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ARTICLE |

FAITH IN STATISTICS.

JAMA. 1899;XXXII(25):1454. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450520052018.
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ABSTRACT

Our bland and child-like faith in statistics as such is beginning to be shaken at last. And it is high time, for the blind belief that if we can only get any subject or set of facts "down in figgers," and then strike an average, the result is bound to be true, has led us into serious errors. The statistic method is the very soul of modern science, but it is beginning to dawn on us that not only are an intimate knowledge of the subject-matter to which it is to be applied and a critic study of the accuracy of the data recorded, absolutely essential to safe conclusions, but that the method is an art in itself. A mere glance at the beautiful and most valuable work of Professors Davenport and Karl Pearson, the results of the applications of graphic plotting and the calculus to the study of variation,

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