Cultures of Prediction

How Engineering and Science Evolve with Mathematical Tools

Published May 7, 2024 by The MIT Press.

ISBN:
978-0-262-54823-6
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The ability to make reliable predictions based on robust and replicable methods is a defining feature of the scientific endeavor, allowing engineers to determine whether a building will stand up or where a cannonball will strike. Cultures of Prediction, which bridges history and philosophy, uncovers the dynamic history of prediction in science and engineering over four centuries. Ann Johnson and Johannes Lenhard identify four different cultures, or modes, of prediction in the history of science and engineering: rational, empirical, iterative-numerical, and exploratory-iterative. They show how all four develop together and interact with one another while emphasizing that mathematization is not a single unitary process but one that has taken many forms.

The story is not one of the triumph of abstract mathematics or technology but of how different modes of prediction, complementary concepts of mathematization, and technology coevolved, building what the authors call “cultures of prediction.” The first part …

2 editions

A Centuries-Spanning, Disjointed History

This book provides a number of case studies of different approaches to prediction across engineering and science, showing how the theoretical and practical interact to form different cultures. The cases here are fairly disjointed, with little connective tissue between them until the final (excellent) chapter. The chapter on Bayesian statistics is by far the best here, and the conclusion is also can't miss (with great reflections on modern machine learning techniques)

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