Real world example: the fire alarm goes off in my apartment building at night about once every two weeks. Many people decide to stay in their room, as opposed to evacuating the building. They aren’t understanding the magnitude of how bad it would be if there was a fire and they ended up getting seriously injured or dying. (There have been two real fires so far; the chance of a real fire is not trivial)
I don’t. I’m not scope sensitive. The alarm system is working fine, it’s just that it’s sensitive to people who are cooking (I think). I’m eager to move out ASAP though.
Real world example: the fire alarm goes off in my apartment building at night about once every two weeks. Many people decide to stay in their room, as opposed to evacuating the building. They aren’t understanding the magnitude of how bad it would be if there was a fire and they ended up getting seriously injured or dying. (There have been two real fires so far; the chance of a real fire is not trivial)
Counterpoint: do you understand the magnitude of how bad it would be if there was a fire and you ended up getting seriously injured or dying?
You continue to live in the apartment building which already had two fires and which has a malfunctioning alarm system.
I don’t. I’m not scope sensitive. The alarm system is working fine, it’s just that it’s sensitive to people who are cooking (I think). I’m eager to move out ASAP though.
I hope you have renter’s insurance, knowledge of a couple evacuation routes, and backups for any important data and papers and such.