“Whassup With Why We Sleep?”, 2019-12-26 (; backlinks; similar):
Last month we reported on the book Why We Sleep, which had been dismantled in a long and detailed blog post by Alexey Guzey. A week later I looked again, and Walker had not responded to Guzey in any way. In the meantime, Why We Sleep has also been endorsed by O.G. software entrepreneur Bill Gates. Programmers typically have lots of personal experience of sleep deprivation, so this is a topic close to their hearts.
As of this writing, it seems that Walker still has not responded to most of the points Guzey made about errors in his book. The closest thing I can find is this post dated 2019-12-19, titled “Why We Sleep: Responses to questions from readers.” The post is on a site called On Sleep that appears to have been recently set up—I say this because I see no internet record of it, and it currently has just this one post. I’m not trying to be some sort of sleuth here, I’m just trying to figure out what’s going on. For now, I’ll assume that this post is written by Walker.
The post begins:
The aim of the book, Why We Sleep, is to provide the general public access to a broad collection of sleep research. Below, I address thoughtful questions that have been raised regarding the book and its content in reviews, online forums and direct emails that I have received. Related, I very much appreciate being made aware of any errors in the book requiring revision. I see this as a key part of good scholarship. Necessary corrections will be made in future editions.
The first link above goes to a page of newspaper and magazine reviews, and the second link goes to Guzey’s post. I didn’t really see any questions raised regarding the book in those newspaper and magazine reviews, so I’m guessing that the “thoughtful questions” that Walker is referring to are coming entirely, or nearly entirely, from Guzey. It seems odd for Walker to cite “online forums” and only link to one of them. Also, although Walker links to Guzey, he does not address the specific criticisms Guzey made of his book.
…Based on his book and his Ted talk, it seems that Walker has a message to send, and he doesn’t care much about the details. He’s sloppy with sourcing, gets a lot wrong, and has not responded well to criticism.
But this does not mean we should necessarily dismiss his message. Ultimately his claims need to be addressed on their merits.