Parable of the squirrels: Difference between revisions
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{{a|devil|}}Once upon a time, there was discord in the kingdom of the squirrels. The red squirrels | {{a|devil|}}Once upon a time, there was discord in the kingdom of the squirrels. The red squirrels rose up and complained to the statistician-general. <br> | ||
They said, “O, Great Statistician! The grey squirrels have more nuts than us! ” | |||
The greys couldn’t be reached for comment, because they were too busy munching on all their nuts. | The greys couldn’t be reached for comment, because they were too busy munching on all their nuts. | ||
Line 5: | Line 6: | ||
The statistician mumbled something about multivariate regressions but the reds would not be deterred. Their spokesquirrel continued: | The statistician mumbled something about multivariate regressions but the reds would not be deterred. Their spokesquirrel continued: | ||
:“Look: on average, grey squirrels have more nuts than red squirrels. This cannot be denied. Is it not so?” | :“Look: on average, grey squirrels have more nuts than red squirrels. This cannot be denied. Is it not so?” | ||
:“It is so,” said the Statistician. “The data are very clear about this.” | :“It is so,” said the Statistician. “The data are very clear about this. Grey squirrels have twenty percent more nuts, on [[average]], than reds.” | ||
:“''Exactly''. This | :“''Exactly''. This is unjust! It is due to illegitimate hierarchical structures in the squirrel community, which unfairly skew nut distributions towards those great big fat, greasy grey squirrels.” | ||
:“Hey!” said a passing grey squirrel. “Enough of the fat-shaming. And the trash-talking about grease, for that matter.” | :“Hey!” said a passing grey squirrel. “Enough of the fat-shaming. And the trash-talking about grease, for that matter.” | ||
:“Therefore,” continued the Red Leader, “as we red squirrels are systematically repressed, it follows as a matter of inexorable logic, that ''this'' red squirrel, Errol, | :“Therefore,” continued the Red Leader, “as we red squirrels are systematically repressed, it follows as a matter of inexorable logic, that ''this'' red squirrel, Errol, must have been deprived by — how much did you say?” | ||
:“I | :“Twenty percent?” | ||
:“ ... and ''this'' grey squirrel, Frank, has too many.” | :Yes! Twenty percent! So Errol should have 20% ''more'' nuts than he currently has...” | ||
:“I should?” said Errol. | |||
:“Don’t let the side down!” hissed Red Leader. “I’m trying to get you more nuts!” | |||
:“Oh, yes! I should!” said Errol. | |||
:“ ... and ''this'' grey squirrel, Frank, has too many, and should have twenty percent fewer.” | |||
:“What?” said Frank, crinkled his brow, but got on with munching. | :“What?” said Frank, crinkled his brow, but got on with munching. | ||
: | :“Therefore, O, Great Statistician, we propose that henceforth we systematically deprive Errol, and grey squirrels like him, of nuts, and give them to Frank, and similar red squirrels, to correct the imbalance.” | ||
The Great Statistician thought about it for a while, and then said | |||
Revision as of 13:23, 27 February 2021
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Once upon a time, there was discord in the kingdom of the squirrels. The red squirrels rose up and complained to the statistician-general.
They said, “O, Great Statistician! The grey squirrels have more nuts than us! ”
The greys couldn’t be reached for comment, because they were too busy munching on all their nuts.
The statistician mumbled something about multivariate regressions but the reds would not be deterred. Their spokesquirrel continued:
- “Look: on average, grey squirrels have more nuts than red squirrels. This cannot be denied. Is it not so?”
- “It is so,” said the Statistician. “The data are very clear about this. Grey squirrels have twenty percent more nuts, on average, than reds.”
- “Exactly. This is unjust! It is due to illegitimate hierarchical structures in the squirrel community, which unfairly skew nut distributions towards those great big fat, greasy grey squirrels.”
- “Hey!” said a passing grey squirrel. “Enough of the fat-shaming. And the trash-talking about grease, for that matter.”
- “Therefore,” continued the Red Leader, “as we red squirrels are systematically repressed, it follows as a matter of inexorable logic, that this red squirrel, Errol, must have been deprived by — how much did you say?”
- “Twenty percent?”
- Yes! Twenty percent! So Errol should have 20% more nuts than he currently has...”
- “I should?” said Errol.
- “Don’t let the side down!” hissed Red Leader. “I’m trying to get you more nuts!”
- “Oh, yes! I should!” said Errol.
- “ ... and this grey squirrel, Frank, has too many, and should have twenty percent fewer.”
- “What?” said Frank, crinkled his brow, but got on with munching.
- “Therefore, O, Great Statistician, we propose that henceforth we systematically deprive Errol, and grey squirrels like him, of nuts, and give them to Frank, and similar red squirrels, to correct the imbalance.”
The Great Statistician thought about it for a while, and then said