We're sorting of hitting the 'arguing about two seperate issues' point.
What I am saying is that the HDI is a fairly legit way to measure a country, but not to contrast to others as a means of fine comparison. In many ways it's basically worthless, because it's pretty obvious and unnecessary to compare dirt hovel places with western countries, and the western countries are simply too close to measure policy off of. You don't need the HDI, nor does it serve any useful purpose, if you're trying to show Country X has a superior literacy program to Country Y. The specific program itself can be used and really is the only useful standard. The thing is not accurate in that way, not to say 'Ah look, X had .01 higher on the HDI, let's assume that is a sign of superior policy' because it just isn't accurate enough.
I want to emphasize, yes, 1/3 can carry on beyond 1 digit, but only if it's been treated as a clean derivative. There has to be a justificaiton for that. 1/2mv^2 can easily be shown to be the integral of mv, the 1/2 comes from that, it is the clean byproduct of a mathematical equation, not a empirical result. It is not a coefficient that has simply been taken from the data, it is very specifically 1/2. Saying 1/3 for weighting is simply an unjustified assumption, unproven, therefore no more or less accurate than saying 1/3.0002 or 1/3.4. Does it make sense to equally weight them when no legitimate justification exists for more accurate weighting and they all seem very important? Yes, sure. But that doesn't mean it becomes highly accurate as a measure of anything but itself. And the more one tries to yank specific comparisons of policy out, the more one is subject to biased interpretations and corrections as well as giving people a big reason to try it. There are simply too many variables in it that have distortion or are distortable to compare, not only do you have the 'no more accurate than least accurate' problem but also that innaccuracies stack.
If I measure the momentum of object by it's mass and velocity, and each is only measurable to within 1%, the momentum isn't accurate to 1%, it's accurate to the range of the of their combined inaccuracy.
This isn't something subject to debate, the variables involved, while allowing for a decent measure of accuracy for HDI, do not allow the HDI to be used as a useful tool for comparison of policy. You are, I believe, trying to argue the accuracy of the HDI itself, I am arguing is accuracy as a useful index for comparison. There's no polite way to put this, but in this regard, I am right. There can be no argument without empirical proof that 1/3 is a more accurate value than 1/4 or .356, and no such empirical proof exists. As such a change in waiting would noticeably alter the rankings, the HDI can not possibly be considered anything but a loose benchmark, and therefore the ranking order as it is can not be used as a legitimate measure of policy between parallel entities.
What I am saying is that the HDI is a fairly legit way to measure a country, but not to contrast to others as a means of fine comparison. In many ways it's basically worthless, because it's pretty obvious and unnecessary to compare dirt hovel places with western countries, and the western countries are simply too close to measure policy off of. You don't need the HDI, nor does it serve any useful purpose, if you're trying to show Country X has a superior literacy program to Country Y. The specific program itself can be used and really is the only useful standard. The thing is not accurate in that way, not to say 'Ah look, X had .01 higher on the HDI, let's assume that is a sign of superior policy' because it just isn't accurate enough.
I want to emphasize, yes, 1/3 can carry on beyond 1 digit, but only if it's been treated as a clean derivative. There has to be a justificaiton for that. 1/2mv^2 can easily be shown to be the integral of mv, the 1/2 comes from that, it is the clean byproduct of a mathematical equation, not a empirical result. It is not a coefficient that has simply been taken from the data, it is very specifically 1/2. Saying 1/3 for weighting is simply an unjustified assumption, unproven, therefore no more or less accurate than saying 1/3.0002 or 1/3.4. Does it make sense to equally weight them when no legitimate justification exists for more accurate weighting and they all seem very important? Yes, sure. But that doesn't mean it becomes highly accurate as a measure of anything but itself. And the more one tries to yank specific comparisons of policy out, the more one is subject to biased interpretations and corrections as well as giving people a big reason to try it. There are simply too many variables in it that have distortion or are distortable to compare, not only do you have the 'no more accurate than least accurate' problem but also that innaccuracies stack.
If I measure the momentum of object by it's mass and velocity, and each is only measurable to within 1%, the momentum isn't accurate to 1%, it's accurate to the range of the of their combined inaccuracy.
This isn't something subject to debate, the variables involved, while allowing for a decent measure of accuracy for HDI, do not allow the HDI to be used as a useful tool for comparison of policy. You are, I believe, trying to argue the accuracy of the HDI itself, I am arguing is accuracy as a useful index for comparison. There's no polite way to put this, but in this regard, I am right. There can be no argument without empirical proof that 1/3 is a more accurate value than 1/4 or .356, and no such empirical proof exists. As such a change in waiting would noticeably alter the rankings, the HDI can not possibly be considered anything but a loose benchmark, and therefore the ranking order as it is can not be used as a legitimate measure of policy between parallel entities.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
Why bipartisanship can't work: the expert view
01/02/2010 11:34:58 PM
- 910 Views
And a personal comment
01/02/2010 11:39:28 PM
- 649 Views
Who's to say YOU really know what's happening in Washington, though?
02/02/2010 01:41:20 AM
- 680 Views
not to mention those who mistake knowledge for understanding
02/02/2010 10:41:14 PM
- 489 Views
Even so.
05/02/2010 05:45:54 AM
- 521 Views
Like the NYT?
05/02/2010 02:12:36 PM
- 547 Views
I don't believe the Times has ever conceded bias.
