Average Age?????????
#27
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 15,646
Likes: 11
I think that the posters who are halving their age and calling it an average are rather referring to the mean. Waiting for someone more mathematically inclined than I am to tell me why I'm wrong.
Lobo, you started this, am I wrong?
Lobo, you started this, am I wrong?
#30
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 2,260
Likes: 0
Dear Nikki, my capabilities in Mathematics, are far better than my capabilities in English, since I don't understand the difference between "mean" and "average".
Ok, all rules have one exception, Loba says a lot "You are a mean wolf", and the never said "You are an average wolf".
Ok, all rules have one exception, Loba says a lot "You are a mean wolf", and the never said "You are an average wolf".
#31
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 2,481
Likes: 0
How do we calculate our average age?
Is it our chronological age?
Our emotional age? That would be the age our spouse’s quote when they say, quit acting like a ____year old.
Our health age? The age my doctor tells me I am.
Our ideal age? This is the age that I blurt out when someone asks me how old I am, and I’ve forgotten how old I am.
Age is relative and to prove it I will say that I was born in the year of the coolest cars.
Is it our chronological age?
Our emotional age? That would be the age our spouse’s quote when they say, quit acting like a ____year old.
Our health age? The age my doctor tells me I am.
Our ideal age? This is the age that I blurt out when someone asks me how old I am, and I’ve forgotten how old I am.
Age is relative and to prove it I will say that I was born in the year of the coolest cars.
#32
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 15,646
Likes: 11
OK, you are an above average wolf. The way I figure it, to halve your age, you are saying there are an equal number of years before that age and after it. That in English is, I believe, the mean.
To figure an average, at least in term of years, I would think you would add 1 plus 2 plus 3 plus 4 up to your age and then divide by the number of years.
To figure an average, at least in term of years, I would think you would add 1 plus 2 plus 3 plus 4 up to your age and then divide by the number of years.
#34
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 6,144
Likes: 0
The mean is the sum of all values, divided by the number of values in the sample set (or n-1 in some cases). So halving your age definitely isn't the mean!
Mode is the value that occurs most often in a sample set - so that'll still be your real age.
Median is the middle value if all values are lined up in order. So again, with just one value, that'll still be your real age.......no getting away from it! 8-)
Mode is the value that occurs most often in a sample set - so that'll still be your real age.
Median is the middle value if all values are lined up in order. So again, with just one value, that'll still be your real age.......no getting away from it! 8-)
#36
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 15,646
Likes: 11
RM67, thank you, I'm getting there. I was confusing my terms. Sounds like you're saying the mean is what I was calling the average. So what is the average? Is that another word for mean?
I was thinking of median and calling it mean. But I was thinking of each year as a value, not just the current age.
Lobo, as demonstrated above, I am not always right. Don't tell my kids. Everyone else knows already.
I was thinking of median and calling it mean. But I was thinking of each year as a value, not just the current age.
Lobo, as demonstrated above, I am not always right. Don't tell my kids. Everyone else knows already.
#37
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 2,260
Likes: 0
I think we have an aporetic dialogue here.
On one hand RM's definition is beyond any attack. On the other hand if the question is: "how hold were you, on average, considering the series of days you have lived"? If the question is like this, then the chronological age divided by 2, is the correct answer.
On one hand RM's definition is beyond any attack. On the other hand if the question is: "how hold were you, on average, considering the series of days you have lived"? If the question is like this, then the chronological age divided by 2, is the correct answer.


