I'm typically in my most tangential state when I'm in the midst of reading a good book, so bear with me for a little while here.
My seemingly never-ending quest for slivers of clarity about the future has me finally reading Nate Silver's excellent "The Signal and the Noise" from 2012. It's a complex book, but it boils down to a simple idea: Information is great, but simply having it doesn't make you smart. In fact, it can make you dangerously dumb. Silver made his name primarily from political forecasting (FiveThirtyEight), but the book spans a lot of different topics.
In a whole bunch of fields, figuring out what information is useful and relevant (the signal) and what is distracting and irrelevant (the noise) is critical. Separating out the two is the key to making good forecasts and predictions.
We live in an increasingly noisy world on multiple levels, and that has only increased (exponentially, one would imagine) since the book was published five years ago.
We are overwhelmed by data (not to be confused with information) constantly, across multiple platforms. When you are bombarded from all angles, it becomes that much more difficult — but that much more important — to determine what is useful and what isn't.
(As an aside, I've been fascinated since reading last week about a lab in south Minneapolis known as "the quietest place on Earth." The space, which was originally used primarily for product testing, is now also being used to "reset" brains overwhelmed by the literal and figurative noise around us).
With that as a preamble, you all probably read the headline and are now wondering: What does any of this have to do with the Timberwolves?
So here it is: Any offseason is filled with a lot of new information, and this one for the Timberwolves was particularly packed. They made a huge trade for Jimmy Butler. They dumped Ricky Rubio. They signed veteran free agents.