TEXT E Nearly two thousand years
have passed since a census decreed by Caesar Augustus become part of the
greatest story ever told. Many things have changed in the intervening years. The
hotel industry worries more about overbuilding than overcrowding, and if they
had to meet an unexpected influx, few inns would have a manager to accommodate
the weary guests. Now it is the census taker that does the traveling in the fond
hope that a highly mobile population will stay long enough to get a good
sampling. Methods of gathering, recording, and evaluating information have
presumably been improved a great deal. And where then it was the modest purpose
of Rome to obtain a simple head count as an adequate basis for levying taxes,
now batteries of complicated statistical series furnished by governmental
agencies and private organizations are eagerly scanned and interpreted by sages
and seers to get a clue to future events. The Bible does not tell us how the
Roman census takers made out, and as regards our more immediate concern, the
reliability of present day economic forecasting, there are considerable
differences of opinion. They were aired at the celebration of the 125th
anniversary of the American Statistical Association. There was the thought that
business forecasting might Well be on its way from an art to a science, and some
speakers talked about newfangled computers and high-falutin mathematical system
in terms of excitement and endearment which we, at least in our younger years
when these things mattered, would have associated more readily with the
description of a fair maiden. But others pointed to the deplorable record of
highly esteemed forecasts and forecasters with a batting average below that of
the Mets, and the President-elect of the Association cautioned that "high
powered statistical methods are usually in order where the facts are crude and
inadequate, the exact contrary of what crude and inadequate statisticians
assume." We left his birthday party somewhere between hope and despair and with
the conviction, not really newly acquired, that proper statistical methods
applied to ascertainable facts have their merits in economic forecasting as long
as neither forecaster nor public is deluded into mistaking the delineation of
probabilities and trends for a prediction of certainties of mathematical
exactitude. The message the author wishes the reader to get is ______.
A.statisticians have not advanced since the days of the Roman B.statistics is not as yet a science C.statisticians love their machine D.computer is hopeful