hey there tribe brethren,
I'm doing a prep session with first year University stats students mid April and would like to lighten things up a bit with some humour. Anyone know any math jokes specific to statistics? If so, pass them on.
Meanwhile, here's a short essay by Stephen Leacock who chaired the department of political science and economics at McGill University between 1908 and 1936. He's best know for being Canada's answer to Mark Twain. Enjoy.
THE FORCE OF STATISTICS an essay by Stephen Leacock
They were sitting on a seat of the car, immediately in front of me. I was consequently able to hear all that they were saying. They were evidently strangers who had dropped into a conversation. They both had the air of men who considered themselves profoundly interesting as minds. It was plain that each labored under the impression that he was a ripe thinker.
One had just been reading a book which lay in his lap.
" I've been reading some very interesting statistics," he was saying to the other thinker.
" Ah, statistics!" said the other; " wonderful things, sir, statistics; very fond of them myself."
" I find, for instance," the first man went on, "that a drop of water is filled with little . . . little things, – er – every cubic inch containing – er – containing . . . let me see . . ."
" Say a million," said the other thinker, encouragingly.
" Yes, a million, or possibly a billion . . . but at any rate, Ever so many of them."
" Is it possible?" said the other. " But really, you know, there are wonderful things in the world. Now, coal . . . take coal . . ."
" Very good," said his friend, "let us take coal," settling back in his seat with the air of an intellect about to feed itself.
" Do you know that every ton of coal burnt in an engine will drag a train of cars as long as . . . I forget the exact length, but say a train of cars of such and such a length, and weighing, say so much . . . from . . . from . . . hum! for the moment the exact distance escapes me . . . drag it from . . ."
" From here to the moon," suggested the other.
" Ah, very likely; yes, from here to the moon. Wonderful, isn't it?"
" But the most stupendous calculation of all, sir, is in regard to the distance from the Earth to the sun. Positively, sir, a cannonball – er – fired at the sun . . ."
" Fired at the sun," nodded the other, approvingly, as if he had often seen it done.
" And traveling at the rate of . . . of . . . "
" Of three cents a mile," hinted the listener.
"No, no, you misunderstand me – but travelling at a fearful rate, simply fearful sir, would take a hundred million – no, a hundred billion – in short would take a scandalously long time in getting there –"
At this point I could stand no more. I interrupted – " Provided it were fired from Philadelphia," I said, and passed into the smoking-car.
I'm doing a prep session with first year University stats students mid April and would like to lighten things up a bit with some humour. Anyone know any math jokes specific to statistics? If so, pass them on.
Meanwhile, here's a short essay by Stephen Leacock who chaired the department of political science and economics at McGill University between 1908 and 1936. He's best know for being Canada's answer to Mark Twain. Enjoy.
THE FORCE OF STATISTICS an essay by Stephen Leacock
They were sitting on a seat of the car, immediately in front of me. I was consequently able to hear all that they were saying. They were evidently strangers who had dropped into a conversation. They both had the air of men who considered themselves profoundly interesting as minds. It was plain that each labored under the impression that he was a ripe thinker.
One had just been reading a book which lay in his lap.
" I've been reading some very interesting statistics," he was saying to the other thinker.
" Ah, statistics!" said the other; " wonderful things, sir, statistics; very fond of them myself."
" I find, for instance," the first man went on, "that a drop of water is filled with little . . . little things, – er – every cubic inch containing – er – containing . . . let me see . . ."
" Say a million," said the other thinker, encouragingly.
" Yes, a million, or possibly a billion . . . but at any rate, Ever so many of them."
" Is it possible?" said the other. " But really, you know, there are wonderful things in the world. Now, coal . . . take coal . . ."
" Very good," said his friend, "let us take coal," settling back in his seat with the air of an intellect about to feed itself.
" Do you know that every ton of coal burnt in an engine will drag a train of cars as long as . . . I forget the exact length, but say a train of cars of such and such a length, and weighing, say so much . . . from . . . from . . . hum! for the moment the exact distance escapes me . . . drag it from . . ."
" From here to the moon," suggested the other.
" Ah, very likely; yes, from here to the moon. Wonderful, isn't it?"
" But the most stupendous calculation of all, sir, is in regard to the distance from the Earth to the sun. Positively, sir, a cannonball – er – fired at the sun . . ."
" Fired at the sun," nodded the other, approvingly, as if he had often seen it done.
" And traveling at the rate of . . . of . . . "
" Of three cents a mile," hinted the listener.
"No, no, you misunderstand me – but travelling at a fearful rate, simply fearful sir, would take a hundred million – no, a hundred billion – in short would take a scandalously long time in getting there –"
At this point I could stand no more. I interrupted – " Provided it were fired from Philadelphia," I said, and passed into the smoking-car.
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Mon, March 31, 2008 - 6:21 PMThe Cartoon Guide to Statistics by Larry Gonick and Woollcott Smith is pretty good and lighthearted. I enjoy it! It makes for good overheads when introducing a new topic. -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Mon, March 31, 2008 - 7:33 PMHow to Lie with Statistics by Darrell Huff. -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Mon, March 31, 2008 - 8:43 PMButttt.... Lie is algebra not statistics :) -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Mon, March 31, 2008 - 9:22 PMGood one -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Tue, April 8, 2008 - 11:37 AMA. K. Dewdney's "200% of Nothing" is a good guide to how to statistics (among other maths) are used, manipulated, distorted, abused, etc.. Not that one needs much introduction to the concept.
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Fri, April 4, 2008 - 7:31 PMEscape velocity: 25,000mph
Distance to the Sun: 93,000,000 miles
So that's 3720 hours, or 155 days, near enough 5 months.
Not that scandalously long of a time! Surely?
Philadelphia is far too North. For the USA, you should choose somewhere like Key West, Florida, at midday on June 21st.
LOL -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Fri, April 4, 2008 - 8:50 PM"Escape velocity: 25,000mph
Distance to the Sun: 93,000,000 miles
So that's 3720 hours, or 155 days, near enough 5 months.
Not that scandalously long of a time! Surely? "
Actually you are forgetting to cancel angular momentum caused by the Earth's motion around Sol. Without doing that, which isn't easy, one would never reach Sol - which is definitely a scandalously long time. -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Sat, April 5, 2008 - 12:06 AM>> "forgetting to cancel angular momentum caused by the Earth's motion around Sol" <<
I'm sure being off by a few degrees is no big deal, as I'm sure the gravitational pull of the Sun will suck in a cannonball, when it gets close enough. -
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Re: Statistics Jokes and Stephen Leacock essay
Sat, April 5, 2008 - 5:04 AMNo, it won't - it would either capture it in a stable orbit (most likely) that crossed Earth's orbit or throw it out of the solar system altogether (one would have to shot the cannonball at a very high speed).
I had intended to just give you a hard time, not turn it into a serious physics discussion. If you want a continue the discussion, PM me.
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