Texas sharpshooter: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{a|design|}}The famous fallacy of probabilistic reasoning. If you happen upon an event which, in the abstract is highly improbable at random, there is a tendency to impute foul play. But at the point where the event has already happened it is not a random event but ''history''. Treating it as a contingency can be misleading. Predicting that a Mr Bentos of Cheltenham will win next week’s lottery is hard. Predicting that he won ''last'' week’s is a cinch. This can...")
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{a|design|}}The famous fallacy of probabilistic reasoning. If you happen upon an event which, in the abstract is highly improbable at random, there is a tendency to impute foul play. But at the point where the event has already happened it is not a random event but ''history''. Treating it as a contingency can be misleading.  
{{a|stats|}}The famous fallacy of probabilistic reasoning. If you happen upon an event which, in the abstract is highly improbable at random, there is a tendency to impute foul play. But at the point where the event has already happened it is not a random event but ''history''. Treating it as a contingency can be misleading.  


Predicting that a Mr Bentos of Cheltenham will win next week’s lottery is hard. Predicting that he won ''last'' week’s is a cinch.
Predicting that a Mr Bentos of Cheltenham will win next week’s lottery is hard. Predicting that he won ''last'' week’s is a cinch.

Latest revision as of 09:18, 26 June 2024

Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics


Index: Click to expand:

Comments? Questions? Suggestions? Requests? Insults? We’d love to 📧 hear from you.
Sign up for our newsletter.

The famous fallacy of probabilistic reasoning. If you happen upon an event which, in the abstract is highly improbable at random, there is a tendency to impute foul play. But at the point where the event has already happened it is not a random event but history. Treating it as a contingency can be misleading.

Predicting that a Mr Bentos of Cheltenham will win next week’s lottery is hard. Predicting that he won last week’s is a cinch.

This can put people in jail who should not be (Sally Clark), keep out of jail people who should be (Om J. Simpson), and confuse the hell out of creationists. Evolution by natural selection is a form of inverse sharpshooter exercise, whereby you deliberately exclude all the bad shots. You only need a few lucky good ones for it to work, and no-one gets the credit for it. Sorry, Baby Jesus.

See also