It's the whole point of things like political science though: trying to quantify and understand social dynamics with empirical models, brought to us by people with a single semester of dumbed down statistics, and maybe a freshman bio course that fulfilled their science requirement, under their belt.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
well the aim of a bachelor of arts isn't to study things with total certitude and 'right' and 'wrong' answers, so the goalposts are moved a little on your "fucking it up" claims. but yes, sure. statistics are misused by everyone. from madison avenue to 'news'/factual sources, to politics and the public sphere. it's not a social sciences thing exclusively. feynman misunderstands their point and function within academia. they are not trying to get at 'scientific truths' in the same sense that physics tries to find immutable 'laws of the universe'.Jay wrote:
The point is that they use tools like statistics haphazardly and then turn that into a thesis, which the media then picks up on and touts as fact. It's generally bad science. Something like 2/3 of the claims made in medical and science journals end up being false when further testing is conducted, and that's coming from people that do understand the mathematical tools they are using. Frankly, the rampant abuse of statistics among the social sciences is why people no longer believe any of it. You end up with stupid sayings like '99% of statistics are made up on the spot, including this one'. Or conducting experiments under the guise of the scientific method but not understanding how to remove the intrinsic biases, or accounting for them if they can't be removed. Science isn't all that hard, but people in the social sciences fuck it up constantly. But I guess that's why they get a Bachelor of Arts instead of Bachelor of Science.
Last edited by Jay (2013-03-10 20:38:41)
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat