“I agree, but unfortunately reality has already put a price on human life, and that price is much less than 5 million dollars. By refusing to accept this, you are only refusing to make an informed decision about which lives to purchase.”
Actually the estimate I heard was about 6 million dollars. And I’d argue the other way: That human life is the only thing you can put a price on, the basis for all trade. Whenever you cross a road, you’re trading a slight chance of being run over for the value of being on the other side. When you eat something unhealthy, you’re trading a portion of your life expectancy for the taste. So people do it every day, except they only trade in fractions of human life.
So people do it every day, except they only trade in fractions of human life.
Or in abstract expected larger numbers of human lives. Direct human-life trading in larger amounts is more unusual, and usually carries strong stigma (hostages, slave trafficking, etc.)
“You can’t put a price on a human life.”
“I agree, but unfortunately reality has already put a price on human life, and that price is much less than 5 million dollars. By refusing to accept this, you are only refusing to make an informed decision about which lives to purchase.”
Actually the estimate I heard was about 6 million dollars. And I’d argue the other way: That human life is the only thing you can put a price on, the basis for all trade. Whenever you cross a road, you’re trading a slight chance of being run over for the value of being on the other side. When you eat something unhealthy, you’re trading a portion of your life expectancy for the taste. So people do it every day, except they only trade in fractions of human life.
Or in abstract expected larger numbers of human lives. Direct human-life trading in larger amounts is more unusual, and usually carries strong stigma (hostages, slave trafficking, etc.)