Premium Only Content
Life is Less Fair Than You Think: Berkson’s Paradox
In video games, balance is everything. You can’t be super smart and strong; your car can’t have great handling and acceleration. These tradeoffs feel fair intuitively, and they make for more interesting game play—and that’s exactly why we like them.
But is real life like this? Not so much.
In this episode of Econ Nerds, we explore why life sometimes feels like a carefully balanced game, even though the traits we care about—intelligence, attractiveness, athleticism—are often completely uncorrelated. The culprit? A weird statistical illusion called Berkson’s Paradox.
You’ll learn why the dating market feels like it’s full of hot jerks, why college sometimes seems like a battle between try-hards and lazy geniuses, and why fairness in real life is at best a comforting illusion.
Watch to the end to learn how real-world success often comes not from balance, but from the Matthew Effect—where small early advantages and incremental improvement can compound into major power-ups over time.
Check out our blog post (https://econnerds.substack.com/p/the-...) for more details, or read some of the original papers:
Feingold, Alan. "Good-looking people are not what we think." Psychological bulletin 111.2 (1992): 304.
Kleisner, Karel, Veronika Chvátalová, and Jaroslav Flegr. "Perceived intelligence is associated with measured intelligence in men but not women." PloS one 9.3 (2014): e81237.
Mitchem, Dorian G., et al. "No relationship between intelligence and facial attractiveness in a large, genetically informative sample." Evolution and Human Behavior 36.3 (2015): 240-247.
Åberg, Maria AI, et al. "Cardiovascular fitness is associated with cognition in young adulthood." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106.49 (2009): 20906-20911.
Credé, Marcus, Michael C. Tynan, and Peter D. Harms. "Much ado about grit: A meta-analytic synthesis of the grit literature." Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 113.3 (2017): 492.
Merton, Robert K. "The Matthew effect in science: The reward and communication systems of science are considered." Science 159.3810 (1968): 56-63.
-
24:42
James Klüg
3 days agoAnti-Trump Protester HITS Grandma Thinking She’s With Us
12.3K13 -
2:18:46
Tucker Carlson
10 hours agoTucker Carlson Interviews Nick Fuentes
160K600 -
2:06:42
FreshandFit
11 hours agoCharleston White Addresses The Backlash From His Charlie Kirk Comments
343K78 -
1:34:52
Badlands Media
15 hours agoBaseless Conspiracies Ep. 156: The ADL Files – Spies, Lies & the Leo Frank Legacy
88.8K37 -
2:04:29
Inverted World Live
11 hours ago700 Scientists and Faith Leaders Warn About Super-Intelligent AI, "Time is Running Out" | Ep. 130
87.2K13 -
2:50:47
TimcastIRL
10 hours agoFOOD STAMPS OVER, Ending Nov 1, Food RIOTS May Spark Trump INSURRECTION ACT | Timcast IRL
237K142 -
4:46:23
Drew Hernandez
19 hours agoCANDACE OWENS CALLS CHARLIE KIRK STAFF INTO QUESTION?
49.2K52 -
47:03
Barry Cunningham
12 hours agoPRESIDENT TRUMP MEETS WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF JAPAN!! AND MORE NEWS!
66.3K32 -
1:18:29
Flyover Conservatives
1 day agoThe Dollar Devaluation Playbook: Gold, Bitcoin… and the “Genius Act” - Andy Schectman | FOC Show
58.9K5 -
7:10:35
SpartakusLIVE
12 hours agoWZ Tonight || Battlefield 6 BATTLE ROYALE Tomorrow!
61.2K1