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The Chronicle of Higher Education (Best)

 

The critical understand that, while some social statistics may be pretty good, they are never perfect. Every statistic is a way of summarizing complex information into relatively simple numbers. Inevitably, some information, some of the complexity, is lost whenever we use statistics. The critical recognize that this is an inevitable limitation of statistics. Moreover, they realize that every statistic is the product of choices -- the choice between defining a category broadly or narrowly, the choice of one measurement over another, the choice of a sample. People choose definitions, measurements, and samples for all sorts of reasons: Perhaps they want to emphasize some aspect of a problem; perhaps it is easier or cheaper to gather data in a particular way -- many considerations can come into play. Every statistic is a compromise among choices. This means that every definition -- and every measurement and every sample -- probably has limitations and can be criticized.
-- Joel Best, "Telling the Truth About Damned Lies and Statistics" The Chronicle of Higher Education (May 4, 2001) http://chronicle.com/weekly/v47/i34/34b00701.htm from Damned Lies and Statistics: Untangling Numbers From the Media, Politicians, and Activists, published by the University of California Press, 2001.
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