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You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life. (Read 3703 times)
freediver
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #105 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:54am
 
A lot of people misrepresent true Darwinian fitness.
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People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
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Gordon
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #106 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 12:00pm
 
freediver wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:54am:
A lot of people misrepresent true Darwinian fitness.


The word fitness is mistaken for most suitable.
The people most likely to breed in large numbers in Australia 2020 are stupid lazy people on welfare.

People grinding it out in the workforce can't breed until their late 30s then manage just one or two.
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aquascoot
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #107 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 12:45pm
 
quite true @rhino @ fd @ gordon.

if you read Guns, Germs and Steel, he makes the interesting point that "immunity to pandemics" was probably the main source of darwinian advantage in the west for the last 1000 years.

the african had to be quick to escape the lion so he wins the 100m at the olympics.
the white european had to have an immune system to fight off typhoid cholera and syphyllis
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John Smith
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #108 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 2:32pm
 
rhino wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:26am:
I rest my case.  Change your tampon Smithy before you get toxic shock syndrome.


Changing your tampon didn't work for you dopey. Why would you think it would work elsewhere?


freediver wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:41am:
Oh look. JS beating his dead horse again.



It's still much more responsive than you FD

Gordon wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:43am:
Why is he continuing to try and drag Aquas kids into the debate?


still trying to be relevant  Grin Grin
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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rhino
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #109 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 4:20pm
 
Gordon wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:43am:
Why is he continuing to try and drag Aquas kids into the debate?

apparently hes still trying to be relevant, whatever that means

John Smith wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 2:32pm:

Gordon wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 11:43am:
Why is he continuing to try and drag Aquas kids into the debate?


still trying to be relevant  

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aquascoot
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #110 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 4:43pm
 
these figures are american from 2010.

The results of this process are summarized in Tables 8-1 and 8-2 for economic and comprehensive costs.
Speed related crashes resulted in 10,536 fatalities, over 800,000 nonfatal injuries, and over 3 million
PDO damaged vehicles in 2010. This represents 32 percent of all fatalities and roughly 20 percent of all
nonfatal crashes (including both nonfatal injury and PDO). Speed related crashes caused $52 billion in
economic costs and $203 billion in comprehensive costs, accounting for 21 percent of all economic costs
and 24 percent of all societal harm (measured as comprehensive costs) from motor vehicle crashes.

so 10,000 speed related fatalities at a cost of 250 billion.

i suppose it might be a bit more now.
of course that 250 billion represents not just the deaths but 800,000 injured.

it seemed from burrowing down into the cost of safety improvements on roads, the engineers worked on a cost of about 9 million to save a life each year.  (ie , if you had a blackspot that caused 1 death per year, $9 million would eliminate that stat)
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freediver
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #111 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 5:07pm
 
So about $1m per life, or $10,000 per kilo.

Some tuna are worth $1m. But I think they weigh more than a person.
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #112 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 5:18pm
 
The price varies.

The most valuable person on the planet is me.
Then those closest to me.
It decreases as people get further away from me.
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freediver
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #113 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 5:19pm
 
Aye. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #114 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 7:38pm
 
How did Haldane's joke go?... "I would willingly die for two brothers or eight cousins".
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #115 - Apr 20th, 2020 at 7:42pm
 
Sprintcyclist wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 5:18pm:
The price varies.

The most valuable person on the planet is me.
Then those closest to me.
It decreases as people get further away from me.


I heard this in an old Radiolab podcast, the effort and resources  someone will expend to help a person decreases at  very predictable rate the further genetically removed they are .
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aquascoot
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #116 - Apr 21st, 2020 at 6:31am
 
Gordon wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 7:42pm:
Sprintcyclist wrote on Apr 20th, 2020 at 5:18pm:
The price varies.

The most valuable person on the planet is me.
Then those closest to me.
It decreases as people get further away from me.


I heard this in an old Radiolab podcast, the effort and resources  someone will expend to help a person decreases at  very predictable rate the further genetically removed they are .



True Gordon
It seems like we are adapted for caring about 100 people or there abouts
That's usually a number of guests you have at a wedding or a 21st
That's usually the number of people who you communicate with on social media
probably from an evolutionary point of view if you were living in a village of 100 people
A lot of those where your relatives and shared your DNA
The Roman centurion commanded about 100 men
Australian rifle company comprises about 100 men

It's quite interesting that even amongst the Australian army
Companies will be loyal to their own company but won't think much of pilfering material from rival companies
So loyalty and caring seems to Peter out and about that level

It's sort of why we feel a mild disgust when a green senator goes on television and cries crocodile tears about some refugee catastrophe

From a biological point of view our reptilian brain recognises that as unlikely

a million Africans butchered each other with machetes a decade ago
That would have got way way way less attention then Daniel morcombe
Or William Tyrrell

That's another phenomenon where our reptilian brain gets tricked
People nowadays may not have 100 friends
They may develop deep emotional attachments to
Lady Di or William Terrell or Steve Irwin or Peter Brock

These people may become very much part of the 100 person tribe
And so people in Australia can become grief-stricken by the death of lady Di

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freediver
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #117 - Apr 21st, 2020 at 7:08am
 
The first human "revolution" identified by historians is an intellectual one. I think they date it to about 100,000 years ago (?), when humans gained the ability to cooperate in groups of more than about 100. Prior to this, humans, as with all other species, used interpersonal relationships to manage group politics. They kept tabs on not just their own relationship with everyone else in their tribe, but also about the relationships between other tribe members. This becomes exponentially complex as group size increases.

I think that is what lead to modern humans replacing neanderthals.
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #118 - Apr 21st, 2020 at 7:34am
 
freediver wrote on Apr 21st, 2020 at 7:08am:
I think that is what lead to modern humans replacing neanderthals.

Aww, c'mon, you remember what Neanderthals were like... They sat around all day, grunting...
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aquascoot
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Re: You Cant Put a Price on a Human Life.
Reply #119 - Apr 21st, 2020 at 8:45am
 
Yes freediver

Ants bees termites will co-operate in their millions
But they all are genetic clones and share the same DNA

Humans are the only animal that will co-operate in large numbers even with people who don't share the same DNA

If you think back to that tribe of 100 people
You can see how trust and reciprocal arrangements were built
How the most powerful person in that tribe
Was not the person with the biggest club who belted the others over the head
But maybe the guy who could coordinate the other hundred into designing and using a Mastodon trap

Even further to this
When wolves bring down a deer
The alpha wolf eats his fill and then the other wolves in order

But say a human group of hunters brought down a Mastodon
And they had the foresight to bring back some of the meat to share with the tribe
Now they are building the idea of trust
The idea of trade
And the idea of markets
That currency becomes more important then having the biggest muscles 2 belt people with the biggest club

It seems like this idea of trust is crucial 2 what has advanced human beings.

If you look at a system such as perhaps eBay

From a purely selfish point of view
One would expect that the seller would sell dodgy items
And the purchaser would send a dodgy check

And when they started eBay there was expensive insurance to ensure this did not happen
After about 6 months it was all dropped
Because people generally are trustworthy
Even when dealing in groups bigger than 100
In fact from a capitalist marketing perspective
Trust is the basis of globalisation

Markets trade and global trust are the way forward

That's why ideas such as closing the Queensland New South Wales border
Or trying to eliminate the virus in Australia and go it alone
Are anti-evolution
They are a step backward
from that perspective they are doomed to failure
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