The series Questions of the Day and of the Fray (QDF) is a publication series issued by The Francis Galton Laboratory for National Eugenics (GLNE). Primarily authored by Karl Pearson, F.R.S., the Galton Professor, and often featuring contributions by David Heron, D.Sc., the series, running at least up to QDF12, served as a highly polemical platform to defend the Laboratory’s quantitative, statistical research methods against critics, particularly those advocating environmental causation or inaccurate statistical interpretation.
Defense of Foundational Studies and Methodology (QDF01, QDF03, QDF05, QDF06)
The earliest publications addressed severe professional scrutiny of GLNE’s research into parental alcoholism. QDF01 (1910) was Pearson’s Reply to the Cambridge Economists (Mr. J. M. Keynes and Professor Alfred Marshall), defending the data and asserting that their critique of the original memoir suffered from “faulty logic”. Pearson maintained that the data showed no discoverable initial differentiation in wages between temperate and intemperate sections of the population being compared, countering the suggestion that drinkers were originally better stock who had fallen due to alcohol. QDF03 (1911) provided further corrections to misstatements made by Sir Victor Horsley and Dr. Mary D. Sturge. Pearson clarified that the study did find higher death rates among children of drinking parents, but argued this excess was due mostly to the differential home environment (carelessness, accidents, overlaying, and burns) rather than the “toxic action of alcohol,” which he claimed had been “grossly exaggerated”.
This core conflict reinforced Pearson’s broader insistence on the necessity of rigorous statistical technique in social policy and public health. In QDF05 (Social Problems), Pearson argued that the future of sociology must be based on “measurement and number,” not sentiment or authority. He exposed statistical errors, such as confusing correlation (or “association”) with causation, citing failed proofs concerning the effect of housing density on child size (QDF05) and attributing a falling rate of female drunkenness to specific institutions when general economic factors were at play. QDF06 (Eugenics and Public Health) criticized public health officials for failing to standardize judgment (the “personal equation”) and drawing vast conclusions from insufficient data (“paucity of data”), which could lead to “fatuous legislative proposals”.
Heredity, Environment, and Disease (QDF02, QDF04)
QDF02, authored by David Heron, defended an earlier memoir’s finding that hereditary factors were the chief determining cause of intelligence differentiation, with environment contributing only a “second order” effect [QDF02]. Heron strongly defended the use of teacher assessments of intelligence against the dismissal of critics like Mr. G. Udny Yule, arguing that the assessments were “highly correlated” with examination results.
In QDF04 (The fight against Tuberculosis), Pearson challenged the consensus that anti-consumption campaigns and sanitation were responsible for the falling death rate from phthisis. He statistically demonstrated that the rate of decline retarded during the period of active anti-consumption efforts. Pearson maintained that constitutional susceptibilitywas a more critical factor in tuberculosis causation than mere infection and criticized opponents for confusing “association with causation”.
The Mendelism Trilogy (QDF07, QDF08, QDF09)
A significant focus of the later QDF series was the critique of American eugenicists, particularly the Eugenics Record Office (E.R.O.), for applying simplistic Mendelian rules to complex human traits.
Heron’s QDF07 launched a severe attack, accusing the E.R.O. of using “fallacious methods of reasoning,” presenting inaccurate and contradictory data, and promoting the “dangerous eugenic rule” that “Weakness should marry strength”.
Pearson continued this argument in QDF08 and QDF09, using psychometric data to argue for the absolute continuity of intelligence [QDF08, 451, 454]. He refuted the idea that mental defect was a simple recessive Mendelian “unit character,” demonstrating that there was significant overlap between the intelligence scores of “mentally defective” and “normal” children. Pearson concluded that decisions regarding segregation should be based on standardized criteria of “social inefficiency” rather than on intelligence tests alone, noting that only children with extreme mental defects (e.g., four or more years of backwardness) could be reliably differentiated from the normal population (QDF09).
Philosophical and Commemorative Works (QDF10, QDF11, QDF12)
In QDF10 (The Science of Man), Pearson argued for an expanded definition of Anthropology that included psychometry and vigorimetry, focusing on problems of “racial efficiency” and applying rigorous quantitative methods to be “utile to the State”.
The series culminated with appreciations of intellectual giants. QDF11 celebrated Francis Galton’s centenary (1822–1922) [QDF11, 601]. Pearson credited Galton with freeing intellectual thought from “dogmatic bondage” and establishing the statistical methods necessary for racial studies (mass-phenomena). QDF12 provided an appreciation of Charles Darwin (1809–1882) as a “Master Mind” and “Liberator” whose doctrine of variation and natural selection provided the necessary intellectual freedom from “old tribal beliefs” [QDF12, 634, 635, 650].