Abstract
Fienberg convincingly demonstrates that Bayesian models and methods represent a powerful approach to squeezing illumination from data in public policy settings. However, no school of inference is without its weaknesses, and, in the face of the ambiguities, uncertainties, and poorly posed questions of the real world, perhaps we should not expect to find a formally correct inferential strategy which can be universally applied, whatever the nature of the question: we should not expect to be able to identify a "norm" approach. An analogy is made between George Box's "no models are right, but some are useful," and inferential systems. © Institute of Mathematical Statistics, 2011.
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CITATION STYLE
Hand, D. J. (2011). Discussion of “Bayesian models and methods in public policy and government settings” by S. E. Fienberg. Statistical Science. https://doi.org/10.1214/11-STS331A
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