this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2026
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Yeah I don't think this is the burn on statisticians OP makes it out to be. Lots of technical disciplines use mathematics, like... all of them I think? I don't know of any field that doesn't incorporate math that isn't purely artistic.
Also why are dentists catching strays?
Statisticians are typically lumped in with mathematicians because Statistics is typically treated like a mathematics course. This isn't really the case with other technical disciplines.
Dentists are catching strays because they're likewise kinda considered "doctors" in a medical sense. They're specialists in their own field that get lumped in with the more general field by a quirk of categorization.
I don't know how it is elsewhere, but in the US they aren't "kinda considered" doctors, they are doctors. They have terminal medical degrees and practitioner's licenses same as any other medical practitioner. They're kinda segmented off from the rest of medical practice because of how dentistry evolved alongside other historical healing practices, but they are doctors.
Second, is statistics not a branch of mathematics? The courses I took on probability and statistics were taught by the math department. I don't see how it can't be. Is it "pure" math? Depends on how you define pure but probably not. Is it "easy" math? Arguably some of it is, though I think people who think stats is an easy science probably aren't very good at it. All that I get. But the idea that it is (uniquely among technical disciplines) "not math" is... confounding to me.
I think the chasm really is within the statistics discipline, less so between statistics a d mathematics. If you're doing statistics research you're essentially a mathematician in the statistics subfield. If you're applying statistics in another field, you're a statistician in the professional worker sense.
I think that's so, but that relationship between theory and application exists for every technical discipline. Computer scientists vs software engineers, for example. The line is usually blurry; I tend to operate closer to the applied side of software, for instance, but I still think about and am informed by the theoretical side, just as theory is shaped by the experimental results of application.
"Mathematics" is an odd case because what people call "pure mathematics" is upstream of even the theoretical side of technical specialties. Like, what a theoretical mathematician might call an applied mathematician, I might call a data scientist, because they're closer to pure theory than I am, but still closer to technical application than the theoretical mathematician. It's a super-theory that underpins other theoretical domains.
Nice summary! And I completely agree, mathematics provide a toolbox for reasoning. A proof about a model is the cheapest way of obtaining knowledge