Anuva Wine Party, Powers of Ten, and Significant Figures (Digits)

Sometimes you just have to go back to the basics. Friends, food, wine.

So we invited over some people, pulled out some of our wines and had a relaxing and lovely evening. One of the greatest things about wine is its ability to be talked about and at the same time talked over.

To illustrate: the evening began with many questions about our wines and our wine club (like what is Don Juan? How did Anuva start? What does the word Anuva mean? etc.) and then progressed into a conversation over many different things, the most notable of which, in my mind, is powers of ten.

Most of you I’m sure know that powers of a number, mathematically, indicate that that number is multiplied with itself the number of times of the power. For example 10^4=10×10x10×10, or 7^3=7×7x7. The importance here is that when talking of powers of 10, once passing 2 powers of 10 or so, a human’s ability to really comprehend how big those numbers are loses touch with reality. (To exemplify this, try laying out 10 paperclips (10^1), then 100 (10^2), then 1000 (10^3). It’s very easy to write the number 10^3 but much less easy to really grasp how much that number really means).

This subject came up in relation to Alan Greenspan’s book The Age of Turbulence. In the book, Greenspan talks about how he was happy to learn that the U.S. Government used the same notation on their financial documents as the big companies that he worked for in his private consulting business. On these documents, when a figure listed as “$0.1″, this was to indicate $100,000,000. The reason for this is simply to save paper. Writing all those zeros takes up a lot of room and also.

But more importantly, this indicates, in my mind, a very big problem with how people like Greenspan, and other central bankers, view as significant figures (definition here). If people like him use 0.1 to denote 100 Million, and then 0.01 to denote 10 Million, etc., they are completely out of touch with reality. What I mean by out of touch with reality, is that since 0.1=100 Million Dollars, and 1.0= 1 Billion Dollars, and since the vast majority of the figures they are going to be dealing with would look something like “10.4″, or “16.75″, or “1.245″ at the most, this means that they do not care about anything in the 100’s of thousands of dollars (and perhaps in the Millions as well since I don’t know if they carry their figures to 3 decimal places).

As we drank our wine, we pondered what it would be like to have 100’s of thousands of dollars not be important on the financial documents of the people making the most important financial decisions in the world. I do understand, of course, that the 100’s of Billions of dollars that they deal with are much more important than the 100’s of thousands that I deal with , but I can’t help but think how much the way they simply write the numbers could affect their thinking. $100,000 could feed a lot of people, buy a lot of books or clothes, or provide other forms of care for people in need.

This is where wine took us last night.

wine drinking

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Wonderful Tasting Last Night

Last night, about 14 people attended an Anuva wine tasting and sampled Hom, Anecon, Uruco, Cavagnaro and Don Juan. We are very pleased to say that many of them are now members. It never ceases to amaze me how many people like all of our wines for different reasons:

Full bodied Reserves

Fruit forward Malbecs

Exclusive, hard to find wines

Unique varietals

Velvety wines

Easy to drink wines

These were the top reasons I heard last night. It also never ceases to amaze me how a group of strangers can come together over wine. It can start as the topic of discussion and then become the “title” of a given memory. E.G. “Do you remember when we had that Cavagnaro Malbec Reserve with Al and Nancy from the Bay Area? What a great night that was. The wine was so earthy and full of red fruit and I remember how that started a discussion on whether California wineries will be able to… what a good time that was.”

Last night was very similar. We discussed the terroir of Argentina, the culture, the winemaking culture, business practices and then, a whole slew of things ranging from food pairing to Argentine politics (yikes) to my wedding plans. I appreciate everyone’s company lat night and I hope to have more tastings like this because they are not tastings. They really are events where people come together over wine, and I get to truly enjoy my job.

Anuva Event

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