It was a rhetorical question. You would not heres Dr. John Campbell talking about excess deaths in 2023 That's per insurance actuaries, the majority of young people don't have life insurance. It can be safely assumed it represents an underreported occurrence
Lol of course I would. Like I said, unless it's only affecting certain regions, I'd absolutely be able to notice if people died who were connected to me.
Per Dunbars number you are only able to maintain about 150 personal relationships. You don't know enough people to notice a fluctuation of say 10% all cause mortality. No one does
You don't think I'd notice 15 people in my social circle dying? If so, that's rich.
Per Dunbars number
How about we go by "per actual situation"? I'm involved in several communities, as well as my job, my hometown people, my friends from university, and my neighbors. Social media makes it pretty easy to keep tabs on everyone.
That's not how statistics work. If you know 150 people in a city of 10 million 15 people wouldn't represent 10% of 10 million. You live in a country with roughly 340 million people your friend group is not an adequate representation of the population. You don't know enough people to notice and that's proven by the fact excess deaths and all cause mortality are at an all time high and you haven't noticed.sourcesourcesourcesource
It was a rhetorical question. You would not heres Dr. John Campbell talking about excess deaths in 2023 That's per insurance actuaries, the majority of young people don't have life insurance. It can be safely assumed it represents an underreported occurrence
Lol of course I would. Like I said, unless it's only affecting certain regions, I'd absolutely be able to notice if people died who were connected to me.
Per Dunbars number you are only able to maintain about 150 personal relationships. You don't know enough people to notice a fluctuation of say 10% all cause mortality. No one does
You don't think I'd notice 15 people in my social circle dying? If so, that's rich.
How about we go by "per actual situation"? I'm involved in several communities, as well as my job, my hometown people, my friends from university, and my neighbors. Social media makes it pretty easy to keep tabs on everyone.
That's not how statistics work. If you know 150 people in a city of 10 million 15 people wouldn't represent 10% of 10 million. You live in a country with roughly 340 million people your friend group is not an adequate representation of the population. You don't know enough people to notice and that's proven by the fact excess deaths and all cause mortality are at an all time high and you haven't noticed. source source source source