You Know Nothing! Living in an Era of Noise

Antony Riley
4 min readJan 2, 2020

Never in human history have we had access to so much reliable data. So why do we keep getting things so wrong? We live in an era of data overload, we have never had access to so much so fast. How do we make sense of it all? I can’t see the facts for all the data …

NASA, 1986:
A keen bongo player sits alongside a veteran of the Korean War to face the world’s press. Why?

Feynman & Armstrong

Richard was a mean bongo player, but he was also a Nobel award-winning physicist. Meanwhile, Neil earned his student pilot’s license at sixteen years old and flew for the US Navy during the Korean war, but he was also the first man on the Moon. So what were they doing facing the press?

A fact-finding mission

Richard Feynman and Neil Armstrong were asked to join the Rogers Commission to investigate the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. The question? Just what went wrong? What connects these two men is the unerring pursuit of fact.

Despite the politics of NASA, ultimately the facts came out. After close examination of all the data, it was recognized that a design fault had caused two small rubber sealant rings to burn through. 73 seconds after liftoff the space shuttle was engulfed in flames, as a result, the rocket broke up and, tragically, seven astronauts lost their lives.

The facts were, as they say, ‘hidden in plain sight’. Sometimes seeing through all the big data, in this case, more than 5000 physical pieces of broken shuttle and rocket, in addition to the noise of politics, to join the dots of data and find the relevant facts takes a moonwalker and a quantum physicist. Sometimes it just takes an insanely curious mind with a passion for education, world health and clarity of thought.

“Stay open to new data and be prepared to keep freshening up your knowledge.” ― Hans Rosling

A fact-based world view — Making sense of it all

It’s 2006 and a new kind of conference is gathering admirers.

TED in Monterrey, California was for the best technologists, entertainers and designers. Attendees were paying thousands of dollars to attend. That year an energetic, impish Swede, took to the stage. He wasn’t an entertainer, but he sure was entertaining as he both illuminated and embarrassed his audience by exposing their ignorance of basic facts.

Hans Rosling, a world health expert and specialist in statistics, made facts sing.

He cleared the room of the noise of data and of the misinterpretation of facts. The audience was changed, to date that presentation has been viewed online over 13 million times.

20 years ago 29% of the world lived in extreme poverty, now it’s 9%

Factfullness ― Hans, Ola and Anna Rosling

Does your mindset correspond to my dataset?

Rosling made it his life’s mission to battle ignorance with facts. From Monterrey, he soon went to the boardrooms of multinational corporations such as CocaCola and Ikea, to global banks and hedge funds. He was demonstrating that so many of us were operating from a distorted worldview. He showed that our mindsets didn’t correspond with his datasets — that we simply weren’t thinking based on facts.

Even our closely held concept of two worlds, one developing and one developed, is completely out of date — not based on current data. Rosling showed that there existed, in fact, four key global income groups. He would question, are we not all developing? Is Singapore, for example, developing or developed? Developing according to the UN, not so said Rosling.

What you think you know, is wrong — upgrade to be better

More people die today from eating too much than from eating too little; more people die from old age than from infectious diseases; and more people commit suicide than are killed by soldiers, terrorists and criminals combined.

Homo Deus ― Yuval Noah Harari

The facts give us a clearer picture of what is truly happening all around us. There is more data available to us and it's moving faster about us than ever before. How can we act if we are operating from a basis of facts and data that are fundamentally out of time or context? Trying to understand so much data and information on which to base our facts leaves us asking ourselves what kind of place and time is this? Confused?

Ultimately, we must squeeze the smart data from the big data to grasp that which is truly relevant. Only then can we make decisions based on hard facts and act with true purpose.

Originally published at https://www.bisnode.com.

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Antony Riley

Pen for hire. I write for myself, for money and more. Based in Stockholm, I connect one thought to another and attempt to draw conclusions. www.antonyriley.com