The Difference Between Correlation and Causality | Freakonomics

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 15

  • @skuzzbunny
    @skuzzbunny 12 лет назад +18

    to put it very simply:
    correlation: two things happen at the same time, etc.
    causation: one of those things is actually making the other thing happen.

  • @thomlee5478
    @thomlee5478 3 года назад +1

    Nice summary.

  • @Dj_Nizzo
    @Dj_Nizzo 4 месяца назад +1

    But, police could “cause” crime, in the fact that they catch more criminals that wouldn’t have been reported in the first place. Almost like saying “we had no crime before installing security cameras”. You just didn’t know there was crime.

  • @akoxya
    @akoxya 4 года назад +11

    "police dont cause crime"
    wheezes

  • @drumminace
    @drumminace 12 лет назад +3

    I like what they're saying. It's very entertaining. EXCEPT! The difference between causality and correlation are still unclear! Why does this seem so confusing?

    • @snoozyboio
      @snoozyboio 2 года назад +1

      Hey, I know you probably got your answer, since it has been literally almost a decade since you asked this, but there's no reason why I can't answer it now.
      As the video said, correlation is two things happening at the same time, and causation is one thing happening because of the other.
      Here's an example of correlation: In the last few centuries, the population of pigeons has increased world-wide. Along with this, the number of pirate ships has went down world-wide. This is an example of correlation, or more pointedly, NOT an example of causation, because the pigeon population did not directly go up just because there are less pirate ships. If you slaughter every pigeon you see, it will not mean that a bunch of pirate ships will pop up suddenly. These two things just so happened to occur, but have no direct relationship to each other. Again, just because one thing occurred doesn't mean it has a direct relationship with the other.
      Here's an example of causation: When you exercise at a heavy intensity, you feel sore and exhausted after. The direct relationship the two share is clear: you feeling exhausted happened because you worked out at a heavy intensity, and those muscles are particularly exhausted. Again, these things occur one after the other, and are directly correlated.

  • @epudin
    @epudin 13 лет назад

    how does this video have only 23 views? that's pathetic!

  • @DanielEstill
    @DanielEstill Год назад

    Causality and motive aren't the same thing!

  • @megatar3
    @megatar3 12 лет назад

    haha now it has almost 2,000

  • @lea8288
    @lea8288 12 лет назад

    False; True