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> "I wish we would stop sharing articles that are not backed by any scent of a scientific study or peer review. It leads to fear, like others have pointed out." fear is evolutionarily contagious. you see it most obviously in herding animals, but in people too. fearful people share their fear with others for validation (my fear is real since others fear too), esteem (i'm helping others and that feels good) and group cohesion (we're together and i'm in). it's useful in context and when used judiciously. it's harmful generally (stress, anxiety, resource diversion, etc.), but the rare instance where it's actually helpful, the positive outcome is outsized, or at least perceived to be so. as a result, we over-attribute usefulness to fear, and then over-prescribe it. brashness, disregarding even rational fear to accumulate resources during diminished competition, can be a dampening counterforce. it also has harmful effects (death, aggression, corruption, etc.) so is a poor general strategy. what's dismaying is that the intellect, literally designed to predict the future, is overwhelmed and failing it's job. the brain constantly assesses the likelihood and magnitude of danger, rationalizing away the remote, and that generally checks our instinctual fear, our overreaction to it, and its spread. but our brains are overcome by massive, relentless, and fast-spreading fear, in forms that seem reasonable or even unreasonable, abetted by the marvel (and it is marvelous) of the internet. the hopeful, eventual upside is that we develop some individual and societal resilience against overwrought fear. |
Given that extreme events tend to belong to these sorts of difficult to predict distributions and have a high chance of ruin, fear is far more rational than pretending you can apply empirical methods that work for mundane phenomenon.
This is the study of extreme value theory and estimators for heavy tailed distributions. A well known popularizer of these mathematics with applications to events like pandemics is Nassim Taleb. His style is very brash and arrogant but his mastery of probability theory in this domain is very solid.
The appropriate reaction to a highly unpredictable event with potential widespread impact will look like overreaction to a naive rationalist post hoc. Don't fall into that sophistic trap. Your lizard brain knows a lot more than you give it credit for and you debase your intelligence by innapropriately elevating your rational brain.