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    Ray Peat's Age Of Death

    The Junkyard
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    • H
      haidut_retard
      last edited by

      I saw a thread on Ray Peat's death on the RPForum (great hub). One of the posts was from haidut, where he stated that Ray Peat ackshually lived 2 decades longer than the average for people who share the same birth year, because the average age of death for those people is in the 60s.

      Doesn't this imply Georgi is an unbelievable retard??? Why do people take this guy seriously when he looks old as fuck, he's fat as fuck, ugly as fuck AND ALSO APPEARS TO BE RETARDED?!?!?!?

      TruthT BuckianB Orkneyman_O KvotheK 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • TruthT
        Truth @haidut_retard
        last edited by

        @haidut_retard what is the "retarded" part of his claim according to you?

        Thrive for the highest degree of energy

        https://x.com/Truth13711

        H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • H
          haidut_retard @Truth
          last edited by

          @Truth not all of the people born in the same year have died yet. I guess you explain my last question

          ? TruthT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ?
            A Former User @haidut_retard
            last edited by

            I assume the statement referred to the assumed probability of death for his year of birth and not the average of all deaths (which - like you said - could only be calculated when all people of a cohort have died).

            Life insurance companies for example use probabilities for future life expectancy. So it's a statistical value and not a statement about what happened in reality.

            H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • H
              haidut_retard @A Former User
              last edited by

              @Luke hate to say it but no, he shared the source. it wasn't probabilistic. if you think about it, a probabilistic estimate concluding such a thing would be an absurd outlier

              Runenight201R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Runenight201R
                Runenight201 @haidut_retard
                last edited by

                @haidut_retard

                @brad is it moral policing too much to push back on posts like these? I mean, the question is valid, in which the OP is curious how can an average be determined if not all people have passed, but the manner is so derogatory and offensive.

                @haidut_retard
                Im cautious to engage with you because you seem like a very inflammatory person, but the topic does pique my interest. When I think back to my statistics courses, you can take an average by looking at either the mean or median. Often times, such as when studying income data, the median is a better way to analyze the data because it is not sensitive to gross outliers. In theory then, you could then use the median measure to analyze all people born in Peat’s given year, and when 50% of them have passed away you could say that anyone who is still alive has passed the average.

                You wouldn’t be able to take a mean measure however until everyone who was born in Peat’s given year had passed away though.

                ? bradB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ?
                  A Former User @Runenight201
                  last edited by A Former User

                  @Runenight201

                  Slightly off topic, but another method could be to use a truncated mean, where you ignore lets say the 5% outliers on both sides. So you wouldn't count the infants and young children who died and also people who get very old. This way you could calculate a mean if only 5% of a given year of birth are still alive.

                  Since the bottom 5% would be further away from the "real" mean than the top 5%, this would of course be somewhat skewed. But I think it would be a pretty realistic value for a "normal" person and closer to the median.

                  Runenight201R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Runenight201R
                    Runenight201 @A Former User
                    last edited by

                    @Luke

                    I think it’s spot on the topic. In either case, I think one can accurately say if someone has passed the average while there are still people alive from their given birth year.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • TruthT
                      Truth @haidut_retard
                      last edited by Truth

                      @haidut_retard Do you know what sources Georgi Haidut was referring to, do you have these sources to see how many people born the same year as Ray are dead, or still alive?

                      Thrive for the highest degree of energy

                      https://x.com/Truth13711

                      ? C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • ?
                        A Former User @Truth
                        last edited by

                        @Truth said in Ray Peat's Age Of Death:

                        @haidut_retard Do you know what sources Georgi Haidut was referring to, do you have these sources to see how many people born the same year as Ray are dead, or still alive?

                        https://www.ssa.gov/oact/TR/2012/lr5a3.html

                        https://u.demog.berkeley.edu/~andrew/1918/figure2.html

                        One has to take into account WHEN Ray was born and the conditions under which he lived. It is easy to forget that the 75+ life expectancy is something very recent...and it is now again dropping after rising for more than 50 years. People born in the early 20th century had a relatively rough life. The peak of the Western world was arguably in the late 1950s and early 1960s and I suspect people born in the 1955-1965 period would have the longest average lifespan since economic conditions declined afterwards and we are now already seeing this play out in real life with the youngest people being at the highest risk for strokes. Same for CVD, cancer, etc.

                        Anyways, there are various sources on life expectancy one can find, but here are two that seem to be widely cited. According to them, the life expectancy for a male born in 1937 (Ray's birth year) was just 58 years! So, according to those stats, Ray lived 50% longer than expected, which is quite an accomplishment. Moreover, the standard deviation for life expectancy in the US is currently about 15. So, using that metric Ray lived ~2 standard deviations longer than expected, and that is very unlikely to happen by chance. In addition,, the standard deviation in the early 20th century was much lower - in the 8-10 year range - which would make Ray exceed his expected life expectancy by 3 or more standard deviations and that is solid evidence of the person doing something that increased lifespan. For comparison, an equivalent feat using the current male life expectancy of 77 years and a standard deviation of 15, would mean somebody who died at the age of 107. Not so bad now, is it? 🙂 @haidut

