There are good hospitals and medicine and most people can use them if they get sick. The food is nutritious and nobody has to be hungry.
Even though Japan's population is quite dense it has a high life expectancy because the healthcare there is very good and people have a good education and know how to stay healthy. Its life expectancy is between 81-85 so is very high.
Normal life expectancy, so long as you don't cut yourself severely.
The American life expectancy is 78.4 years, so by these calculations he may die around 2025 or so.
Since the emergence of human civilization (generally, with the advent of writing), average human life expectancy has hovered in the high 20s-30 year range. In civilizations with high levels of sanitation (or, in nomadic societies where it was less of a concern), life expectancy was a bit over 30.So, for typical societies in Old Testament time periods, 28 would be reasonable. For New Testament societies, a bit older (perhaps 30 or so) would be reasonable.One reason life expectancy was so low is that infant mortality was very high. If one discounts deaths in infants (i.e. death before the 1st birthday) from life expectancy calculations, increase the above numbers by as much as 10 years.
There are good hospitals and medicine and most people can use them if they get sick. The food is nutritious and nobody has to be hungry.
a so a schass
well i think that it might be the way they were born and so they see the world the same way we do
Swaziland is the country with the lowest life expectancy. Its life expectancy is about 40 years old; the world life expectancy is about 67 years old, so Swaziland is 40% below world average.
Life expectancy was low in 1900 due to high infant mortality rates, limited medical advancements, lack of access to clean water and sanitation, prevalence of infectious diseases, poor living conditions, and limited availability of healthcare services. These factors contributed to higher mortality rates across all age groups, resulting in the overall low life expectancy.
because we have a good literacy rate, therefore we know how to take care of ourselfs (what to eat, how to stay health, ect.)
While Lithuania is ranked 88th in the world for life expectancy, it is not particularly low. According to the CIA World Factbook, in 2010 the life expectancy of Lithuanians is 70.23 years for men and 80.29 years for women.
The impact of the agricultural revolution caused life expectancy to drop, it brought diseases upon us, and the nutritional values that hunter gatherers had we lost. so was this really the right decision well over time. or today, the life expectancy has actually increased.