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The Triumph of Numbers

How Counting Shaped Modern Life

I. Bernard Cohen (Author, Harvard University)

 

From the pyramids to mortality tables, Galileo to Florence Nightingale, a vibrant history of numbers and the birth of statistics.

The great historian of science I. B. Cohen explores how numbers have come to assume a leading role in science, in the operations and structure of government, in marketing, and in many other aspects of daily life. Consulting and collecting numbers has been a feature of human affairs since antiquity—taxes, head counts for military service—but not until the Scientific Revolution in the twelfth century did social numbers such as births, deaths, and marriages begin to be analyzed. Cohen shines a new light on familiar figures such as Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Charles Dickens; and he reveals Florence Nightingale to be a passionate statistician. Cohen has left us with an engaging and accessible history of numbers, an appreciation of the essential nature of statistics.

Book Details

  • Paperback
  • July 2006
  • ISBN 978-0-393-32870-7
  • 5.6 × 8.2 in / 224 pages
  • Territory Rights: Worldwide

Endorsements & Reviews

“Brief, lively, and highly entertaining.” — William Grimes, New York Times

“This book will inform and enlighten you. . . . [Cohen] paints a vivid picture of the rise of statistics.” — Tom Korner, American Scientist

Also by I. Bernard Cohen All

  1. Book CoverThe Birth of a New Physics

    Revised and Updated / Paperback

  2. Book CoverNewton

    Paperback

  3. Book CoverScience and the Founding Fathers: Science in the Political Thought of Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and James Madison

    Paperback

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