英语复习话题阅读素材28:doc全文下载 href="/Upload/UploadFiles//coach_UploadFiles_8112/201311/2013112810283368.doc">高考英语复习话题阅读素材28:doc全文下载
高考英语复习话题阅读素材28
The Art of Smart Guessing
Several days ago, interviewing job candidates, I grew tired of asking "What experience do you have?" I decided on a quiz to find out how resourceful a thinker the new hire might be. Here it is: You are on a yacht sailing the
Before reading on, try to solve this yourself -- paying special attention to how you might solve it. Did you make a completely wild guess because "there wasn't enough information?" Did you get too bogged down in the details trying to come up with the "exactly right" answer? Or did you zero in on the two most important problems -- how deep is the Mariana Trench and how fast might a cannonball fall through the water? Most of my candidates simply made a wild guess. Rarely was someone willing to risk an approximation.
What does this have to do with business or creativity? A great deal. In the real world, we frequently need to make decisions when the full information does not exist. A problem that doesn't contain all the information deeded to solve it is called a Fermi problem, named after Nobel Prize-winning physicist Enrico Fermi.
Fermi once asked is students how many piano tuners there were in
Why was guesswork so accurate? The law of averages is partly responsible. At any point, your assumptions may be too high or too low. But because of the law of averages, your mistakes will frequently balance out.
By the way, the Mariana Trench is about six nautical miles deep, and a cannonball drops at a rate of ten feet per second. So it took the cannonball about an hour to reach the bottom. Could this be guess? If you know Earth's highest point Mount Everest, is 29,000 feet, you might reasonably conclude that its lowest point would be close to the same distance. Then you might imagine that a heavy object would take one second to fall through the water of a 10-foot-deep swimming pool. These estimates would bring you close enough to the correct answer.