                        &

                        https://raypeatforum.com/community/threads/big-disappointment-that-dr-peat-didnt-live-longer-i-wish-i-didnt-feel-this-way.48695/page-4#post-876661

                        https://raypeatforum.com/community/threads/dont-understand-why-people-think-ray-peat-died-young.48711/

                        I think it stems from the ideas people have nowadays that life expectancy should be in the late 70s or even higher, when in fact it very much depends on when the person was born. Based on widely accepted actuarial data, Ray outlived his expected lifespan by 50%! And more impressively, that was 2-3 standard deviations longer than the projected lifespan for somebody born in 1937, which is very strong evidence that whatever he did in regards to diet, lifestyle, supplements, etc was working. @haidut

                        And the worst part of the picking on him is that he did not actually die early. He exceeded his expected lifespan by 50%! @haidut

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                        • thyroidchor27T
                          thyroidchor27
                          last edited by

                          haidut retard

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • C
                            Comstock @Truth
                            last edited by

                            @jwayne said in Ray Peat's Age Of Death:

                            https://u.demog.berkeley.edu/~andrew/1918/figure2.html

                            These life expectancies look like they address the issue that @haidut_retard was worried about, since more recent years would have comically low life expectancies if they were averages of everyone who had died, as opposed to some sort of forecast.

                            @jwayne said in Ray Peat's Age Of Death:

                            https://www.ssa.gov/oact/TR/2012/lr5a3.html

                            I think the "At age 65" column here is the most informative piece to look at. It removes the downward bias of infant mortality, early deaths from infection, etc. You can see that the the average additional years lived after 65 for men increases slowly over time. The typical 65 yr old from 1940 would live till about 77. So Peat certainly lived longer than the average man from his generation, by quite a bit. If we add legitimate under 65 (i.e. fatal heart attack at 50, stroke at 60, etc.) it would be even more apparent.

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                            • C
                              Comstock
                              last edited by

                              @brad Can you edit posts?

                              bradB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • BuckianB
                                Buckian @haidut_retard
                                last edited by Buckian

                                @haidut_retard

                                For Peats age cohort, the life expectancy is 60ish (at birth). Peat lived to just shy of 90 years. This means he outlived the expectations by just under 50% or more than two decades.

                                It may not be the best metric to use, but based on the data Haidut shared his statement doesn’t seem to imply he’s “retarded” (well to a rational person I guess).

                                I think Haidut’s statement may have been misconstrued. although I don’t think he used actuarial terminology completely accurately in the RPF - having said this and no hate to you - your understanding of average age at death vs outliving the average person in a cohort vs life expectancy seems limited - judging from your questions in this thread. It might be helpful to not judge him on something that you don’t comprehend.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Orkneyman_O
                                  Orkneyman_ @haidut_retard
                                  last edited by

                                  @haidut_retard Haidut lives very high stress life to my knowledge. Multiple jobs, kids and running a supplement company. It would explain why he looks old and is overweight. He is clearly a very smart guy, I have only listened to a few interviews of his and I already have that impression.

                                  H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • KvotheK
                                    Kvothe @haidut_retard
                                    last edited by

                                    @haidut_retard This is by far your most obvious profile, Charlie.

                                    R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • bradB
                                      brad @Comstock
                                      last edited by

                                      @Comstock You should be able to edit your own posts

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • bradB
                                        brad @Runenight201
                                        last edited by

                                        @Runenight201 I’m going to move this post to the junkyard. There’s nothing that crosses the line into violent or illegal so I won’t delete or ban for the time being. I also don’t encourage people to give this person the attention they so clearly crave.

                                        H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • R
                                          risingfire @Kvothe
                                          last edited by

                                          @Kvothe you beat me to the punch

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • H
                                            haidut_retard @Orkneyman_
                                            last edited by haidut_retard

                                            @Buckian said in Ray Peat's Age Of Death:

                                            @haidut_retard

                                            For Peats age cohort, the life expectancy is 60ish (at birth). Peat lived to just shy of 90 years. This means he outlived the expectations by just under 50% or more than two decades.

                                            It may not be the best metric to use, but based on the data Haidut shared his statement doesn’t seem to imply he’s “retarded” (well to a rational person I guess).

                                            I think Haidut’s statement may have been misconstrued. although I don’t think he used actuarial terminology completely accurately in the RPF - having said this and no hate to you - your understanding of average age at death vs outliving the average person in a cohort vs life expectancy seems limited - judging from your questions in this thread. It might be helpful to not judge him on something that you don’t comprehend.

                                            it's cope
                                            ray peat talked shit on immortality and lived a meager 86 years of age, less than both of my grandfathers
                                            assuming a constant mortality across time is retarded when the current mean's already higher

                                            @Orkneyman_ said in Ray Peat's Age Of Death:

                                            @haidut_retard Haidut lives very high stress life to my knowledge. Multiple jobs, kids and running a supplement company. It would explain why he looks old and is overweight. He is clearly a very smart guy, I have only listened to a few interviews of his and I already have that impression.

                                            it's cope. his 'job' is to have his bulgarian friends illegally ship medicine, for a multiple of the price they paid for it. working one job and having a family doesn't make you fat and overweight. shit genetics and a poor diet are the real cause

                                            BuckianB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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