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by pandapower2
2486 days ago
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That's not really true. Once you exclude people who died in childhood the average life expectancy shoots up. https://ourworldindata.org/uploads/2013/05/Life-expectancy-b... In England and Wales around 1850 the life expectancy overall was around 40 because a lot of people died as children and dragged down the average. For someone that made it to 5 years old their life expectancy goes us 15 years to 55. People now definitely have a higher life expectancy but the difference isn't as vast as some might assume. |
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An entertaining use of the word "true".
Yes, if you exclude a lot of the data, the average changes :)
Sarcasm aside, that is an important point in average life span statistics, but doesn't change the point that preindustrial life was "Nasty, brutish and short", as the old saying goes.
Also, 1850s England was the richest place on earth, almost a century into industrialism. Already a vastly elevated existence compared to our "natural state".