Yes, that means the average male lives to be 76.5. So take all the males who died much much earlier than that age and factor that into the “average”. This means that quite a number of males live quite a bit past 76.5.
WTF? I was responding to someone who claimed that at 76 years Harlan had not yet made it to the average life expectancy. (BTW, you seem to have scrambled your numbers: It’s 75.6 years, not 76.5.) I am well aware it’s a statistical average and people who die under that number are balanced by those who die over it. I don’t confuse an average life expectancy with a Logan’s Run-style experation date, and would really like to know just what the Hell got you thinking I did.
I’ll admit I was being a bit of a pedantic asshole. I was correcting a minor, but explicit, error in the poster’s thinking. Can you show me the explicit error in my thinking from the post you quoted?
Or you could just look it up on an actuary chart like the one here and find that Harlan’s got a life expectancy of about 9 to 10 years right now. (Assuming he’s healthy of course.)