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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Christopher J. PhillipsPublisher: Princeton University Press Imprint: Princeton University Press ISBN: 9780691180212ISBN 10: 0691180210 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 26 March 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Language: English Table of ContentsReviewsWith clear and careful writing, Scouting and Scoring describes how, for a large part of its history, professional baseball has been accompanied by an array of performance statistics. Chronicling different phases in baseball's development since the nineteenth century, this book focuses on the performance measures used and the bureaucratic infrastructures that supported their use. This is a great topic and not just for those that like baseball. -Michael Lynch, Cornell University This striking, elegant, and brilliant book offers a dual account of the scouting and scoring traditions that have made modern baseball what it is. Scouting and Scoring is a unique contribution to the history of quantification-and the history of the modern human sciences more generally-told by a talented historian with a great love for the untold stories of baseball tabulators. -Rebecca Lemov, Harvard University Christopher Phillips knows that you can't spell history without story. He goes back, back, back--from beyond the dawn of baseball's quantification and evaluation through to today's worship of objective data--to find where subjectivity and humanity stubbornly lurk. Scouting and Scoring is provocative, thorough, and brilliant. --John Thorn, official historian of Major League Baseball This striking, elegant, and brilliant book offers a dual account of the scouting and scoring traditions that have made modern baseball what it is. Scouting and Scoring is a unique contribution to the history of quantification--and the history of the modern human sciences more generally--told by a talented historian with a great love for the untold stories of baseball tabulators. --Rebecca Lemov, Harvard University With clear and careful writing, Scouting and Scoring describes how, for a large part of its history, professional baseball has been accompanied by an array of performance statistics. Chronicling different phases in baseball's development since the nineteenth century, this book focuses on the performance measures used and the bureaucratic infrastructures that supported their use. This is a great topic and not just for those that like baseball. --Michael Lynch, Cornell University Winner of a SABR Baseball Research Award, Society for American Baseball Research The subject of Christopher Phillips's Scouting and Scoring is baseball, but it's worth reading for more than just the baseball. The book is an effort to help us understand one of the oldest problems in modern societies, which is how to evaluate human beings. ---Louis Menand, New Yorker Finalist for the CASEY Award for Best Baseball Book of the Year, Spitball Magazine Phillips' book is an enticing read for baseball data enthusiasts and, more broadly, those interested in thinking about notions such as 'fact' and 'truth,' how one measures the seemingly immeasurable, and attempts to quantify human potential. ---Russ Goodman, MAA Reviews The subject of Christopher Phillips's Scouting and Scoring is baseball, but it's worth reading for more than just the baseball. The book is an effort to help us understand one of the oldest problems in modern societies, which is how to evaluate human beings. ---Louis Menand, New Yorker This striking, elegant, and brilliant book offers a dual account of the scouting and scoring traditions that have made modern baseball what it is. Scouting and Scoring is a unique contribution to the history of quantification--and the history of the modern human sciences more generally--told by a talented historian with a great love for the untold stories of baseball tabulators. --Rebecca Lemov, Harvard University With clear and careful writing, Scouting and Scoring describes how, for a large part of its history, professional baseball has been accompanied by an array of performance statistics. Chronicling different phases in baseball's development since the nineteenth century, this book focuses on the performance measures used and the bureaucratic infrastructures that supported their use. This is a great topic and not just for those that like baseball. --Michael Lynch, Cornell University Many have written about the sabermetric revolution, but no one has ever presented the history of it all in such a coherent and entertaining fashion as Christopher Phillips has done here. Everyone interested in understanding modern baseball needs to read this book. --Dave Smith, founder of Retrosheet Christopher Phillips knows that you can't spell history without story. He goes back, back, back--from beyond the dawn of baseball's quantification and evaluation through to today's worship of objective data--to find where subjectivity and humanity stubbornly lurk. Scouting and Scoring is provocative, thorough, and brilliant. --John Thorn, official historian of Major League Baseball With clear and careful writing, Scouting and Scoring describes how, for a large part of its history, professional baseball has been accompanied by an array of performance statistics. Chronicling different phases in baseball's development since the nineteenth century, this book focuses on the performance measures used and the bureaucratic infrastructures that supported their use. This is a great topic and not just for those that like baseball. --Michael Lynch, Cornell University This striking, elegant, and brilliant book offers a dual account of the scouting and scoring traditions that have made modern baseball what it is. Scouting and Scoring is a unique contribution to the history of quantification--and the history of the modern human sciences more generally--told by a talented historian with a great love for the untold stories of baseball tabulators. --Rebecca Lemov, Harvard University Author InformationChristopher J. Phillips is associate professor of history at Carnegie Mellon University. He is the author of The New Math: A Political History. His work has appeared in such publications as the New York Times, Science, and Nature. He lives in Pittsburgh. 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