1.There has to be at least one person who is average, hence there will be 49.999% below or somethign to that effect.inasero said:in light of riddling in non-school:
"half of the people you know r below average..."
cmon statisticians, identify two flaws with this argument!
Mean, median, or mode? If you mean (no pun intended) "average" as in median, and the sample of people you know is random in the particular quantity you wish to measure, then there's a good chance that approximately half the people you know are below "average" in that quantity, in particular if your sample size is large (i.e. you know alot of people).inasero said:"half of the people you know r below average..."
inasero said:getting there!
1) yes...average of what?
2) in relation to a particular characteristic, half of the people you know might not be equally distributed over a cohort...eg if youre an academic and you know other academics...then half of the academics you knew might intellectually be below average, but then again that same half are probably above average compared to everyone you knew including family