In his paper, "Euler and the Partial Sums of the Prime Harmonic Series" (pdf), Paul Pollacks makes a small statement at the top of page 4:
$$ \log \frac{3}{2} < (\frac{3}{2} - 1) = \frac12 $$
I can see numerically this is true, but I can't see how he makes the inequality $\log \frac{3}{2} < (\frac{3}{2} - 1)$.
I have looked through references of power series approximations but can't see anything that matches.
For any $x > 1$ we have $$ \log(x) < x - 1. $$ For a geometric proof, note that both functions vanish at $x = 1$ and that the graph of $\log(x)$ is concave down (so is trapped below the tangent line as you move to the right).