Arthur Pringle stood on the edge of the Liverpool docks in , watching the way the seagulls huddled against the iron railings of the customs house. He was a junior clerk for a coal conglomerate, a man whose job was to reconcile ledgers, yet he found himself distracted by the specific, heavy gray of the horizon.
He had tried to tell his supervisor, a man who lived and died by the previous quarter’s ledger, that the winter would be brutal and early. The supervisor pointed to the shipping manifests from and , which showed a steady, late-December uptick. He ordered the standard replenishment.
Arthur, however, had seen the way the old men in the pub were layering their waistcoats and how the price of tallow was creeping up in the back alleys. When the frost hit three weeks early, the coal yards were empty, the ledgers were technically “optimized” based on history, and half the city went cold because a system was deaf to the atmosphere.
Trading Seagulls for Algorithms
We live in a world that has traded Arthur’s seagulls for sophisticated algorithms, yet the fundamental error remains identical. We have replaced the “gut feeling”