05/02/2010 06:03:02 PM
- 580 Views
and neither does Fox so I am not sure that matters
05/02/2010 06:40:15 PM
- 609 Views
Note that I didn't mention Fox (or anyone, for that matter. )
05/02/2010 07:13:31 PM
- 541 Views
PBS is biased
05/02/2010 07:21:14 PM
- 520 Views
You're entitled to believe that.
05/02/2010 07:31:07 PM
- 660 Views
PBS has an obvious yet undeclared bias so does NPR
09/02/2010 04:47:53 AM
- 478 Views
Even were that true (which I dispute) my statement stands.
09/02/2010 09:50:36 AM
- 604 Views
so they wouldn't be biased becuas it could hurt them but you still argue republicans attack them
09/02/2010 02:19:53 PM
- 555 Views
We have been for some time.
02/02/2010 03:31:10 AM
- 552 Views
I don't think that's the case
03/02/2010 02:59:50 PM
- 526 Views
Universal healthcare was the primary plank in Clintons '92 platform.
04/02/2010 10:02:18 AM
- 514 Views
That does not mean his bare plurality was an endorsement of National Healthcare
04/02/2010 02:09:32 PM
- 638 Views
I don't think he won by default, and that was his primary issue.
05/02/2010 08:09:50 AM
- 656 Views
Re: I don't think he won by default, and that was his primary issue.
05/02/2010 03:52:23 PM
- 604 Views
[insert witty subject line here]
06/02/2010 02:15:21 AM
- 636 Views
Let me break this into multiple replies here
06/02/2010 07:45:36 PM
- 617 Views
'K
08/02/2010 01:22:12 PM
- 609 Views
Probably time to go into 'summary mode'
08/02/2010 07:34:55 PM
- 639 Views
Again, we're back to "how would you prefer to do it?"
09/02/2010 09:42:51 AM
- 660 Views
Any way that works, which currently probably is none
09/02/2010 06:12:41 PM
- 594 Views
I think HDI is more accurate than nothing, though it certainly needs some fine tuning.
10/02/2010 11:03:08 AM
- 657 Views
I'll play a bigger age card since it was my third election to vote in and he won because of Perot
05/02/2010 05:57:04 PM
- 531 Views
Let's put it another way: Why did Dems nominate him instead of, say, Gephardt?
06/02/2010 02:22:04 AM
- 598 Views
you don't get mandates from primaries
08/02/2010 02:12:29 PM
- 500 Views
No, but end of the day more people wanted healthcare than didn't.
08/02/2010 03:09:31 PM
- 512 Views
everyone want health care they just don't want congress runnig it
09/02/2010 04:56:44 AM
- 548 Views
Whom do you prefer?
09/02/2010 10:07:39 AM
- 582 Views
Sorry not a big fan of socialism I hear it big over in Europe though
09/02/2010 02:23:55 PM
- 479 Views
In other words you prefer the system we have; thanks for admitting it.
10/02/2010 10:05:38 AM
- 529 Views

I prefer Thomas Woods Jr's description of bipartisanship
02/02/2010 02:49:06 AM
- 537 Views
If only someone had stood up on 8 December, 1941 and said, "hey, you're not supposed to do stuff!"
02/02/2010 03:28:38 AM
- 681 Views
you're making a good job taking things out of context, Joel
03/02/2010 12:47:57 PM
- 498 Views
Don't speak in absolutes and I won't read absolutes.
04/02/2010 10:08:43 AM
- 513 Views
Some qualifiers can be left unsaid for a clearer message. Or better delivery
04/02/2010 10:26:56 AM
- 502 Views

Qualifiers are clarifying by nature.
04/02/2010 10:49:06 AM
- 636 Views
huh. That does make sense. I know malpractice is a big weight on the the system in the US.
04/02/2010 11:58:37 AM
- 475 Views
Perhaps, but it's hardly the greatest weight, or even in the top three, IMHO.
05/02/2010 05:44:49 AM
- 621 Views
Pearl Harbor would never have happened to a classically liberal nation
05/02/2010 01:33:56 AM
- 524 Views
Wow - that was a dumb statement even for you!
05/02/2010 04:22:59 PM
- 702 Views
I do generally agree, but I think the Washington Naval Conference is too often overlooked.
06/02/2010 02:33:51 AM
- 652 Views
Politicians and pundits should stop calling things that happened in the last decade "unprecedented"
02/02/2010 03:23:27 AM
- 725 Views
Or the democratic party has shifted so far to to the left they can't even get all of the dems
02/02/2010 02:39:14 PM
- 501 Views
You didn't hear all the whining when Bush was in charge with a Republican Congress?
02/02/2010 08:50:05 PM
- 516 Views
I there was plenty of whining going on
02/02/2010 10:36:56 PM
- 445 Views
Is this you conceding that the GOP is being obstructionist?
08/02/2010 01:43:04 PM
- 490 Views
I agree they are obstructing the libs from doing whatever they want
08/02/2010 02:19:13 PM
- 412 Views
They've tried including Republicans in drafting bills.
08/02/2010 03:08:17 PM
- 577 Views
tyring to pcik off one republican is not including republicans
09/02/2010 05:03:44 AM
- 516 Views
So we've gone from "stop being secretive" to "no public meetings" eh?
09/02/2010 11:59:50 AM
- 529 Views
well it was your guy who was up in arms about private meetings
09/02/2010 02:29:34 PM
- 499 Views
Was it? I don't recall any Dem complaining about private meeting on healthcare.
10/02/2010 09:44:56 AM
- 667 Views
most liberals seem to foretting the "rhetoric" that Obama used to get elected
13/02/2010 06:54:34 AM
- 498 Views