It’s interesting that the first three are aggregation error—a focus on the mean rather than the distribution. And that the last 3 are politically-entangled enough that I see incentive to believe/teach the naive version.
It’s interesting that the first three are aggregation error—a focus on the mean rather than the distribution. And that the last 3 are politically-entangled enough that I see incentive to believe/teach the naive version.