An economist says that the probability is .47 that a randomly selected adult is in favor of

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An economist says that the probability is .47 that a randomly selected adult is in favor of keeping the Social Security system as it is, .32 that this adult is in favor of totally abolishing the Social Security system, and .21 that this adult does not have any opinion or is in favor of other options. Were these probabilities obtained using the classical approach, relative frequency approach, or the subjective probability approach? Explain your answer.

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