Chandra:
Satya, today my measurement matched the true value exactly. So my experiment is perfect, right?
Satya:
Not so fast, Chandra. One correct answer can be luck. Tell me—would you get the same result again?
Chandra:
Hmm… maybe not. Yesterday it was slightly different.
Satya:
Then you may have accuracy, but not precision.
Chandra:
So accuracy is closeness to truth, and precision is consistency?
Satya:
Exactly.
Accuracy asks, “How close am I to reality?”
Precision asks, “How reliable am I?”
Chandra:
Satya, suppose an examiner evaluates a student’s answer.
The student’s true understanding deserves 6 marks.
Satya:
Good. Now tell me—how does the examiner mark?
Chandra:
In one case, the examiner gives 8, 8, 8, 8 every time.
Satya (raises an eyebrow):
Then the examiner is consistent… but biased.
Chandra:
So the marking is precise, but not accurate?
Satya:
Exactly.
Precision reflects the examiner’s habit.
Accuracy reflects the examiner’s judgement.
Chandra:
What if the examiner gives 6, 6, 6, 6?
Satya (smiles):
Then consistency meets truth.
Both precision and accuracy are achieved.
Chandra:
And if the marks are 8, 4, 9, 3?
Satya:
Then the examiner sometimes hits the truth, sometimes misses it.
Accurate on average, but lacking precision.
Chandra (thinking):
So repetition alone doesn’t guarantee fairness.
Satya:
No.
Without accuracy, precision becomes reliable error.
Without precision, accuracy becomes fortunate coincidence.
And remember—without precision, accuracy cannot be trusted;
without accuracy, precision is meaningless.
Chandra:
That sounds like life advice too.
Satya (laughs):
Physics always is.
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