Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1041944
26 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 21 OCTOBER 2018 OPINION Raphael Vassallo Maybe they're onto something I shall have to start this article by confessing that I never really understood the fine art (sorry, 'science') of statistics. And like many other people confronted by things they don't immedi- ately understand… I tend to dismiss the whole shebang as a load of hocus pocus. To cite one example: on my travels in cyberspace, I recently encountered an online 'Top 50 list' of the 'World's Most Dan- gerous Animals': categorised in order of their presumed threat- levels to human life and limb; and complete with a warning that… 'the results may surprise you'. I suppose it's my fault for being suckered by such an obvious case of click-bait: but among the list's more 'surpris- ing' conclusions was that you are around 99.999% more likely to be killed by 'your own dog'… than by 'a lion'. Erm… really? You don't say. Could it perchance have something to do with the fact that you are also 99.999% more likely to actually own a pet dog… than a pet F***KING LION?! Coupled with the fact that – unless you happen to be a zoo-keeper, a circus animal handler, a big-game hunter, a poacher or a Masai from Western Kenya – your chances of ever even encountering a member of the species 'Felis leo' (still less getting killed by one) are, and will always be, practically ZERO? Same with great white sharks, naturally (and polar bears, and crocodiles... but let's limit ourselves to a few choice speci- mens). Apparently, great white sharks are a lot less dangerous than… horses. Which of course comes as an intense surprise, because – unless there has been an evolutionary quantum leap while I wasn't looking, enabling great white sharks to crawl onto dry land – to be attacked by a shark, you actually have to be in the water yourself. And that automatically rules out all those billions of people around the world who have never swum once in their lives: either because they can't, or because they live thousands of miles from the nearest beach. Meanwhile, those who can and do swim (or dive, or surf, etc.) would still have to be unlucky enough to share their bathing space with one of the world's rarest and most elusive marine predators. And even with both those factors firmly in place, there remains a fair chance that the shark would have bigger fish to fry anyway, and simply ignore you. Compare that to your chances of one day getting too close to a horse that might kick you, or otherwise trample you to death. It is admittedly unlikely for most of us… at least, those of us who don't cross the road while the Mnarja horse-races are in full swing… but how many people around the world live and work surrounded by horses on a daily basis? Farmers, ranchers, jockeys, show-jumpers, riding trainers, polo-players, mounted police- men, drivers of horse-drawn carriages... they all run that risk practically every day. Nobody in the world – not even Jacques Cousteau or Steve Irwin – could possibly say the same about great white sharks. So yes, of course the num- ber of people killed by horses annually is going to be much, much higher than the death toll accruing from all recorded great white shark attacks in history put together. I would have been surprised – 'neigh', astounded – had it been the other way round. But the real problem is slightly more insidious than that. Statistical probabilities aside… how the bleeding hell can you possibly look at the above fatality statistics – which, by the way, I do not even remotely question – and come to the bizarre conclusion that dogs (or horses) are 99% more dangerous than lions (or great white sharks)… on an individu- al specimen level? Well, it's a very easy hypoth- esis to put to the test. Imagine you are faced with a choice of crossing one of two fields: the first has a sign saying, 'Beware of the dog'… and the second, 'Beware of the lion.' Be honest, now: which field would you sooner walk across without a rifle or armed escort? And it gets even more bizarre with the other two 'dangerous animals' (because let's face it: though less intimidating than a lion, I wouldn't take my chanc- es with a random, unknown dog either). The choice is now between swimming across a stretch of water patrolled by a great white shark… and… um… walking through a paddock full of horses. Gee, that's a tough one, innit? Thank goodness, it's not the sort of decision we all have to face each time we go to work… But in any case: by now you will surely have spotted the flaw in the statistical reasoning. The calculation is based simply on a straight comparison be- tween the annual fatalities as- sociated with lions/sharks, and those caused by dogs and hors- es. It tells us absolutely bugger all about our own individual chances of emerging alive from a direct, one-on-one encounter with any of those animals. And that – and no amount of global statistics – is the real yardstick whereby the 'danger' of any animal is measured. (Oh, and just to make this list as unfair as it is wildly inaccurate: with horses it even extends to acci- dental deaths… i.e., riders who fall off their mounts and break their own necks. Like it's the bloody horse's fault…) But to conclude this over- lengthy preamble about 'the world's most dangerous animals': the biggest 'surprise' on the list was its number one killer (drums rolling): the Anopheles mosquito… which carries malaria… which is in turn responsible for literally millions of deaths each year, etc. Two small problems with that. One, people who die from malaria are not directly killed by the Anopheles mosquito, in the same way as shark-attack victims are directly killed by sharks. The real killer will be the malaria virus carried by the parasite. Two: if we are going to extend this list to also include viruses and (worse still) bacteria, on the basis that they are carried and spread by in- dividual animals…. then never mind the 'Top 50': the 'Top 5,000 Most Dangerous Ani- mals in the World' would all be carriers of infectious diseases such as rabies (another reason dogs get in so high, by the way), yellow fever, murine typhus, bubonic plague, etc. Yet interestingly enough, the common sewer rat – a carrier of at least two of those killer diseases, present everywhere in the world where there are hu- man beings – doesn't even get an honorary mention… OK, so this particular set of statistics was a pile of junk. You probably all knew that anyway. But the reason I went into so much detail is that: well, for one thing, I've been meaning to get all that off my chest for months (God, I hate those stu- pid lists. Which is why I click on the link every single time…); two, I am sorry to have to add that most other 'facts' derived from statistics – even serious international scientific studies, or local political polls – tend to be just as ludicrous, for broadly the same reasons. I could litter this newspaper with analogous accounts about

