Statis Books
Showing 1-13 of 13
Navigating the Stars (Sentinels of the Galaxy, #1)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.15 — 4,172 ratings — published 2018
No Life But This (UniCorp, #2)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 3.27 — 318 ratings — published 2014
Project Hail Mary (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.50 — 995,411 ratings — published 2021
A Long, Long Sleep (UniCorp, #1)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 3.82 — 7,523 ratings — published 2011
Mastering 'Metrics: The Path from Cause to Effect (Kindle Edition)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.27 — 835 ratings — published 2014
An Introduction to Statistical Learning: with Applications in R (Springer Texts in Statistics)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.59 — 2,314 ratings — published 2013
Small Data: The Tiny Clues that Uncover Huge Trends (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 3.78 — 2,958 ratings — published 2016
Probability and Bayesian Modeling (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.67 — 3 ratings — published
Introduction to Probability (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.50 — 167 ratings — published 2014
Naked Statistics: Stripping the Dread from the Data (Paperback)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 3.96 — 15,010 ratings — published 2012
How to Lie with Statistics (Paperback)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 3.84 — 17,807 ratings — published 1954
All of Statistics: A Concise Course in Statistical Inference (Springer Texts in Statistics)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.25 — 394 ratings — published 2003
Statistical Inference (Hardcover)
by (shelved 1 time as statis)
avg rating 4.17 — 393 ratings — published 2001
“Classical Greece is perhaps the place in which this tension found for a moment an uncertain, precarious equilibirum. In the course of the subsequent political history of the West, the tendency to depoliticise the city by transforming it into a house or a family, ruled by blood relation or by merely economic operations, will alternate together with other, symmetrically opposed phases in which everything that is unpolitical must be mobilised and politicised. In accordance with the prevailing of one or the other tendency, the function, situation and form of civil war will also change. But so long as the words 'family' and 'city', 'private' and 'public', 'economy' and 'politics' maintain an albeit tenuous meaning, it is unlikely that it can ever be eliminated from the political scene of the West.”
― The Omnibus Homo Sacer
― The Omnibus Homo Sacer
“The form that civil war has acquired today in world history is terrorism. If the Foucauldian diagnosis of modern politics as biopolitics is correct, and if the genealogy that traces it back to an oikonomical-theological paradigm is equally correct, then global terrorism is the form that civil war acquires when life as such becomes the stakes of politics. Precisely when the polis appears in the reassuring figure of an oikos - the 'Common European Home', or the world as the absolute space of global economic management - then stasis, which can no longer be situated in the treshold between the oikos and the polis, becomes the paradigm of every conflict and re-emerges in the form of terror. Terrorism is the 'global civil war' which time and again invests this or that zone of planetary space. It is no coincidence that the 'terror' should coincide with the moment in which life as such - the nation (which is to say, birth) - became the principle of sovereignty. The sole form in which life as such can be politicised is its unconditioned exposure to death - that is, bare life.”
― The Omnibus Homo Sacer
― The Omnibus Homo Sacer
