There’s a trope / common pattern / cautionary tale, of people claiming rationality as their motivation for taking actions that either ended badly in general, or ended badly for the particular people who got steamrollered into agreeing with the ‘rational’ option.
People don’t like being fooled, and learn safeguards against situations they remember as ‘risky’ even when they can’t prove that this time there is a tiger in the bush. These safeguards protect them against insurance salesmen who ‘prove’ using numbers that the person needs to buy a particular policy.
There’s a trope / common pattern / cautionary tale, of people claiming rationality as their motivation for taking actions that either ended badly in general, or ended badly for the particular people who got steamrollered into agreeing with the ‘rational’ option.
People don’t like being fooled, and learn safeguards against situations they remember as ‘risky’ even when they can’t prove that this time there is a tiger in the bush. These safeguards protect them against insurance salesmen who ‘prove’ using numbers that the person needs to buy a particular policy.