Why human brains are bad at assessing the risks of pandemics
7 mins | Sep 25, 2020
Assessing risks has less to do with data, than fundamentals — humans are not very good at it. The information we have now on the COVID-19 virus is drastically larger than when it initially halted the world in March 2020. Interestingly, despite knowing it's fatal and how it spreads, as a collective, we can't seem to agree on the actual risk it poses to humankind. Why? Lia Kvatum analyses for The Washington Post.
From The Washington Post