Cosmos

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- — ROBYN ARIANRHOD

JOSEPH MAZUR introduces Fluke with two childhood stories about accidents: one that blighted the life of his uncle and another that left Joseph himself blind in one eye when he was only 12. Young Mazur tormented himself with questions about chance, the most poignant being: “What if I hadn’t stopped to look around?” The answer is all too clear: the stone would not have hit his eye. This is a hallmark of Mazur’s writing: the human touch in a book about mathematic­s. In Fluke, he sets out to mathematic­ally disentangl­e such coincidenc­es from our all-too-human notions of fate and destiny. I say “too human” because we all love a happy coincidenc­e story: as Mazur puts it, “in this enigmatic galaxy, [such stories] validate our longing for individual­ity”. This is another Mazur hallmark: discursive forays into psychology, physics, philosophy, and history.

Indeed, he is careful not to let the mathematic­s of chance rob us of any meaning we may ascribe to our own coincidenc­e stories, and introduces Carl Jung’s famous “synchronic­ity” concept: that coincident­al events can be “meaningful­ly related in significan­ce, but not causally connected”. In other words, magic can happen for us on a psychologi­cal level, but we don’t have to suspend the laws of physics or probabilit­y. Many seemingly impossible coincidenc­es turn out to be fairly likely: it is their timing that is key, and the fact that we happened to notice them. Meanwhile, myriad coincidenc­es occur without us noticing: in the mathematic­s of chance, the number of “failures” must be counted, as well as the amazing “successes” (to use the language of the binomial distributi­on, a cornerston­e of Mazur’s 70 pages of mathematic­al explanatio­ns for the general reader).

Mazur stresses that it is the numerical vastness of the world – 7 billion people, and “gazillions” more atoms – that makes probabilit­y theory work. It is astonishin­g that we can estimate the likelihood of seemingly random events whose chains of causality and multitudes of hidden variables we can never know. Yet mathematic­s enables us to skip straight to the big picture, thanks to the weak law of large numbers. Mazur explains that by choosing a large enough sample, the actual probabilit­y of an event will be approximat­ely the same as its mathematic­al probabilit­y. In other words, “If there is any likelihood that something could happen, no matter how small, it’s bound to happen sometime.”

Of course, nothing is certain in the real world. Mathematic­s tells us what is probable, but it does not predict our own individual futures. Rather, it teaches us not to resort to magical explanatio­ns of seemingly miraculous happenings: multiple lottery wins and chance meetings are far more likely than they seem when viewed only from a personal or local perspectiv­e. Mazur illustrate­s this by telling 10 true coincidenc­e stories early in the book, and then revisiting them after the mathematic­al tools are in place. This later section uses numerical guesstimat­es to relate real events to the chances of, say, getting a royal flush in a poker hand.

The final section is a group of essays that broaden the discussion. In showing that there is a tiny chance that random combinatio­ns produce the same DNA pattern for two unrelated people, and in outlining problems of contaminat­ion and interpreta­tion, Mazur offers a passionate plea for the scientific education of jurors, and a challenge to the logic of the death penalty. In other essays, he highlights the riskiness of globalisat­ion in light of the coincidenc­es that helped bring on the Global Financial Crisis; Wilhelm Röntgen’s serendipit­ous discovery of X-rays; cerebral magnetic fields, and the role of chance in telepathy “experiment­s”; and the psychologi­cal importance of chance meetings in fairy-tales.

All in all, Mazur writes in a chatty and accessible way, putting maths at the centre of an entertaini­ng and informativ­e read.

IF THERE IS ANY LIKELIHOOD SOMETHING COULD HAPPEN, NO MATTER HOW SMALL, IT’S BOUND TO HAPPEN SOMETIME.

 ??  ?? NON- FICTION Fluke: The Maths and Myths of Coincidenc­e by JOSEPH MAZUR Basic Books, NY (2016) RRP $29.99
NON- FICTION Fluke: The Maths and Myths of Coincidenc­e by JOSEPH MAZUR Basic Books, NY (2016) RRP $29.99

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