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         Pearson Karl:     more books (100)
  1. Karl Pearson: The Scientific Life in a Statistical Age by Theodore M. Porter, 2005-12-19
  2. The grammar of science by Karl Pearson, 2010-09-11
  3. Karl Pearson's Early Statistical Papers by Karl . E. S. Pearson (Ed.) Pearson, 1956
  4. A list of the papers and correspondence of Karl Pearson, 1857-1936, held in the Manuscripts Room, University College, London, Library by London University College, 1983
  5. A History of Inverse Probability: From Thomas Bayes to Karl Pearson (Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences) by Andrew I. Dale, 1999-06-04
  6. The History of Statistics in the 17th and 18th Centuries, Against the Changing Background of Intellectual, Scientific and Religious Thought: Lecture by Karl Pearson, E. S. Pearson, 1978-06
  7. A Preliminary Study of Extreme Alcoholism in Adults by Amy Barrington, Karl Pearson, et all 2009-07-10
  8. On the General Theory of Skew Correlation and Non-Linear Regression by Karl Pearson, 2010-02-23
  9. Windows on the Japanese Past
  10. A Monograph on Albinism in Man (Volume 1: 1) by Karl Pearson, 2010-01-11
  11. Tables of the incomplete [Gamma]-function by Karl Pearson, 1922-01-01
  12. Real estate; principles & practices, by Karl G Pearson, 1973
  13. On a novel method of regarding the association of two variates classed solely in alternate categories by Karl Pearson, GH Soper, 2010-09-05
  14. The problem of practical eugenics by Karl Pearson, 2010-05-17

1. Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson Seite aus einem deutschsprachigen OnlinePhilosophenlexikon. Karl Pearson (1857 - 1936). Karl Pearson war ein sozialdarwinistischer Positivist.
http://www.philosophenlexikon.de/pearson.htm
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2. Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson. (18571936) British Mathematician. Major Contribution. KarlPearson developed some of the central techniques of modern statistics.
http://www.indiana.edu/~intell/pearson.html
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Karl Pearson
British Mathematician
Education
  • King's College, Cambridge
  • Admitted to the bar at age 24 (1881)
Career
  • In 1884 (age 27) he was appointed to the chair of Applied Mathematics at University College, London.
  • In 1890 he was appointed Lecturer on Gemoetyr at Gresham College.
Major Contribution Karl Pearson developed some of the central techniques of modern statistics. In the early 1900's Pearson became interested in the work of Francis Galton, who wanted to find statistical relationships to explain how biological characteristics were passed down through generations. Pearson's research laid much of the foundation for 20th-century statistics, defining the meanings of correlation, regression analysis, and standard deviation. Ideas and Interests Poetry, philosophy, history of religion, law, the theory of elasticity Publication
  • The Grammar of Science (1892)
  • The Life, Letters and Labours of Francis Glaton (1930?)
References:
Introduction
Interactive Map Alphabetic Index Time Period Index ... Comments For further information please contact
Content questions: Dr. Jonathan Plucker

3. Pearson
Karl Pearson. Karl Pearson graduated from Cambridge University in 1879,then spent most of his career at University College, London.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Pearson.html
Karl Pearson
Born: 27 March 1857 in London, England
Died: 27 April 1936 in London, England
Click the picture above
to see two larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Karl Pearson graduated from Cambridge University in 1879, then spent most of his career at University College, London. He was the first Galton professor of eugenics, holding the chair from 1911 to 1933. His book The Grammar of Science (1892), was remarkable in that it anticipated some of the ideas of relativity theory. It was wide ranging and attempted to extend the influence of science into all aspects. Pearson then became interested in developing mathematical methods for studying the processes of heredity and evolution. He applied statistics to biological problems of heredity and evolution. From 1893-1912 he wrote 18 papers entitled Mathematical Contribution to the Theory of Evolution which contain his most valuable work. These papers contain contributions to regression analysis, the correlation coefficient and includes the chi-square test of statistical significance (1900). His chi-square test was produced in an attempt to remove the normal distribution from its central position. Pearson coined the term 'standard deviation' in 1893. His work was influenced by the work of

4. Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson (18571936) Karl Pearson was a major player in the early development of statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/Stats/history/pearson.html
Karl Pearson (1857-1936)
Karl Pearson was a major player in the early development of statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right. He founded the Department of Applied Statistics (now the Department of Statistical Science) at University College London in 1911; it was the first university statistics department in the world. The present departments of Statistical Science and Computer Science , as well as the Genetics and Biometry group in Biology and the physical side of Anthropology are all part of his legacy to UCL. This page contains a brief biography, as well as some indications of his contributions to the subject.
Contents of this page
Biographical details
Karl Pearson was born in London on the 27th March 1857. He was educated privately at University College School, after which he went to King's College Cambridge to study mathematics. He then spent part of 1879 and 1880 studying medieval and 16th century German literature at the universities of Berlin and Heidelberg - in fact, he became sufficently knowledgeable in this field that he was offered a post in the German department at Cambridge University. His next career move was to Lincoln's Inn, where he read law until 1881 (although he never practised). After this, he returned to mathematics, deputising for the mathematics professor at King's College London in 1881 and for the professor at University College London in 1883. In 1884, he was appointed to the Goldshmid Chair of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics at University College London. 1891 saw him also appointed to the professorship of Geometry at Gresham College; here he met W.F.R. Weldon, a zoologist who had some interesting problems requiring quantitative solutions. The collaboration, in biometry and evolutionary theory, was a fruitful one and lasted until Weldon died in 1906. Weldon introduced Pearson to Francis Galton, who was interested in aspects of evolution such as heredity and eugenics, and this was another very rewarding partnership.

5. WIEM: Pearson Karl
pearson karl (18571936), angielski filozof, matematyk, mechanik, antropolog,socjolog, eugenik. Profesor katedry eugeniki na Uniwersytecie
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/00f22b.html
wiem.onet.pl napisz do nas losuj: has³a multimedia Biologia, Socjologia, Wielka Brytania
Pearson Karl widok strony
znajd¼ podobne

poka¿ powi±zane
Pearson Karl (1857-1936), angielski filozof, matematyk, mechanik, antropolog, socjolog, eugenik. Profesor katedry eugeniki na Uniwersytecie Londyñskim i dyrektor Narodowej Pracowni Eugenicznej. Twórca najradykalniejszego pogl±du scjentystycznego na ¶wiat. Jedn± ze swoich prac ( Mathematical Contributions to the Theory of Evolution , 1893-1912) po¶wiêci³ metodologii nauk ¶cis³ych, teorii ewolucji i zastosowaniu metod statystycznych w biologii, zw³aszcza do analizy zjawisk dziedziczno¶ci i zmienno¶ci. Spo³eczne misje nauki okre¶li³ Pearson w  The Ethics of Freethought Zobacz równie¿ Scjentyzm Ewolucji teoria Darwina Ewolucjonizm Powi±zania Biometria wiêcej zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry Encyklopedia zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra

6. Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson (18571936). Up to Statistical Science home page. Biographicaldetails. Karl Pearson was born in London on the 27th March 1857.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/stats/history/pearson.html
Karl Pearson (1857-1936)
Karl Pearson was a major player in the early development of statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right. He founded the Department of Applied Statistics (now the Department of Statistical Science) at University College London in 1911; it was the first university statistics department in the world. The present departments of Statistical Science and Computer Science , as well as the Genetics and Biometry group in Biology and the physical side of Anthropology are all part of his legacy to UCL. This page contains a brief biography, as well as some indications of his contributions to the subject.
Contents of this page
Biographical details
Karl Pearson was born in London on the 27th March 1857. He was educated privately at University College School, after which he went to King's College Cambridge to study mathematics. He then spent part of 1879 and 1880 studying medieval and 16th century German literature at the universities of Berlin and Heidelberg - in fact, he became sufficently knowledgeable in this field that he was offered a post in the German department at Cambridge University. His next career move was to Lincoln's Inn, where he read law until 1881 (although he never practised). After this, he returned to mathematics, deputising for the mathematics professor at King's College London in 1881 and for the professor at University College London in 1883. In 1884, he was appointed to the Goldshmid Chair of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics at University College London. 1891 saw him also appointed to the professorship of Geometry at Gresham College; here he met W.F.R. Weldon, a zoologist who had some interesting problems requiring quantitative solutions. The collaboration, in biometry and evolutionary theory, was a fruitful one and lasted until Weldon died in 1906. Weldon introduced Pearson to Francis Galton, who was interested in aspects of evolution such as heredity and eugenics, and this was another very rewarding partnership.

7. Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson. Born 27 March 1857 in London, England. Died 27 April1936 in London, England. Pearson applied statistics to biological
http://www.roma.unisa.edu.au/10920/Pearson.htm

8. Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson Medical Mathematician *From Karl Pearson, Darwinism, MedicalProgress and Eugenics, The Cavendish Lecture, 1912. Page 29.
http://students.vassar.edu/jelinden/pearson.htm
Karl Pearson: Medical Mathematician
Karl Pearson, Galton's successor as the crusader for eugenics in England, began his professional career, much like Galton, as a mathematician. However, it was Pearson who took Galton's idea of eugenics one step further to declare that with proper guidance and selection, human evolution could be guided. As was proven in Galton's composite photography, there was a regression back to a general human aspect, a physical representation. Proper, scientific selection based on statistics and mathematics could cancel this regression and be used to direct human development.
As Daniel Kevles put it in his In the Name of Eugenics , "in Pearson's view, the imperial nation required more than an economic framework designed to give its citizens a material stake in its power; it also demanded the 'high pitch of internal efficiency' won by 'insuring that its numbers are substantially recruited from the better stocks.'"* Recall the mission of eugenics given by Paul Popenoe, that superior persons must reproduce in greater number, and the reproduction of the inferior population must be controlled. "If we suspend the stringent selection of the living. . . then we can only progress as a race, mentally and physically, by a stringent selection for parenthood..."** Pearson was the first to apply this idea, and he did so by creating a new idea of medicine and mathematics combined.
"Medical men in public service, whether as officers of health, school officers, or as superintendents of asylums, sanatoria and reformatories have access to immense masses of data bearing on medico-social problems, and schedule it in increasing quantities. Are these schedules to be wasted, to be stacked and ultimately burned for want of space, or shall they form archives from whence knowledge as to the factors which improve or impair national well-being may be extracted?"***

9. Lefalophodon Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson. English biometrician and disciple of Galton. Pearsonwas the leading eugenicist in Europe during the early 20th century
http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~alroy/lefa/Pearson.html
Karl Pearson
English biometrician and disciple of Galton . Pearson was the leading eugenicist in Europe during the early 20th century, influencing many workers including Cyril Burt. Responsible for the development of the product-moment correlation coefficient and numerous other breakthroughs in basic statistical theory. Career:
  • Studied under:
  • Students:
  • Colleagues:
  • Key publications:
  • Lefalophodon Home Timeline Bibliography Related Sites
  • 10. Pearson
    Karl Pearson (18571936). Last modified Feb. 25,2003. Soshichi Uchii suchii@bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp.
    http://www.bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/phisci/Gallery/pearson.html
    Karl Pearson Last modified Feb. 25, 2003. Soshichi Uchii suchii@bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp

    11. Pearson
    Translate this page pearson karl anglais, 1857-1936 Statisticien à l'University Collegede Londres, il eut Cayley comme professeur. Il collabora avec
    http://www.sciences-en-ligne.com/momo/chronomath/chrono1/Pearson.html
    PEARSON Karl
    anglais, 1857-1936
    University College de Londres, il eut Cayley comme professeur. Il collabora avec ses compatriotes Gosset, alias Student et Galton .Travaux importants sur les distributions statistiques, la Loi de Pearson : (prononcer ki deux i i Le test du
    • (1893) le terme de "standard deviation" ( ) pour signifier ce que l'on appelle aujourd'hui l' variance Gauss et chez Legendre
    Huygens Koenig Pour en savoir plus :
    • La statistique Histoire de la statistique , par J.-J. Droesbeke et Philippe Tassi
    Liapounov Goursat

    12. Karl Pearson
    Karl Pearson. Karl Pearson was born in 1857, the younger son and secondof three children of William Pearson, a selfmade man and
    http://www.atkinson.yorku.ca/~mcowles/pearson.htm
    Karl Pearson
    Karl Pearson was born in 1857, the younger son and second of three children of William Pearson, a self-made man and successful barrister, and Fanny Smith. He was a clever and hard-working schoolboy and a scholar and academic for the whole of his life. The second half of the nineteenth century saw the debate and triumph of the new biology based on Darwinian theory and the entrenchment of positivism in the scientific method. It was a period of intellectual confidence that quite clearly suited Pearson. He placed third on the honours list ('third wrangler') in the mathematical tripos at Cambridge in 1879 and then studied in Germany, becoming something of an expert in German literature and a germanophile. In 1884 Pearson was appointed Goldsmid Professor of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics at University College, London, and other lecture courses on the scope and concepts of modern science formed the basis of his book, The Grammar of Science published in 1892. Lectures on probability and the philosophy of chance gave him valuable foundations for his later work on biometrics/statistics. Pearson came to his biometric work from a career of teaching applied mathematics. It was Walter Weldon, appointed Professor of Zoology at University College, London in 1890, who, going to Pearson for help with statistical problems, brought him into the field. Galton, the father of individual difference research, who had refereed papers by Weldon, was introduced to Pearson and it was Galton's intellectual and financial support that brought the Biometric Laboratory into being. In less than eight years (between 1893 and 1901) Pearson produced over thirty papers on statistical methods and these included his work on

