What about people who have had limbs amputated?
Do teeth count as part of the skeleton? If you’ve lost teeth do you only have 99% of a skeleton left?
According to this, bones don’t start forming until the sixth or seventh week of gestation, so does the fetus technically not have a skeleton before then?
So many questions
For the sake of this exercise we’ll consider skeletons rounded to whole integers. And air resistance may be ignored.
I’d argue you still have one skeleton if you lose limbs or teeth.
Amount of skeletons is an integer representing the anount of bone structures holding and protecting human body (or whatever’s left of it).
The real question is, how much of which parts of skeleton can we lose with it still being skeleton instead of a set of bones?
Everyone else is failing to count the number of babies (140 million per year) nearly all of whom have 100% complete skeletons and set that against the number of amputations of perhaps a few percentage points across a much smaller number of people annually (“more than 1 million annually”).