Kaffis Mark V wrote:
But the ellipsis isn't a decimal number. Adding it into the representation makes it no longer a decimal approximation, it makes it a precise and accurate representation of what you cannot fully write down.
That's irrelevant. First, an irrational number can only be approximated by a decimal number. Second, the ellipsis just signifies continuation, not precision, and it doesn't change a decimal number into something capable of making a magical mystery tour of infinite precision...and that, my friend, is where π lives.
If you would like to assert that an ellipsis provides "a precise and accurate representation of what you cannot fully write down" I'd enjoy reading any information you could provide on the subject.
Dash wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
There is no inherent difference in the accuracy of verbal evidence compared to statistical analysis. Any belief that there is indicates a cognitive bias.
I'm gonna back out since I'm not sure if I'm following the argument correctly here but this was an interesting point and made me think. I agree with you here if I understand you right. So in this example we have, as a fact, that public sector employees make more on average than the private sector counterparts. You're not denying that, as I understand it, or saying that's equal to whomever giving an unsupported opinion. You're saying any interpretation of that fact is equal. Right? So your position is yeah they make more on average but they do harder work or have more experience or whatever the argument is, and that's as valid as saying they make more just because they work for the government.
Anyway this is going on for a while now so maybe I shoulda just let it die down but wanted to mention at least that bit.
I don't dispute any fact presented in the article, I accept all of them as the truth.
My position is really simple. 2 groups. Group A makes more than group B. Group A is comprised of government workers, group B is comprised of public sector workers.
Now, if the facts ended there, it would be cut and dried, nothing to see, move along. However, there was an additional fact in the article… Group A is also older and more experienced.
Now, does group A make more money because they are government workers or does it make more money because the people in it are older and more experienced?
There's no statistical information in the article that resolves that conundrum. It's just not there. However, there is verbal evidence that they make more because.. well, that's in the article.
So, some have gone to great lengths to try to disqualify the fact that group A is older and more experienced by discrediting it as "anecdotal", that something verbally presented by the spokesperson for the US Office of Personnel Management is inherently less accurate than the statistical analysis that resulted in the identification of group A as government workers…which just boggles my mind because nobody is disputing statistical evidence.
I think it's bias. At least, that's the kindest reason one can have for preferring a table of data over the word of an official spokesperson. A table of data has the ability to be true or false. An official spokesperson has the ability to communicate a truth or a falsehood. Neither method of communicating truth is inherently more accurate than the other. In fact, the evidence doesn't conflict with the premise that government workers get paid more, it just conflicts with the conclusion that they get paid more
because they're government workers... and there isn't enough information to support that conclusion.
For whatever reason some think because a table of figures says group A makes more money because it's STATISTICAL … and the fact that the group is said to be comprised of older, more experienced people is irrelevant, because the… well, I have to admit, I get a little lost there. Something to do with rhetorical, but I don't think the word means what he thinks it means. DFK! just wants that whole piece of evidence thrown out. However, it's got just as much weight as any other bit of evidence the article introduces, and them's the facts, Jack.