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1.4: The Battle of Words Versus Numbers

  • Page ID
    48871
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    We could just talk about the variation as part of prose and discourse. After all, we readily discuss variation. By type, we say, this person is a male, and that person is a female (again, acknowledging the binary for only this example); this person is in psychology, that person is in medical school; this person is an extrovert, this person is an introvert; this person is a social drinker, that person has a problem with alcohol. By amount, we say this person is taller than that person, this person is faster than that person, that person has more money than that person, and that person drinks more than that person. In most cases, simply stating that one something is more or less than another is sufficient for communicating differences in amount.

    You might already anticipate that the preceding discourse will have problems. All discussions of variation depend on perspective, and perspectives are biased. Not that bias is a bad thing, it is part of our flawed human nature. However, we must check our biases, and we don’t always do that. As an innocuous example, when one person from Chicago says it is a hot day, another person from the South might say there is nothing to whine about because they have a different experience of that same temperature. Yes, it does become a problem when one person says this child has a behavioral problem, but another person says the child is displaying behaviors that reflect struggles with trauma.

    The bias inherent when we use words is that it is difficult to extend the meaning of the conversation beyond those who are having the conversation. When a teacher says to another teacher that one of their students has a behavioral problem, those words are not likely going to be shared by the parent of that child. A behavioral problem to a teacher has a different meaning compared to the parent’s meaning of a behavioral problem. Having a number that describes the extent of the behavioral problem is the beginning of some common frame of reference for discussion.

    The numbers can guard against when we generalize something. When we say someone is depressed, the word alone doesn’t give you the full description of the depression. The devils are in the details. To what extent is the person depressed, how depressed, in what ways does depression show, and is it bad or bad enough that action needs to be taken? Words can describe these details, but we need in-depth explanations. With a set of numbers, we can efficiently summarize these details about the extent of the depression.


    This page titled 1.4: The Battle of Words Versus Numbers is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.