Posted on 11/28/2017 1:27:41 PM PST by nickcarraway
This book has been in continuous print since 1954.....................
86.3% of statistics are made up on the spur of the moment.
That’s my claim and I;m sticking with it!
“There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.”....Mark Twain............
Find your favorite fallacy. How about, hard statistical evidence followed by poorly supported assertions that have nothing to do with the evidence. That’s bullying, IMHO.
Yep - it’s all about how you present the data. I never see confidence intervals, p-values, etc in any news reporting. Mainly because the only thing the idiots really understand is gross percentages...which can be fudged by using the other values.
Actually, that figure should be 86.3245769856%, which raises another separate issue. :=)
Firat step, get a box.
To date this book is probably the best book ever written on stats. Always keep a copy handy to lend to my friends (especially libs).
(Ignorance is bliss!) Solution: More epidemiology on how people collect, manipulate, analyse, communicate and consume data.
As Shakespeare said, "For all the rest, they'll take suggestion as a cat laps milk. They'll tell the clock to any business that we say befits the hour."
You mean that four out of five dentists DIDN'T really recommend Dentyne?
-PJ
I have an original, printing from 1950’s.................
Reality is too complex to model with numbers.
A famous example from WW2 was American statistician realized the German industry was continuing to grow despite massive bombing raids. This caused the military to switch from bombing factories to bombing people which strengthened German’s resolve to fight on. The reality was that weapons being made in the new German industry were generally crap and what the bombing raids were doing was reducing the quality of German arms which in turn reduced German fighting effectiveness. But this couldn’t be modeled statistically so it was ignored.
The most effective part of the US bombing campaign came in the last 6-8 months of the war where we targeted Germany’s transportation grid instead of its factories or people. The results of attacks that couldn’t be modeled by statistics. These attacks caused the Germany industry to grind to a halt as rare materials and food we were no longer able to get from point A to point B. If we’d listened to the air force generals urging attacks on the transport grid instead of the bean counters the war would have been over in late 1944.
Moral of the story: Never trust a bean counter.
My youngest Daughter double Majored ... she Interned at Ford and at that time was a Theoretical Math Major, they told her she needed a salable Degree and recommended Statistics so she made that her Primary but she Loves Theoretical Math and just does Statistics to pay the way cause Dad told her “NO LOANS” and Dad is 3 outta 3 (3 kids w Degrees and 3 kids without Student Loans)
One of my favorite sayings:
“If you torture numbers they will confess to anything.”
*** “Never trust a bean counter” ***
Where to start ...
May start with GIGO (Garbage In Garbage Out)
Bean Counters don’t do Tactics so if Air Force Generals were taking Orders from the inept it was either Politicians, other Generals, poor Intel on the ground or most likely Politicians, Bankers and Royals.
The beauty of the US Forces in Europe WW2 was the lack of communications perceived or fabricated allowed those on the ground to do what they needed to do to get the job done with Great Leaders like Patton.
Stealing that!
So no more asterisks!
She sounds like a smart young lady who takes after her dad. But I am surprised that Theoretical Math won’t pay the bills.
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