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.it does not prevent damage to the head and neck. Military transports have the passenger seats facing backwards - much, much safer.
What is white? If you shine an intense enough light on grey does it become white?
Quote from: vhfpmr on 13/01/2024 16:42:41It isn't really practical to objectively quantify risk, because risk isn't objective.Oh yes it is. Risk is the product of probability x impact.
It isn't really practical to objectively quantify risk, because risk isn't objective.
In most cases involving damage to humans we can ascribe an impact value of 1 to death and turn to the insurance market for a consensus of "partial death" injury values.
Quote from: vhfpmrpeople behave more carefully when they perceive more risk,Apparently, after cyclones were given both male & female names (back in 1975), it was discovered that female-named cyclones killed more people than male-named cyclones. ("Cyclone" is Australian for hurricane.)- I saw a speculation this week that female-named cyclones were perceived as less threatening than males, and so people took fewer precautions!
people behave more carefully when they perceive more risk,
Quote from: vhfpmr on 13/01/2024 16:42:41Cars kill ~1500 Brits a year, I don't think that many are killed by planes, what's in operation is the Availability Heuristic: people perceive probability according to how easily something springs to mind. I know more people who have been in car crashes than have been in plane crashes.So the "availability" argument isn't convincing.
Cars kill ~1500 Brits a year, I don't think that many are killed by planes, what's in operation is the Availability Heuristic: people perceive probability according to how easily something springs to mind.
newspapers etc publish stories about 10 people dying in a plane crash but not about the 25 killed on the road each month precisely because people are more interested in rare events involving a moderately large number than in the thing which kills a lot more people, but by a steady drip feed of corpses.
Seat belts prevent you from smashing your frontal cortex on the windscreen
So you think that the insurance industry knows the value of your arm better than you do?
Give someone a seatbelt and they drive faster, which is largely why the projected benefits calculated from 'objective' risk never materialised
But not on the steering wheel
Nonsense, most people drive in a way to prevent damage to their car, seat belt or no, the idea of imminent demise is not really a thought. Seatbelts save lives.
- Subsequent work suggests that the gain from some safety measure is up to half offset by more risky behaviours (the comment about bicycle helmets suggests a 30% offset).
Quote from: vhfpmr on 19/01/2024 16:07:21So you think that the insurance industry knows the value of your arm better than you do? You decide how much your arm is worth
Quote from: vhfpmr on 19/01/2024 16:07:21Give someone a seatbelt and they drive faster, which is largely why the projected benefits calculated from 'objective' risk never materialisedNonsense, most people drive in a way to prevent damage to their car, seat belt or no,
the idea of imminent demise is not really a thought
Seatbelts save lives.
yes even on the steering wheel.
It's sometimes called the Peltzman Effect, named after a Chicago economics professor.- He wrote a paper arguing that road safety measures weren't worth the cost, because they didn't save any lives.
The immediate effect of teh introduction of Davy's safety lamp was an increase in mine explosions.Previously, people didn't even try to work in "gassy" mines.With the lamp, they could do so.And when a pickaxe struck a spark...
car ownership goes up, road deaths come down
The piece of my nose bone that I dug out of the steering wheel in this says otherwise
It's been known for decades that road deaths correlate with traffic density, not safety devices: busy roads look more dangerous, so people drive more carefully on them
Another interesting one is that motorists who cycle are half as likely to crash their cars than ones who don't.Why?
So how much will you sell me your arm for then? Mine aren't for sale.
Above the elbow, GBP102,890 -122,860, below the Elbow GBP90,250 - 102,890
What Is Gray?