify the conditions that differentiate this approach from a simple matter of asking a bunch of people what they think and averaging the results. In addition to being just long enough it's also well narrated although the production standards are poor; hence the dropped star. Ten minutes in I no longer noticed the slightly muffled delivery.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Interesting, but not quite as engaging as expected

The subject matter for me, was interesting, but the delivery was slightly dry and the primary point that groups of people, thinking independently are collectively much better than small numbers is good. However, the narrative could have been more engaging, and it could do with an update given recent political change.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

Interesting book

I thought that this was an interesting book, and that it was worth listening to.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars

Shoot the messenger

This book takes an awfully long time to unpack a very simple idea - interesting, persuasive but excessively laboured and wordy. The worst part though is the choice of narrator. Grover Gardner is just plain unbearable, quacking away in a style that destroys the material. Shoot the messanger. Please!

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4 people found this helpful