ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1929. This balanced combination of fieldwork, statistical measurement, and realistic applications shows a synthesis of economics and political science in a conception of an organic relationship between the two sciences that involves functional analysis, institutional interpretation, and a more workmanlike approach to questions of organization such as division of labour and the control of industry.

The treatise applies the test of fact through statistical analysis to economic and political theories for the quantitative and institutional approach in solving social and industrial problems. It constructs a framework of concepts, combining both economic and political theory, to systematically produce an original statement in general terms of the principles and methods for statistical fieldwork. The separation into Parts allows selective reading for the methods of statistical measurement; the principles and fallacies of applying these measures to economic and political fields; and the resultant construction of a statistical economics and politics. Basic statistical concepts are described for application, with each method of statistical measurement illustrated with instances relevant to the economic and political theory discussed and a statistical glossary is included.

part One|48 pages

Mood And Matter Of Statistical Enquiry

part |98 pages

The Statistical Measurement of Economic and Political Data

chapter VII|21 pages

Risk and Uncertainty

chapter VIII|18 pages

The Measurement of Time and Space Tendencies

part |80 pages

Statistical Fieldwork in Economics and Political Science

chapter X|21 pages

Statistics Applied in Description

chapter XI|11 pages

Statistics Applied in Generalization

chapter XII|12 pages

The Canvass Of Possible Causal Relations

chapter XIII|22 pages

Statistics’ Part in Causal Interpretation

chapter XIV|14 pages

Non-Statistical Analysis and Interpretation

part Four|268 pages

Sketch for a Statistical Economics and Politics