Everyone Says: How We Mistake Confidence for Consensus explores how familiar phrases such as “everyone knows,” “most people think,” “everyone feels this way,” and “everyone I know” quietly shape decisions, influence perception, and close conversations before important questions have been asked.
Drawing on the habits of statistical thinking—attention to uncertainty, variation, scale, and comparison—the book shows how confidence can be mistaken for agreement and how repetition can begin to sound like evidence. Rather than teaching statistics or presenting formal models, it offers readers a different way of listening: one that asks simple but powerful questions such as How many? Compared to what? Who is included?
Each chapter begins with a familiar phrase and places it in a real-world setting, including universities, youth sports, healthcare, organizations, media environments, elections, and everyday conversations. Through short, story-driven chapters, the book reveals why these statements feel persuasive, how they gain authority, and what can be lost when assumed consensus takes the place of careful thinking.
At its heart, Everyone Says is an invitation to slow down, look more closely, and recognize the difference between confidence and consensus before decisions become settled too quickly.
Everyone Says...How We Mistake Confidence for Consensus explores how familiar phrases such as “everyone knows,” “most people think,” “everyone feels this way,” and “everyone I know” quietly shape decisions, influence perception, and close conversations before important questions have been asked.
Drawing on the habits of statistical thinking—attention to uncertainty, variation, scale, and comparison—the book shows how confidence can be mistaken for agreement and how repetition can begin to sound like evidence. Rather than teaching statistics or presenting formal models, it offers readers a different way of listening: one that asks simple but powerful questions such as How many? Compared to what? Who is included?
Each chapter begins with a familiar phrase and places it in a real-world setting, including universities, youth sports, healthcare, organizations, media environments, elections, and everyday conversations. Through short, story-driven chapters, the book reveals why these statements feel persuasive, how they gain authority, and what can be lost when assumed consensus takes the place of careful thinking.
At its heart, Everyone Says... is an invitation to slow down, look more closely, and recognize the difference between confidence and consensus before decisions become settled too quickly.
Jeffrey R. Wilson
language and decision-making uncertainty statistics and society institutional behavior social perception popular science cross-cultural communication False consensus