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by __MatrixMan__ 732 days ago
> many natural things provide a benefit in terms of procreation but detrimental to health

Maybe... but many more either kill you or they don't. Lets take your whales-getting-the-bends example. That gives us a dimension: pressure. Suppose you're whale.

- Let x be a randomly chosen pressure

- Let y be a pressure that your parents lived through

You have to spend a few minutes at x or y, which pressure do you chose? y would be a safer choice.

The same goes for potentially hazardous chemicals: the safer bet is to pick the one that comes with evidence that things like you can survive contact with it, and that'll be the one that was in your environment when you were born. Otherwise you wouldn't have been born there.

If somebody wants to sell us something that our parents never came in contact with, the evidence that it is safe should be stronger than the effect described above. I'm not a statistician, so I can't quantify that effect, but it exists, and the naturalistic fallacy distracts from it.

1 comments

Sure, there is a precautionary principle. Change nothing and you won't end up worse than before.

It depends on how risky you think the baseline factors are, and how risky you think the average new factor is. It also depends on how likely catastrophic risks are.

We know people don't drop dead from most things, so risk is generally at the fringe. Long lead times and low impact.

You then have to consider how many safe products you are missing out on to avoid the bad ones.

I think the the current paradigm is pretty reasonable. Screen for major known risks and then monitor and study

I think that breaks down when you compare Neolithic or pre-industrial man to now.