MONTHLY MEMORY LANE: 3 years ago: December 2014. I mark in red 3-4 posts from each month that seem most apt for general background on key issues in this blog, excluding those reblogged recently[1], and in green 3- 4 others of general relevance to philosophy of statistics (in months where I’ve blogged a lot)[2]. Posts that are part of a “unit” or a group count as one.
December 2014
- 12/02 My Rutgers Seminar: tomorrow, December 3, on philosophy of statistics
- 12/04 “Probing with Severity: Beyond Bayesian Probabilism and Frequentist Performance” (Dec 3 Seminar slides)
- 12/06 How power morcellators inadvertently spread uterine cancer
- 12/11 Msc. Kvetch: What does it mean for a battle to be “lost by the media”?
- 12/13 S. Stanley Young: Are there mortality co-benefits to the Clean Power Plan? It depends. (Guest Post)
- 12/17 Announcing Kent Staley’s new book, An Introduction to the Philosophy of Science (CUP)
- 12/21 Derailment: Faking Science: A true story of academic fraud, by Diederik Stapel (translated into English)
- 12/23 All I want for Chrismukkah is that critics & “reformers” quit howlers of testing (after 3 yrs of blogging)! So here’s Aris Spanos “Talking Back!”
- 12/26 3 YEARS AGO: MONTHLY (Dec.) MEMORY LANE
- 12/29 To raise the power of a test is to lower (not raise) the “hurdle” for rejecting the null (Ziliac and McCloskey 3 years on)
- 12/31 Midnight With Birnbaum (Happy New Year)
[1] Monthly memory lanes began at the blog’s 3-year anniversary in Sept, 2014.
[2] New Rule, July 30,2016, March 30,2017 -a very convenient way to allow data-dependent choices (note why it’s legit in selecting blog posts, on severity grounds).