Totovader
Game Warden
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2007
- Messages
- 3,321
Yes, you are "measuring the conditional probability of death given a scenario". Sadly that is a meaningless question to us as humans. What we want to know is, which situation is more dangerous to us in a given timeframe?
No, it's not. I'm not measuring the lifetime likelihood of a random event occurring. That is not only miniscule, it's utterly irrelevant to this question. You are more likely to die in a plane crash, but so what- the question is: what is more dangerous?
The question whether spending time in a restaurant filled with guns is more dangerous than driving a car on public roads over a lifetime has no meaning.
Well, that's not really what the question was in the first place. The question is: what is more dangerous- what kills more. Not: what's the likelihood you will die in your lifetime from one of these things. That question is irrelevant to the discussion.
The question that actually matters is whether spending two hours in a restaurant with twelve armed men is more or less dangerous than driving a car for two hours.
This is where you have made your error. There is absolutely no reason to account for "the same amount of time" in this. The data has nothing to do with that, it has nothing to do with the question, and it's an arbitrary requirement. We don't care about your lifetime risk of dying from one of these things in a random event. That's not the question. The question is: given that these two things exist, which is more dangerous. You are confusing conditional probability with random events. I specifically measured the conditional probability because 1) it's where the error is most often made- and thus, this is a response to that and 2) it's what is most apropos to the question: which is more dangerous.
If you wanted to ask the question: which is more likely to kill me in a random event, you can. It's not relevant to this topic since we know that those numbers are going to be minuscule. And I don't care about random events: the audience generally doesn't understand them because they have no frame of reference and the "not gonna happen to me" bias prevents people from thinking critically about the issue. Which is more deadly, on the other hand: a cobra or a kitten... people care about that.
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