670 Episoder

  1. Covid climb, childcare costs and why can’t the French count properly?

    Publisert: 29.6.2022
  2. Ed Sheeran and the mathematics of musical coincidences

    Publisert: 25.6.2022
  3. Rail strikes, tyre pollution and sex statistics

    Publisert: 22.6.2022
  4. How often do people have sex?

    Publisert: 18.6.2022
  5. Maternity litigation, stars, bees and windowless planes

    Publisert: 15.6.2022
  6. Hannah Fry: Understanding the numbers of cancer

    Publisert: 11.6.2022
  7. Employment puzzle, pyramids and triplets

    Publisert: 8.6.2022
  8. Are girls starting puberty earlier?

    Publisert: 4.6.2022
  9. Jubilee costs, fuel poverty and imperial measures

    Publisert: 1.6.2022
  10. Noisy Decisions

    Publisert: 28.5.2022
  11. Germany’s excess deaths, Eurovision and teacher shortages

    Publisert: 25.5.2022
  12. Are just 100 companies responsible for 71% of global emissions and how stressed are South Africans?

    Publisert: 21.5.2022
  13. Did the WHO get some of its excess death estimates wrong?

    Publisert: 14.5.2022
  14. Have the oceans become 30% more acidic?

    Publisert: 7.5.2022
  15. Sweden’s polarising pandemic response

    Publisert: 30.4.2022
  16. Understanding India through Data

    Publisert: 23.4.2022
  17. Subitising and simplifying: how to better explain numbers

    Publisert: 15.4.2022
  18. Did tea-drinking cut deaths in the Industrial Revolution?

    Publisert: 9.4.2022
  19. Will the war in Ukraine cause a global wheat shortage?

    Publisert: 2.4.2022
  20. Pizza and Nuclear War

    Publisert: 20.3.2022

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Tim Harford explains - and sometimes debunks - the numbers and statistics used in political debate, the news and everyday life

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