I see lots of situations where let's say, Mike is aware that either method A and method B that can be used to carry out a task.
Observational data shows that on average, system A outperforms system B, so seeing this, Mike decides to use system A.
But, the best ever result on the task was achieved with system B, and the conditions under which that was achieved could be easily replicated.
So really, Mike would be better off using system B and replicating those exact conditions - Mike could have cherry picked and recreated the best scenario, but made a decision based on averages instead.
Is there a term for this? And if not, what should the term be?
Haha, I just realized that can be true no matter which group you're in. If you want to give your kids better education, statistics will say homeschooling isn't great at that; if you want to protect your kids from sin, statistics will say homeschooling isn't great at that either; but your chances of achieving your goal, whichever of the two it is, are better than statistics suggest. I wonder where else this kind of quirk happens.