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#13
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On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 12:57:47 GMT, (Henry Spencer)
wrote: In article .net, algomeysa2 wrote: "The risk you face of dying as a result of an asteroid impact is about 1 in 20,000, the same risk you face of dying in a plane crash. - Source: Spaceguard Survey" The fact that that's obviously a completely bogus statistic.....considering, oh...... I can search the web and find many people who have died in plane crashes, but, there's not one instance in recorded history of anyone dying in an asteroid impact...... makes that rather suspect.... Depends on how long a period the number is averaged over. The chances of dying from an asteroid impact tend to be dominated by extremely rare events that kill a sizable fraction of the human race, so to check on that statistic, you need a very long averaging period indeed -- recorded history is much too short. "Misleading" is a better word than "bogus". Depending on whether Tunguska was a comet or an asteroid, there is a finite probability that one or more people died from asteroid impact. However, the death(s) would probably be unreported, as the victim(s) would have been nomadic reindeer herders (Sami) or fur trappers or other people unlikely to be reported missing. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. However, in these bureaucratic days it's easy to assume that such fatalities will be reported. We're too accustomed to the way things are to be able to appreciate how it was back when. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
#14
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Jonathan Silverlight writes:
algomeysa2 writes: Interesting page, but, you know, when I go to a webpage and the first thing I see is this: "The risk you face of dying as a result of an asteroid impact is about 1 in 20,000, the same risk you face of dying in a plane crash. - Source: Spaceguard Survey" The fact that that's obviously a completely bogus statistic.....considering, oh...... I can search the web and find many people who have died in plane crashes, but, there's not one instance in recorded history of anyone dying in an asteroid impact...... makes that rather suspect.... On what basis do you call it a fact that it is "a completely bogus statistic"? In reality, the statistic is not at all bogus. It's your reasoning that's bogus. You're trying to compare a relatively high frequency, low fatality event (plane crashes) with a relatively low frequency, high fatality event (asteroid impacts). Suppose an asteroid impact that causes a mass extinction (let's say 50 percent of the human population eventually dies as a result) happens once every 10 million years. Well, the current global population is about 6 billion. That makes for an average death rate of 600 people per year. How many people die in plane crashes each year? The number is comparable to within the limits of this execise. I would say that shows how completely bogus the statistic is. What you would say is irrelevant; the facts are relevant, and it's a fact that there is nothing wrong with the statistic; the problem is in its correct interpretation. The actual number of people exposed to the danger of dying in a plane crash is a tiny fraction of the number now living in various degrees of poverty on Earth. But it is an absolute certainty that some of them will die in a plane crash. Which does nothing to substantiate your claim that the statistic is bogus. And the number of people who have lived in the past ten million years is vastly more than the current population - Clarke's "behind every man now alive stand thirty ghosts" comes to mind. Illogical, given that you can't be killed if you're already dead. The relevant number is therefore the number of people killed in an asteroid impact, which has to be some fraction less than or equal to unity of the number of people living at the time. In fact 10 million years ago man didn't exist. I can imagine one dinosaur telling another, some 65 million years ago, that 10 million years earlier, dinosaurs didn't exist. Does that somehow make the statistic of their death rate "bogus"? But then no-one's interested in spending money on solving problems that actually kill people. After all, we've spent trillions to ensure the destruction of all life on Earth. Actually, money has been spent disproportionately on solving problems that actually kill people: disease, automobile safety, floods, aircraft safety, highway safety, and so on. |
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Jonathan Silverlight writes:
algomeysa2 writes: Interesting page, but, you know, when I go to a webpage and the first thing I see is this: "The risk you face of dying as a result of an asteroid impact is about 1 in 20,000, the same risk you face of dying in a plane crash. - Source: Spaceguard Survey" The fact that that's obviously a completely bogus statistic.....considering, oh...... I can search the web and find many people who have died in plane crashes, but, there's not one instance in recorded history of anyone dying in an asteroid impact...... makes that rather suspect.... On what basis do you call it a fact that it is "a completely bogus statistic"? In reality, the statistic is not at all bogus. It's your reasoning that's bogus. You're trying to compare a relatively high frequency, low fatality event (plane crashes) with a relatively low frequency, high fatality event (asteroid impacts). Suppose an asteroid impact that causes a mass extinction (let's say 50 percent of the human population eventually dies as a result) happens once every 10 million years. Well, the current global population is about 6 billion. That makes for an average death rate of 600 people per year. How many people die in plane crashes each year? The number is comparable to within the limits of this execise. I would say that shows how completely bogus the statistic is. What you would say is irrelevant; the facts are relevant, and it's a fact that there is nothing wrong with the statistic; the problem is in its correct interpretation. The actual number of people exposed to the danger of dying in a plane crash is a tiny fraction of the number now living in various degrees of poverty on Earth. But it is an absolute certainty that some of them will die in a plane crash. Which does nothing to substantiate your claim that the statistic is bogus. And the number of people who have lived in the past ten million years is vastly more than the current population - Clarke's "behind every man now alive stand thirty ghosts" comes to mind. Illogical, given that you can't be killed if you're already dead. The relevant number is therefore the number of people killed in an asteroid impact, which has to be some fraction less than or equal to unity of the number of people living at the time. In fact 10 million years ago man didn't exist. I can imagine one dinosaur telling another, some 65 million years ago, that 10 million years earlier, dinosaurs didn't exist. Does that somehow make the statistic of their death rate "bogus"? But then no-one's interested in spending money on solving problems that actually kill people. After all, we've spent trillions to ensure the destruction of all life on Earth. Actually, money has been spent disproportionately on solving problems that actually kill people: disease, automobile safety, floods, aircraft safety, highway safety, and so on. |
#16
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In article ,
Mary Shafer wrote: Depending on whether Tunguska was a comet or an asteroid, there is a finite probability that one or more people died from asteroid impact... And that was only about a century ago, too. It's easy to forget that when you go back as little as a few centuries, "recorded history" is the history of only a modest fraction of the world... and if you go back a few thousand, "recorded history" is small fragments of the history of a few isolated locations. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. However, in these bureaucratic days it's easy to assume that such fatalities will be reported... An even more modern example: Several years before Skylab itself came down, the S-II stage of the Saturn V that launched it -- quite a bit bigger than Skylab itself -- came down, in pieces, in central Africa. We think it didn't kill anyone... but nobody is actually sure of that. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#17
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In article ,
Mary Shafer wrote: Depending on whether Tunguska was a comet or an asteroid, there is a finite probability that one or more people died from asteroid impact... And that was only about a century ago, too. It's easy to forget that when you go back as little as a few centuries, "recorded history" is the history of only a modest fraction of the world... and if you go back a few thousand, "recorded history" is small fragments of the history of a few isolated locations. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. However, in these bureaucratic days it's easy to assume that such fatalities will be reported... An even more modern example: Several years before Skylab itself came down, the S-II stage of the Saturn V that launched it -- quite a bit bigger than Skylab itself -- came down, in pieces, in central Africa. We think it didn't kill anyone... but nobody is actually sure of that. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#18
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Jonathan Silverlight wrote:
I would say that shows how completely bogus the statistic is. Please do not display your innumeracy in public. Paul |
#19
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Jonathan Silverlight wrote:
I would say that shows how completely bogus the statistic is. Please do not display your innumeracy in public. Paul |
#20
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![]() algomeysa2 wrote: ...... there's not one instance in recorded history of anyone dying in an asteroid impact. Tunguska. There've been numerous accounts of people killed by stones falling from the sky. For most of recorded history these accounts were dismissed. Educated folks knew they were the fantasies. Only ignorant peasants would believe stones fall from the sky! -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
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