Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2024. - 351 p. - ISBN 1032377399.
Unlike mathematics, statistics deals with real-world data and involves a higher degree of subjectivity due to the role of interpretation. Interpretation is shaped by context as well as the knowledge, preferences, assumptions and preconceptions of the interpreter, leading to a variety of interpretations of concepts as well as results.
Philosophies, Puzzles and Paradoxes: A Statistician’s Search for Truth thoroughly examines the
distinct philosophical approaches to statistics –
Bayesian, frequentist and likelihood – arising from different
interpretations of probability and uncertainty. These differences are highlighted through
numerous puzzles and paradoxes and illuminated by extensive discussions of the background philosophy of science.
Features:
Exploration of the philosophy of knowledge and truth and how they relate to deductive and inductive reasoning, and ultimately scientific and statistical thinking.
Discussion of the
philosophical theories of probability that are
wider than the standard Bayesian and frequentist views.
Exposition and examination of
Savage’s axioms as the basis of subjective probability and Bayesian statistics.
Explanation of likelihood and likelihood-based inference, including the controversy surrounding the likelihood principle.
Discussion of fiducial probability and its evolution to confidence procedure.
Introduction of extended and hierarchical likelihood for random parameters, with the recognition of confidence as extended likelihood, leading to epistemic confidence as an objective measure of uncertainty for single events.
Detailed analyses and
new variations of classic paradoxes, such as the Monty Hall puzzle, the paradox of the ravens, the exchange paradox, and more.
Substantive yet
non-technical, catering to readers with only
introductory exposure to the theory of probability and statistics.
This book primarily targets
statisticians in general, including both undergraduate and graduate students, as well as researchers interested in the philosophical basis of probability and statistics. It is also suitable for philosophers of science and general readers
intrigued by puzzles and paradoxes.
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