Correlation is not causation

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Correlation is not causation

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Last edit: 23:09, 3 September 2015

Correlation is not necessarily always causation, and this is an example showing why we shouldn't take it for causation. Some studies state that religious people are more healthy than their secular counterparts, while others say otherwise. Although churchgoing is a sedentary activity, it lasts for a relatively short time. The data found in the study might be a statistical fluke. Therefore, I think that obesity and churchgoing are not necessarily casually connected, more like correlated, since I don't see how they could be connected.

In other news:

Evolution inversely correlated with global cooling Average age correlated with My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic fanbase size

111.193.142.186 (talk)23:09, 3 September 2015