I’m not clear what you are driving at? The question was a statistical economic one, or?
Not quite. The question already morphed into what makes crime different from “normal” economic transactions and whether you can represent it as a only slightly different economic transaction.
As a rationalist I obviously have no inhibitions on placing a monetary value on my life.
So which amount of money would you be willing to exchange your life for?
As suicide has a high symbolic value (see my list above; in this case signalling to a large number of persons including to myself and my children) and that is not the kind of exchange I have thought about before (where I considered external causes for (my) life) I cannot easily say so.
Not quite. The question already morphed into what makes crime different from “normal” economic transactions and whether you can represent it as a only slightly different economic transaction.
So which amount of money would you be willing to exchange your life for?
As suicide has a high symbolic value (see my list above; in this case signalling to a large number of persons including to myself and my children) and that is not the kind of exchange I have thought about before (where I considered external causes for (my) life) I cannot easily say so.