Hawking Index


The Hawking Index is a mock mathematical measure on how far people will, on average, read through a book before giving up. It was invented by American mathematician Jordan Ellenberg, who created it in a blog for The Wall Street Journal in 2014. The Index is named after English physicist Stephen Hawking, whose book A Brief History of Time is often dubbed, "the most unread book of all time".

Calculation

Ellenberg's non-scientific method of calculating the Index is to the "Popular highlights", the five most highlighted passages marked by Amazon Kindle readers of each title. A wide spread of highlights throughout the book mean that most readers will have read the entire book, scoring high on the Index. If the spread of highlights occurs only at the beginning of the book, then it means that fewer people will have read the book completely and will thus score low on the Index. When the Index was created, this information was easier to access as "Popular highlights" was available to everyone, but since then this information has only been made available to people who buy the books on Kindle.

Hawking Index scores

When Ellenberg first used the Index, he used the following books as his examples.
Book titleAuthorHawking Index
Hard ChoicesHillary Clinton1.9%
Capital in the Twenty-First CenturyThomas Piketty2.4%
Infinite JestDavid Foster Wallace6.4%
A Brief History of TimeStephen Hawking6.6%
Thinking, Fast and SlowDaniel Kahneman6.8%
Lean InSheryl Sandberg12.3%
Flash BoysMichael Lewis21.7%
Fifty Shades of GreyE. L. James25.9%
The Great GatsbyF. Scott Fitzgerald28.3%
Catching FireSuzanne Collins43.4%
The GoldfinchDonna Tartt98.5%