Back on track then:
SafeSpeed wrote:
I am certain that tiny changes in average driver quality will reflect directly in the number of road crashes we experience nationally.
In other words:
Number of crashes is inversely proportional to average driver quality
The trap here is you have missed other influences. So whilst it would be true to say "The number of crashes is
heavily influenced by average driver quality" your statement does not admit other factors.
Gosh, that's a schoolboy error - almost as bad as the Governments view that road safety is
only related to speed!!
SafeSpeed wrote:
This works in exactly the same way as 'number of bankruptcies is proportional to interest rates'. Those who are near the edge can be tipped over by the smallest change.
1) I note that this concept of 'working on a slope' is alien to many people. I'd like to understand that better.
I don't think it is as alien as you suspect - if you forgive this somewhat frivolous example of something in popular culture:
Grand Master Flash, Melly Mel and the Furious Five in the popular Rap song The Message wrote:
Dont push me, cause I'm close to the edge I'm trying not to lose my head
SafeSpeed wrote:
2) I've coined the phrase micrometric influence to try to describe the concept that a tiny tiny change WILL have a real world effect. But is there a better term? Is there, perhaps, a known phrase that carries the same concept?
(my bold) I think the bold bit says it far better than anything else I've said! if not that, then
teabelly wrote:
the butterfly effect in chaos theory. Tiny changes can have enormous consequences.
is quite commonly known and understood (although not at the quamtum level!)
SafeSpeed wrote:
3) Does anyone REALLY doubt that micrometric influence is real and true?
no argument from me ... other than what it's called!
SafeSpeed wrote:
4) Any other thoughts?
see above!
_________________
COAST Not just somewhere to keep a beach.
A young loner on a crusade to champion the cause of the innocent, the helpless, the powerless, in a world of criminals who operate above the law.