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Inductive inference is the only process known to us by which essentially new knowledge comes into the world.
Ronald Fisher
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Ronald Fisher
Age: 72 †
Born: 1890
Born: February 17
Died: 1962
Died: July 29
Astronomer
Biologist
Geneticist
Mathematician
Statistician
London
England
Ronald Aylmer Fisher
R. A. Fisher
Ronald A. Fisher
Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher
R.A. Fisher
Knowledge
Process
Comes
Science
World
Inductive
Inference
Essentially
Known
More quotes by Ronald Fisher
The analysis of variance is not a mathematical theorem, but rather a convenient method of arranging the arithmetic.
Ronald Fisher
Professor Eddington has recently remarked that 'The law that entropy always increases - the second law of thermodynamics - holds, I think, the supreme position among the laws of nature'. It is not a little instructive that so similar a law [the fundamental theorem of natural selection] should hold the supreme position among the biological sciences.
Ronald Fisher
... the actual and physical conduct of an experiment must govern the statistical procedure of its interpretation.
Ronald Fisher
It was Darwin's chief contribution, not only to Biology but to the whole of natural science, to have brought to light a process by which contingencies a priori improbable, are given, in the process of time, an increasing probability, until it is their non-occurrence rather than their occurrence which becomes highly improbable.
Ronald Fisher
No efforts of mine could avail to make the book easy reading.
Ronald Fisher
In scientific subjects, the natural remedy for dogmatism has been found in research.
Ronald Fisher
The statistician cannot evade the responsibility for understanding the process he applies or recommends.
Ronald Fisher
Natural selection is not evolution.
Ronald Fisher
The best time to plan an experiment is after you've done it.
Ronald Fisher
If ... we choose a group of social phenomena with no antecedent knowledge of the causation or absence of causation among them, then the calculation of correlation coefficients, total or partial, will not advance us a step toward evaluating the importance of the causes at work.
Ronald Fisher
The more highly adapted an organism becomes, the less adaptable it is to any new change.
Ronald Fisher
To consult the statistician after an experiment is finished is often merely to ask him to conduct a post mortem examination. He can perhaps say what the experiment died of.
Ronald Fisher
No practical biologist interested in sexual reproduction would be led to work out the detailed consequences experienced by organisms having three or more sexes yet what else should he do if he wishes to understand why the sexes are, in fact, always two?
Ronald Fisher
We have usually no knowledge that any one factor will exert its effects independently of all others that can be varied, or that its effects are particularly simply related to variations in these other factors.
Ronald Fisher
... no scientific worker has a fixed level of significance at which from year to year, and in all circumstances, he rejects hypotheses he rather gives his mind to each particular case in the light of his evidence and his ideas.
Ronald Fisher
The best causes tend to attract to their support the worst arguments, which seems to be equally true in the intellectual and in the moral sense.
Ronald Fisher
I believe that no one who is familiar, either with mathematical advances in other fields, or with the range of special biological conditions to be considered, would ever conceive that everything could be summed up in a single mathematical formula, however complex.
Ronald Fisher
This is perhaps the most important book on evolutionary genetics ever written
Ronald Fisher
We can set no limit to human potentialities all that is best in man can be bettered it is not a question of producing a highly efficient machine, ... but of quickening all the distinctly human features, all that is best in man, all the different qualities, some obvious, some infinitely subtle, which we recognize as humanly excellent.
Ronald Fisher
The tendency of modern scientific teaching is to neglect the great books, to lay far too much stress upon relatively unimportant modern work, and to present masses of detail of doubtful truth and questionable weight in such a way as to obscure principles.
Ronald Fisher