When you buy a car that’s cheaper than a Volvo, or drive over the speed limit, or build a house that cannot withstand a magnitude 9 earthquake, you are making a life and death decision.
yes, and this is a series of examples of decisions that almost everyone is discouraged from making themselves. Other examples include a police officer’s decision to use lethal force or whether a firefighter goes back into the collapsing building one more time. These are people specifically trained and encouraged to be better at making these judgments, and EVEN then we still prefer the police officer to always take the non-lethal path. The average person is and I think should in general be discouraged from making life or death decisions for other people.
Note that those are all decisions which have been off-loaded to large institutions.
People rarely make overt life and death decisions in their private lives.
Overt is the key word.
When you buy a car that’s cheaper than a Volvo, or drive over the speed limit, or build a house that cannot withstand a magnitude 9 earthquake, you are making a life and death decision.
no. The phrase “life or death decision” does not mean this and this is not how it’s used.
yes, and this is a series of examples of decisions that almost everyone is discouraged from making themselves. Other examples include a police officer’s decision to use lethal force or whether a firefighter goes back into the collapsing building one more time. These are people specifically trained and encouraged to be better at making these judgments, and EVEN then we still prefer the police officer to always take the non-lethal path. The average person is and I think should in general be discouraged from making life or death decisions for other people.