When something is outside my personal experience--and I have never been killed or eaten by a bear--then I learn about it before commenting (and often don't comment, because I understand that I don't know enough).
So, having not been killed at eaten by bears a statistically informative number of times, I did my homework.
You didn't. You also haven't been repeatedly killed or eaten by bears, I'm assuming, and despite me linking you to the resources, you keep making the same counterfactual comments about why it happens and then call me irrational.
Bears are cool, and it's easy to wildly exaggerate the danger. But you're simply not giving a proper accounting for why things go wrong when they go wrong.
I'm not saying bears are rampaging human-devouring monsters. However, just like with humans, when they are violent, the cause isn't always "provocation" in any reasonable sense of the word.
(You're basically doing the bear version of "It was really my fault; I know how jealous he gets; I shouldn't have gone out with my friends.")