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TE status of statistics has shifted radically in the past 30 years. Whereas professionals and politicians once held up statistics as a guarantor of political neutrality and social scientists embraced them as evidence of scientific objectivity, both sets of claims now ring hollow.1 Or so it seems to the historian or sociologist of science who has followed the past decades of scholarship. Social historians have demonstrated the political intentions behind official statistics (Scott, 1988; Anderson, 1988, 1999), and historians of statistics have revealed the ways that social, political, and professional contexts have shaped the development of specific statistical tools and the interpretation of statistical measures (Brian, 1994; Desrosieres, 1998; Szreter, 1996). One of the most influential studies in this move to historicize statistics was a pathbreaking study by Donald MacKenzie (1978) on the way in which technical debates over the choice of statistical indices were informed by professional and political commitments. More specifically, MacKenzie documented the close articulation between the eugenic and social reform programs of leading statisticians and the "invention" of mathematical statistics in Britain in the first decades of the twentieth century.
My contribution to this special volume on "Numbers" builds on MacKenzie's analysis by comparing his example with a number of nineteenth-century technical-political debates in statistics. The question that interests me concerns the national specificity of MacKenzie's analysis. To what extent was the pattern of tight articulation between technical, cognitive, and political considerations specific to the British statistical community? A second question concerns the relation of modes of discourse and styles of statistical reasoning (where "statistical reasoning" refers to the type of statistical entities and forms of explanation engaged).2 Finally, I am interested in how this particular pattern of articulation helps to account for Britain's leading role in the development of mathematical statistics at the turn of the century. While a few brief case studies are clearly inadequate to fully address these problems, they can be used to illustrate the questions and to raise a number of suggestions for further research.
The case studies in this paper are part of a larger study comparing the use of population statistics in France and Britain between 1825 and 1885. Whereas most studies in the history of statistics focus on the inventors of new methods...