true
Explanation
This comic takes a romantic moment — a partner asking "would you always be true to me?" — and derails it with ruthless probabilistic thinking.
In the first panel, a woman asks her partner: "Baby, would you always be true to me?" He begins his response: "Well, my prior probability of any given relationship lasting an extremely long time is extremely low. Even accounting for a Bayesian update, it can't rule it out, but..."
He continues: "The nature of life as a small mind compels me to admit the possibility that a basically happy future self might be hoping on some strange long-tail thing, and to tell you that I'm a strong 'lean yes,' like 'likely.'"
In the final panels, the woman says: "I'm gonna break up with you for doing this, Bayesian..." and the man responds: "You mean you THINK you're gonna break up with me?" — applying his probabilistic framework even to the breakup itself.
The joke satirizes the type of person who cannot turn off analytical thinking even in intimate emotional moments. Instead of simply saying "yes" to a romantic question, the character launches into a Bayesian probability analysis of relationship longevity. The final punchline doubles down: even when told he's being dumped for this exact behavior, he can't help but correct her certainty with a probabilistic qualifier. The comic pokes fun at hyper-rational, statistician-brained personalities who treat every human interaction as a probability problem, missing the emotional forest for the mathematical trees.