L
LilyM
Guest
Known risk? Are you telling me that everyone who steps into a car has calculated with precision and accuracy the statistical chances of how likely they are to be involved in an accident on that particular drive? I would doubt such a thing could be ‘known’ with any level of certitude that would approach anywhere near knowledge - not when you factor in things like the behaviour of fellow drivers and the condition of the car itself, which would be difficult for the punter to know before they set out.The difference is huge. If you cannot see that, I cannot help you. Of course the situation is not that simple. When people get into a car, they take a known risk. They are aware of the dangers, and they are aware of the probabilities. Based upon those values they can choose to take the risk or decline it. That is not true in relation to hell. There is no proof that hell exists, or even if it does, what are the conditions there. To say that people “risk” hell is just about as sensible as to say that the children take a risk by going into bed, because they believe that some monsters exist under the bed.
If you polled drivers in a parking lot, all 99.99% of them could ever say is that they simply are aware that they could possibly be in an accident, without being able to be any more precise than that as to their knowledge of the risk. In other words your average driver has more ‘knowledge’ of the risk than we are supposing about the risk of hell.