Not unlike a horoscope.Quote from gnome:
The survey is so farkin' vague, any result could more-or-less apply to half the people.
A few years ago, there was a segment on 20/20. University students in one class were told to write their name plus date and time of birth on a piece of paper. At the next class, they were given a "personalized" horoscope reading which they were told to read but not share with anyone else. They were overwhelmed with the "accuracy" and "specificity" of the reading, expressing utter amazement at how someone who didn't know them could, in fact, write about them in such "detail." The students were then told that each and every one of them had received the exact same report. Further, it was the horoscope reading of a prisoner on death row.
It is amazing how people will connect the dots when their egos get stroked, and assign precision to the vaguest of notions just to validate the stroking. Are we all that attention-starved?
