Science and Inquiry discussion

This topic is about
Calling Bullshit
Book Club 2021
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December 2021 - Calling Bullshit
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I've started reading this book. So far, it is very interesting. I had not thought of all the ways people use bullshit, intentionally or unintentionally.
I just finished reading the book. Wow! The author shows how he does research, to unearth the origins of so many unlikely stories and urban myths. I highly recommend it. Here is my review.

American Nero (tRUMP) plenty
Rage in the Whitehouse
PERIL!
fire and fury Whitehouse and more!

Jessica, I agree. As the book mentions, 3D charts rarely are needed. 2D charts are usually more understandable.


In case there are any active Twitter users here - Carl Bergstrom, one of the authors, tweets actively and has been a very reliable source of data and analysis for me over this pandemic period, which is also how I first learnt about this book.


That is the perfect summation of how I got through the little bit of statistics that I took, too. It's both fascinating & mind bending. I've read that screwing up the statistical analysis of experiments by otherwise honest & intelligent scientists is rampant. They really need a mathematician to do that work.
Steve wrote: "I enjoyed the book and it inspired me to perhaps go to Khan Academy and brush up statistics, which I both suffered through and enjoyed my sophomore year in college. My only negative thoughts are th..."
Steve, your negative comments really got to me. I agree with you--the people who might benefit from the book won't read it, and those who want to improve their bullshit will read and study it!
Steve, your negative comments really got to me. I agree with you--the people who might benefit from the book won't read it, and those who want to improve their bullshit will read and study it!
Jim wrote: "I've read that screwing up the statistical analysis of experiments by otherwise honest & intelligent scientists is rampant. "
Jim, this is very true. It is the selective "P-Hacking" that causes a big bias in science articles. This is the argument that allows scientists to write the words "statistically significant".
It reminds me of a famous quote from Richard Feynman:
Finding correlations or results "after-the-fact", that is formulating a hypothesis after conducting an experiment can invalidate the conclusions of the experiment!
Jim, this is very true. It is the selective "P-Hacking" that causes a big bias in science articles. This is the argument that allows scientists to write the words "statistically significant".
It reminds me of a famous quote from Richard Feynman:
You know, the most amazing thing happened to me tonight... I saw a car with the license plate ARW 357. Can you imagine? Of all the millions of license plates in the state, what was the chance that I would see that particular one tonight? Amazing!
Finding correlations or results "after-the-fact", that is formulating a hypothesis after conducting an experiment can invalidate the conclusions of the experiment!

https://twitter.com/aarit_ahuja/statu...

Books mentioned in this topic
How to Lie with Statistics (other topics)Calling Bullshit: The Art of Skepticism in a Data-Driven World (other topics)
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