If reason told you to jump off a cliff, would you do it?
Yup, because there are probably some pretty damned good reasons—no pun intended—for jumping off the cliff, like that I have a parachute strapped to my back and an impending explosion will kill all people still on the cliff.
If there weren’t good reasons that were similarly persuasive, then it wouldn’t be reasonable.
Yup, because there are probably some pretty damned good reasons—no pun intended—for jumping off the cliff, like that I have a parachute strapped to my back and an impending explosion will kill all people still on the cliff.
That’s a good example. I was going for “hanglider, chased by a guy wielding a claymore”.
Also, on your relative social position to the cutie, your general charm and good looks, etc .. - in other words, your perceived odds of making it with her if you don’t jump off the cliff.
Yup, because there are probably some pretty damned good reasons—no pun intended—for jumping off the cliff, like that I have a parachute strapped to my back and an impending explosion will kill all people still on the cliff.
If there weren’t good reasons that were similarly persuasive, then it wouldn’t be reasonable.
That’s a good example. I was going for “hanglider, chased by a guy wielding a claymore”.
Would “bungee cords firmly attached to body, cutie of the interesting sex looking on anxiously” count as reason or as misguided social signaling?
You missed the rather important “cliff has substantial overhang”.
Depends on the utility you get from bungee jumping and the probability of the cords breaking.
Also, on your relative social position to the cutie, your general charm and good looks, etc .. - in other words, your perceived odds of making it with her if you don’t jump off the cliff.