To: Rockitz
Let me show you what I found contradictory:
"Today 81 percent of Americans say that prayer is an important part of their daily lives,"
Blzbba: OK - 81% of Americans say that prayer is an important part of their daily lives. Continuing to paste from the article:
"...... But a more important finding may be that 51 percent completely agree that prayer is an important part of their daily lives "
While I'll give a nod to the other poster who mentioned the statistical usage of "Strongly Agree...Agree....Disagree...Strongly Disagree" in surveys, shouldn't the 81% of people who pray on a daily basis completely agree that prayer is an important part of their daily lives? Why do 30% of the people (81%-51%) who pray on a daily basis NOT completely agree that prayer is an important part of their daily lives? If they don't completely agree, then why are they praying?
15 posted on
12/17/2003 12:45:30 PM PST by
Blzbba
To: Blzbba
Maybe it's a lottery ticket mentality?
17 posted on
12/17/2003 1:16:55 PM PST by
Rockitz
(After all these years, it's still rocket science.)
To: Blzbba
Despite the Likert scale, the results are still odd, I agree. You would think people who pray everyday would think it is a very important part of their day.
24 posted on
12/17/2003 1:53:48 PM PST by
bdeaner
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