
Close date updated to 2024-12-01 3:59 pm
I think @ThomasKwa thinks it's good to note that I'm letting this market affects my odds of trying to run a marathon--concretely if the market was really low (eg 5%) I would be less likely to try because it would seem less fun and more dangerous. and if the market was really high (90%) I might be less likely to try also because it would be less fun.
Mostly I don't expect the market to significantly affect my odds of running, but I'm not trying to act as if it didn't exist.
@NoaNabeshima Well, this information affects the market! To take an extreme example, if you were guaranteed to N/A the market if it went below 5%, that would create a disincentive to bet NO...
@NoaNabeshima this information only esp. affects the market if there's an implicit norm that I won't do this sort of thing
@NoaNabeshima I'm confused... I don't think I'm talking about something that can be affected by rules.
If you don't run, this market resolves N/A. (Right?) If the market goes low, that makes it less likely for you to run, which means it's more likely that the market will resolve N/A, which means people betting the market down might not get their payout. So I was thinking that might affect bettors' incentives...
@NoaNabeshima Also I think maybe I was wrong about the information affecting the market? Like sure, if it goes down you're likely to N/A, but the probability that you finish conditional on attempting shouldn't be affected by that...
@JonasVollmer I think that marathons w/ training are very safe. After thinking about it a little bit I don't think it would be very dangerous (if I include knowledge that I won't push myself or will stop if it seems good to do). The main risk is a heart attack, I think.
@NoaNabeshima Based on hearsay from people with medical backgrounds, I think there are various other risks, and not all of them are reduced by proper training. But I would update my opinion (and might run a marathon myself sometime!) if some competent person looked into this properly and came up with compelling reasons to think that running a full marathon is not a significant health risk.
(or if you said something like "I think that marathons w/ training are very safe because of XYZ" for a convincing XYZ, that could also update me substantially)
@JonasVollmer https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0363546512444555?sid=35278b9d-c1b4-4ed6-b916-c22d5d9b776e
This suggests 10 micromorts for randomly sampled runner. But I think the death rate is higher for older runners, so let's say 5 micromorts. I would not push myself extremely hard, which also reduces the risk. Say that going without significant training 6xs the number of micromorts. Then that's 30 micromorts, ie 3 skydiving jumps, which doesn't seem so bad.
This predictor says with a time of 17:33 for 3 miles (season best of 5:51 per mile), a similar effort in a marathon might give a time around three hours four minutes (7:02 per mile). That gives a lot of room to run slower and still make your four hour goal.
I initially missed that you still run somewhat regularly, but don’t consider this to be training.
I did do a lot of running in high school (currently 24)
and run every so often these days (once a week or less?)