School of Social and Political Science

The History of Statistics and the Sciences of Subjectivity

Category
Seminar
31 October 2022
15:30 - 17:00

Venue

Violet Laidlaw Room, Chrystal Macmillan Building

Description

We have long known that numbers and statistical concepts sit at the center of how objective, reliable knowledge is made in the contemporary world. Yet subjectivity remains crucial to understanding the spread of statistical concepts, not just in the theoretical underpinnings of "subjectivist" interpretations but also in the way statistical methods have proven useful for navigating the particular "problems" of the sciences of subjectivity. By examining and juxtaposing the rise of biostatistics within clinical medicine and of sports analytics, this talk asks how and why statistical methods originally developed for the aggregate came to be used to make judgments about individuals, and in so doing aims to provide a better understanding of the roots of the current dominance of data science and statistically-driven algorithms.

 

Key speakers

  • Dr Christopher Phillips

Location