Archive for Birmingham

dammit!!

Posted in pictures, Running, Travel, University life with tags , , , , , , , , , on February 11, 2025 by xi'an

When I arrived (from Paris via B’ham airport) at the University of Warwick this morning, I went directly to the secure bike shed where I store my bike between my visits. Except it was no longer there and the shed was strangely barely occupied. I immediately suspected a commando action from the dreaded Warwick Estates, who permanently chase abandoned bikes and tag them with threatening red tags for incoming removal (of said bike) if no removal (of said tag) within two weeks. And indeed when contacted they replied that

The records have been checked, and I can confirm that the bike was removed by Estates following all bikes in the secure storage over at University House being tagged as part of the abandoned bike process, due to a report of abandoned bike/s. The tags were in place for 2 weeks allowing owners to remove these before Estates collecting any bikes with tags remaining.

although the bike was still in storage with them and I thus managed to recover it… Along with a replacement, top-quality, massive D-lock. Now looking for a long-term solution that does not involve buying a Brompton!

David Lodge (1935-2025)

Posted in Books, Travel, University life with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on January 15, 2025 by xi'an

Found upon my return from India that British and Birmingham writer David Lodge had passed away. While I cannot trace all the novels of his’ I read, and while I have a false memory of him being the author of a dystopia on an isolationist England returning to postcard pastoral England (namely, Julian Barnes’ England England!), I clearly remember the fun in reading his (Rummidge) campus trilogy, a fictional Midlands campus that sounded like a mix between the University of Birmingham and the Warwick campus. I vaguely remember enjoying Changing Places, and the barbs on US and UK academic lives, while Small World, focussing on the excesses of 1970’s and 1980’s international academic conferences, was both to the point and hilarious. The third volume, Nice Work, is much less of a satire of academic life, as it focus on a couple of characters, gradually switching opinions about the other (character and community). Plus attacking Thatcherism on the side. Since I read these books in the 1990’s. they may have aged or lost their appeal (esp. the trick at the centre of Nice Work), but they were definitely enjoyable at the time.

travel woes

Posted in Travel, University life with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 29, 2024 by xi'an

On my last trip to Warwick, the local (RER) train I boarded broke on its way to the CDG airport, after hitting something in a tunnel just three stops short of the airport, with so much delay and misleading communication that I missed my flight. While a minor issue for me, since I managed to work (and blog) in an airport lounge for most of the day—where I crossed path with Numerobis—, while waiting for the only flight to B’ham, this made me to reflect anew on the very poor state of the transportation network in Paris and its suburbs, with such incidents (power failures, broken rails, vetust engines, stolen cables, idiots on the tracks, &tc., even without mentioning the strikes) more and more the norm. And to wonder at how the ancient and bursting network is going to cope with the incoming flow of visitors attending the Olympics this summer… Actually, when compared with the other cities with a fairly reasonably efficient airport connection I experienced, it remains a mystery to me why the Greater Paris conurbation—whose president, Valérie Pécresse, was apparently deemed the main culprit for our train break by an incensed fellow passenger that morning!—has kept for years postponing the construction of a dedicated rail line between the airport and central Paris, as the unpredictable and uncomfortable suburban train is not delivering the intended message to Paris visitors and their still-growing contribution to the French GNP. But with the growing public opposition to any new infrastructure, incl. trains, this is unlikely to happen!

Warwickshire honey fungus [by Birmingham]

Posted in Books, pictures, Travel with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 9, 2024 by xi'an

the flawed genius of William Playfair [book review]

Posted in Books, pictures, Statistics, University life with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 26, 2024 by xi'an

David Bellhouse has written a new book on the history of statistics, focussing on William Playfair this time (following his fantastic book on Abraham de Moivre). The Flawed Genius of William Playfair (The Story of the Father of Statistical Graphics) got published a few months ago by the University of Toronto Press.

“[Playfair] was an ideas man whose ideas often did not come to fruition; or, when they did, they withered or exploded.” [p.121]

The impressions I retained from reading this detailed account of a perfect unknown (for me) are of a rather unpleasant, unappealing, unsuccessful, fame-seeking, inefficient, short-sighted, self-aggrandising,  bigoted, dishonest, man, running from debtors for most of his life, with jail episodes for bankruptcy, while trying to make a living from all sorts of doomed enterprises, short-lived blackmailing attempts, and mediocre books that did not sell to many. Similar to David Bellhouse’s colleague earlier wondering at the appeal of exposing such a rogue character, I am left with this lingering interrogation after finishing the book

“[Richard] Price liked what Playfair had written. He found [in 1786] Playfair to be “agreeable” and “useful”.” [p.64]

Not that I did not enjoy reading it!, as it gives a most interesting of the era between the 18th and the 19th Centuries, in particular in its detailed narration of the first months of the French Revolution of 1789, and of the impact of the Industrial Revolution on economics and politics as the birth of capitalism. The book abounds in crossing lots of historical characters, like Richard Price (Bayes’s friend who published his most famous paper), Adam Smith (whose book Playfair reprinted with poor additions), Edward Gibbons (whose book along with Smith’s inspired the title of his Inquiry Into the Permanent Causes of the Decline and Fall of Powerful and Wealthy Nations), Thomas Malthus (competing for an annotated edition of Smith’s book), not to mention the political class of Britain at the time. David Bellhouse’s book demonstrates academic and historical excellence, constantly being very detailed, with a wealth of references, documents, and definite support for or against the rumours that accompany the life and deeds of Playfair. (Frankly, rarely a name has been that inappropriate!) This includes for instance the pictures pointing out to his first (?) forged signature [p.140] and the evacuation of the myth of Playfair as a spy for the British Crown—which the Wikipedia page happily reproduces, pointing out the need for an in-depth revision of said page. Similarly, the book delivered a convincing discussion of arguments for and mostly against Playfair “being the key player in the British operation to forge [French] assignats” towards destroying its economy. A lot of the book is touching upon the then novel issue of paper money, which Playfair only and negatively considered through his own (and catastrophic) experiences. At times, the book is almost too scholarly as it makes reading less fluid than was the case his Abraham de Moivre for instance. (And obviously less than in the contemporary Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrel!)

It may be that my very relative lack of enthusiasm stems from the realisation that the story of Playfair is overall rather little connected with statistical inference, if not with descriptive statistics (albeit with a complete disregard for the quality and sources of his data), as when  publishing a Statistical Breviary on descriptive statistics for a series of countries (and surprisingly sold on Amazon!).  Or Statistical Account of the United States of America. And of course for his innovative graphical representations like the one represented on the cover of the book or the pie chart. I feel that the book is much more engaged in Playfair’s contributions to the then nascent science of economics, as for instant about the shallow and mostly misguided views of his’ on banking and running the economy, while conducting his personal finance and investments so disastrously that it negatively advertised against confidence in such views.

On a very personal level, I noticed that some graphs were provided by my friend and statistics historian Stephen Stigler [who also wrote a review of the book] while an analysis of the poor French involved in a coding scam of Playfair about Napoléon’s escape from Elba was by Christian Genest (whom I first met at a statistics conference dinner on the Lac de Neufchâtel in 1986).

[Disclaimer about potential self-plagiarism: this post or an edited version will eventually appear in my Books Review section in CHANCE. As appropriate for a book about Chance!]