- Thu Feb 20, 2020 7:20 pm
#73978
Hi,
I have 2 examples of #% questions that I wanted to clarify since they keep confusing me.
1. 20% of girls have a dog. 30% of boys have a dog. Therefore, boys are more likely to have a dog than girls. (what is the flaw?)
I was hoping you could clarify what "more likely" means. I know that it refers to a correlation but I'm confused as to whether it means a % and if so, which %?
2. Right-handed people are more likely to cause accidents than left-handed people. So, there are more right-handed people causing accidents than left-handed people.
I understand that a flaw of this reasoning would be that it doesn't account for when there is a small # of right-handed people and a big # of left-handed people. For example, if there were 10 right-handed people and 100 left-handed people, 50% of 10 would be 5 right-handed people who cause accidents vs. 10% of 100 left-handed people would be 10 left-handed people who cause accidents. Thus, there would be less right-handed people causing accidents than left-handed people.
For some reason, I can't reconcile the "more likely" usage in both examples to mean the same thing...
As you can probably tell, I am very confused so I would super appreciate any help! Please break down each example and provide a definition for "more likely". Thank you so much!
I have 2 examples of #% questions that I wanted to clarify since they keep confusing me.
1. 20% of girls have a dog. 30% of boys have a dog. Therefore, boys are more likely to have a dog than girls. (what is the flaw?)
I was hoping you could clarify what "more likely" means. I know that it refers to a correlation but I'm confused as to whether it means a % and if so, which %?
2. Right-handed people are more likely to cause accidents than left-handed people. So, there are more right-handed people causing accidents than left-handed people.
I understand that a flaw of this reasoning would be that it doesn't account for when there is a small # of right-handed people and a big # of left-handed people. For example, if there were 10 right-handed people and 100 left-handed people, 50% of 10 would be 5 right-handed people who cause accidents vs. 10% of 100 left-handed people would be 10 left-handed people who cause accidents. Thus, there would be less right-handed people causing accidents than left-handed people.
For some reason, I can't reconcile the "more likely" usage in both examples to mean the same thing...
As you can probably tell, I am very confused so I would super appreciate any help! Please break down each example and provide a definition for "more likely". Thank you so much!