    13. Karl Pearson - Wikipedia
    Karl Pearson. Karl Pearson (18571936) was a major player in the early developmentof statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right.
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Pearson
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    Karl Pearson
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Karl Pearson ) was a major player in the early development of statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right. He founded the Department of Applied Statistics at University College London in 1911; it was the first university statistics department in the world.
    Biography
    Karl Pearson was born in London on the 27th March 1857. He was educated privately at University College School, after which he went to King's College Cambridge to study mathematics. He then spent part of 1879 and 1880 studying medieval and 16th-century German literature at the universities of Berlin and Heidelberg - in fact, he became sufficiently knowledgeable in this field that he was offered a post in the German department at Cambridge University. His next career move was to Lincoln's Inn, where he read law until 1881 (although he never practised). After this, he returned to mathematics, deputising for the mathematics professor at King's College London in 1881 and for the professor at University College London in 1883. In 1884, he was appointed to the Goldshmid Chair of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics at University College London. 1891 saw him also appointed to the professorship of Geometry at Gresham College; here he met W.F.R. Weldon, a zoologist who had some interesting problems requiring quantitative solutions. The collaboration, in biometry and evolutionary theory, was a fruitful one and lasted until Weldon died in 1906. Weldon introduced Pearson to Francis Galton, who was interested in aspects of evolution such as heredity and eugenics.

    14. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
    Karl Pearson, a British mathematician and philosopher of science, is best knownfor developing some of the central techniques of modern statistics while
    http://library.thinkquest.org/19926/text/library/bios/pearson.htm
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    The web site you have requested, Evolution Revolution , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Evolution Revolution click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ...
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    Click image for the Site Languages : Site Desciption This web site is designed to teach about evolution theory. Enter this site to take a guided tour to discover the rudiments of evolution. Start by learning what evolution is and then read about the scientists who formed theories about it, including Charles Darwin. Read about genetic variations, natural selection, and other theories.
    Students Harsha M. Irvine High School
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    15. Ideal Point Talk -- Karl Pearson
    Karl Pearson Born 27 March 1857 Died 27 April 1936.
    http://voteview.uh.edu/ideal_point_Karl_Pearson.htm
    Karl Pearson
    Born: 27 March 1857
    Died: 27 April 1936

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    17. Karl Pearson - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All
    Karl Pearson. Karl Pearson (18571936) was a major player in the early developmentof statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right.
    http://acapedia.org/aca/Karl_Pearson
    var srl33t_id = '4200';

    18. Cover Letter: Karl L. Pearson
    Thanks,. Karl L. pearson karlp@ourldsfamily.com Senior Consulting Systems AnalystSenior Consulting Database Analyst 560 W. 700 S. Lehi, Utah 84043. index 6.
    http://ourldsfamily.com/~karlp/cover.shtml
    Printable Version Saturday, March 29, 2003 Dear Sirs/Mmes: I am interested in finding a position that challenges me, yet allows me to use my acquired skill set. I can solve most any problem I'm given and have excellent leadership and team skills. I have an open management philosophy which increases trust and productivity among professional employees. I know how and what it takes to delight clients, either within my own office or those who pay our salaries through purchasing company products. As a proven disaster recovery specialist, I've been called on to repair data for Equifax, Risk Management Alternatives, CBCL (Toronto), Bancolombia (in Colombia, S.A.), CheckRite and Snap-On tools, plus many other major corporations and entities, including some of the largest libraries in the United States, such as Fort Worth Public Library, Omaha Public Library, King County (Washington) Library System, Multnomah County Library System and many others. Included in disaster recovery, I have experience as an expert witness for clients dealing with insurance companies in corporate data-loss cases where the cause and time of the incident was determined. Also aided the client in recovering the lost data and consulted with them to implement practices which would make future attacks less likely, or at least less damaging. Self-published white papers (http://consulting.ourldsfamily.com/mypapers) for, and apps in, the uniVerse version of PICK BASIC and some more for

    19. Karl Pearson (1857-1936)
    There is a large and scattered literature on the work and life of karl pearson(18571936), applied mathematician, philosopher of science, biometrician
    http://www.economics.soton.ac.uk/staff/aldrich/kpreader.htm
    K arl Pearson: A Reader’s Guide There is a large and scattered literature on the work and life of Karl Pearson (1857-1936), applied mathematician, p hilosopher of science, biometrician, statistician, eugenist and contributor to “the woman’s question.” This guide gives both introductory references and leads on specialised topics. It lists writings by statisticians, geneticists, several varieties of historian—of science, of politics, of social thought, of feminism, of literature—and sociologists of science. It tries to accommodate different interests and levels of sophistication. However the coverage is neither exhaustive nor uniform—there is a bias towards the history of statistics. Links This guide has external links to free sites, like the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, and to subscriber sites, like JSTOR JSTOR makes available most of the journal literature on Pearson; it also has excellent search facilities. For information on JSTOR and a list of participating institutions go to htt p w w ... tor.

    20. Karl Pearson Consulting - Home
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