Chance News 10: Difference between revisions
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*from a more recent story: "Street crime, fed by an explosion of drug abuse, has risen exponentially." | *from a more recent story: "Street crime, fed by an explosion of drug abuse, has risen exponentially." | ||
== | ==RRS Coincidence column== | ||
Norton Starr, who provides our RSSNews Forsooth items, told us that the RRSNews now has a Coincidence column. Norton sent us the following colinsidence story from the Nov 05 RSS News and suggested some questions relating to this coincidence. | |||
<blockquote>This month's contribution is from Pam Warner of the University of Edinburgh Medical Statistics Unit who relates a story told to her by a colleage named Willlma during a recent morning coffee-break. | |||
Wilma had been waiting in a queue for a check-out (in Edinburgh) and a little boy, here accompanying the lady ahead of her in the queue, struck up a conversation with her. He asked her what her name was, and on being told that it was Wilman exclaimed that was the same name as his granny (the lady he was with). | |||
Wilma then returned the compliment, asking him what his name was. amd je saod Loeram/ | |||
==item4== | ==item4== |
Revision as of 14:12, 29 November 2005
Quotation
The weather man is never wrong. Suppose he says that there's an 80% chance of rain. If it rains, the 80% chance came up; if it doesn't, the 20% chance came up! - Saul Barron .
From: Stastical Quotations
Forsooth
Literary License
"'Four million ... heard it. Ten percent remember it. One percent of those matter. One percent of those do something about it. That's still' - he does the math - 'four people.'" From: _The Betrayal_, by Sabin Willett, NY: Villard (Random House), 1998.
Submitted by Margaret Cibes
Logarithmetic behavior as metaphor
For many years Ed Barbeau has edited a wonderful column in the College Mathematics Journal called Fallacies, Flaws, and Flimflam. In Barbeau's column in the November 2005 issue of the College Math Journal Norton Starr provides a contribution called "Logarithmic behaviour as metaphor". Norton provides examples from a wide variety of writers who say that something is growing logarithmically when they mean it is growing exponentially.
Norton says that he became interested in this when a convocation speaker at his college (Amherst) said:
As opposed to all other appetites which are stimulated by deprivation and satisfied by food, good education stimulates with plenty so that appetite for knowledge and understanding escalate logarithmically to insatiability.
Norton finds examples among faculty, newspapers, television and of course on the web. He writes:
Here are three examples of metaphorical growth from the New York Times, with the third suggesting an improved understanding on the part of this newspaper:
- from a review of Harlow Shapley's autobiography: "if the autobiographer opts for a method he believes will grant him immortality without industry, his risks rise logarithmically."
- from a story about corruption and drugs:"' The drug situation is a horror story, increasing logarithmically.'"
- from a more recent story: "Street crime, fed by an explosion of drug abuse, has risen exponentially."
RRS Coincidence column
Norton Starr, who provides our RSSNews Forsooth items, told us that the RRSNews now has a Coincidence column. Norton sent us the following colinsidence story from the Nov 05 RSS News and suggested some questions relating to this coincidence.
This month's contribution is from Pam Warner of the University of Edinburgh Medical Statistics Unit who relates a story told to her by a colleage named Willlma during a recent morning coffee-break.
Wilma had been waiting in a queue for a check-out (in Edinburgh) and a little boy, here accompanying the lady ahead of her in the queue, struck up a conversation with her. He asked her what her name was, and on being told that it was Wilman exclaimed that was the same name as his granny (the lady he was with).
Wilma then returned the compliment, asking him what his name was. amd je saod Loeram/
item4