Which Stats Text Is More Math-Intensive?

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I have tried many stats textbooks and none of them really works for me. The issue is that there are too many formulas and too little proofs or derivations. Some of these formulas are really technical (ugly) and you can't get the feel on what's happening without seeing the derivation.



To give a flavor of what I'm looking for, I will point to Chapter 4 in Wasserman's All of Statistics. In it, he derived the inequalities given in the chapter. So that's good; you know where the numbers came from.







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  • ive been reading silvey's book statistical inference. he doesnt prove everything but he points to Lehmann for proofs, also a good book so far.
    – Tim kinsella
    Jul 16 at 2:14











  • You might try Degroot and Schervish.
    – Michael Hardy
    Jul 16 at 2:47










  • Rice's "Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis" has served me very well.
    – RideTheWavelet
    Jul 16 at 6:46














up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I have tried many stats textbooks and none of them really works for me. The issue is that there are too many formulas and too little proofs or derivations. Some of these formulas are really technical (ugly) and you can't get the feel on what's happening without seeing the derivation.



To give a flavor of what I'm looking for, I will point to Chapter 4 in Wasserman's All of Statistics. In it, he derived the inequalities given in the chapter. So that's good; you know where the numbers came from.







share|cite|improve this question



















  • ive been reading silvey's book statistical inference. he doesnt prove everything but he points to Lehmann for proofs, also a good book so far.
    – Tim kinsella
    Jul 16 at 2:14











  • You might try Degroot and Schervish.
    – Michael Hardy
    Jul 16 at 2:47










  • Rice's "Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis" has served me very well.
    – RideTheWavelet
    Jul 16 at 6:46












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I have tried many stats textbooks and none of them really works for me. The issue is that there are too many formulas and too little proofs or derivations. Some of these formulas are really technical (ugly) and you can't get the feel on what's happening without seeing the derivation.



To give a flavor of what I'm looking for, I will point to Chapter 4 in Wasserman's All of Statistics. In it, he derived the inequalities given in the chapter. So that's good; you know where the numbers came from.







share|cite|improve this question











I have tried many stats textbooks and none of them really works for me. The issue is that there are too many formulas and too little proofs or derivations. Some of these formulas are really technical (ugly) and you can't get the feel on what's happening without seeing the derivation.



To give a flavor of what I'm looking for, I will point to Chapter 4 in Wasserman's All of Statistics. In it, he derived the inequalities given in the chapter. So that's good; you know where the numbers came from.









share|cite|improve this question










share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question









asked Jul 16 at 2:11









Andy Tam

1,32311526




1,32311526











  • ive been reading silvey's book statistical inference. he doesnt prove everything but he points to Lehmann for proofs, also a good book so far.
    – Tim kinsella
    Jul 16 at 2:14











  • You might try Degroot and Schervish.
    – Michael Hardy
    Jul 16 at 2:47










  • Rice's "Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis" has served me very well.
    – RideTheWavelet
    Jul 16 at 6:46
















  • ive been reading silvey's book statistical inference. he doesnt prove everything but he points to Lehmann for proofs, also a good book so far.
    – Tim kinsella
    Jul 16 at 2:14











  • You might try Degroot and Schervish.
    – Michael Hardy
    Jul 16 at 2:47










  • Rice's "Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis" has served me very well.
    – RideTheWavelet
    Jul 16 at 6:46















ive been reading silvey's book statistical inference. he doesnt prove everything but he points to Lehmann for proofs, also a good book so far.
– Tim kinsella
Jul 16 at 2:14





ive been reading silvey's book statistical inference. he doesnt prove everything but he points to Lehmann for proofs, also a good book so far.
– Tim kinsella
Jul 16 at 2:14













You might try Degroot and Schervish.
– Michael Hardy
Jul 16 at 2:47




You might try Degroot and Schervish.
– Michael Hardy
Jul 16 at 2:47












Rice's "Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis" has served me very well.
– RideTheWavelet
Jul 16 at 6:46




Rice's "Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis" has served me very well.
– RideTheWavelet
Jul 16 at 6:46















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