MONTHLY MEMORY LANE: 3 years ago: July 2012. I mark in red three posts that seem most apt for general background on key issues in this blog.[1] This new feature, appearing the last week of each month, began at the blog’s 3-year anniversary in Sept, 2014. (Once again it was tough to pick just 3; please check out others which might interest you, e.g., Schachtman on StatLaw, the machine learning conference on simplicity, the story of Lindley and particle physics, Glymour and so on.)
July 2012
- (7/1) PhilStatLaw: “Let’s Require Health Claims to Be ‘Evidence Based’” (Schachtman)
- (7/2) More from the Foundations of Simplicity Workshop*
- (7/3) Elliott Sober Responds on Foundations of Simplicity
- (7/4) Comment on Falsification
- (7/6) Vladimir Cherkassky Responds on Foundations of Simplicity
- (7/8) Metablog: Up and Coming
- (7/9) Stephen Senn: Randomization, ratios and rationality: rescuing the randomized clinical trial from its critics
- (7/10) PhilStatLaw: Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence (3d ed) on Statistical Significance (Schachtman)
- (7/11) Is Particle Physics Bad Science?
- (7/12) Dennis Lindley’s “Philosophy of Statistics”
- (7/15) Deconstructing Larry Wasserman – it starts like this…
- (7/16) Peter Grünwald: Follow-up on Cherkassky’s Comments
- (7/19) New Kvetch Posted 7/18/12
- (7/21) “Always the last place you look!”
- (7/22) Clark Glymour: The Theory of Search Is the Economics of Discovery (part 1)
- (7/23) Clark Glymour: The Theory of Search Is the Economics of Discovery (part 2)
- (7/27) P-values as Frequentist Measures
- (7/28) U-PHIL: Deconstructing Larry Wasserman (connects to 7/15)
- (7/31) What’s in a Name? (Gelman’s blog)
[1] excluding those recently reblogged. Posts that are part of a “unit” or a group of “U-Phils” count as one.