| ▲ | SauntSolaire 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
The concept of everyone dying at 40 is a myth/misunderstanding anyways - the reality was a lot more bimodal than that. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | gpm 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Eh, here it's more of a simplification than a myth as used in my comment. There are two effects: 1. We've reduced infant (and childhood) mortality. My comment isn't talking about this effect but it did drag down average life expectancy substantially. Including this effect life expectancy at birth in the stone age might have been as low as 20... but as you say the bimodality means this is a deceptive statistic when used this way. 2. We've made it so you on average live longer even if you survive childhood, my comment is really just about this part of the effect. It's still a simplification because saying "on average if you survive childhood you die at 40" isn't the same as "everyone dies at 40" but closer to "adults die at all ages in a reasonable smooth monotonic curve and 40 is about the average age they live to but some get lucky and live to 80 or whatever". But then "don't use ultrasonic dehumidifiers" is like this too, using one won't kill you at some specific age, it will just slightly increase your chance of death every year for the rest of your life however long that ends up being. The number 40 was picked out of a hat, too. It should be right for some areas at some times just by coincidence though and since I was non-specific that makes me right ;) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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