Seems to me there's a lot of semantic mumbo-jumbo about 'rules' vs 'guidelines' in this thread. What's the big deal about calling them rules? Don't you have to learn the 'rules' to pass your 'tests' in order to get your cave-diving certification? Whether Sheck thought they were guidelines or not then, they're rules now.
Andrew's post suggesting that some of the rules need to be made more conservative, and some added, is a great idea. That's, to me, akin to saying, "Let's use seatbelts so people don't go flying through the windshield of their cars."
I went to a trauma training at the hospital. When two cars bash into each other we no longer call it a car 'accident', it is now a car 'collision'. We were told this is because ALL car crashes are preventable, and therefore not accidents. I don't know if I categorically agree with that, but I do agree with the sentiment.
No one really knows what happened to Bruce and whether or not his death could have been prevented by following the rules. That sucks. If we ever do find out for certain, then maybe we need to change, or add to, the rules to make it so that it can't happen again. Unless people enjoy dying in caves.
"Not all change is improvement...but all improvement is change" Donald Berwick
oohhh, postulates! I like that!
-skip
"Learning the techniques of others does not interfere with the discovery of techniques of one's own." B.F. Skinner, 1970.
"Have you ever noticed
When you're feeling really good
There's always a pigeon
That'll come shiat on your hood?" John Prine 4-7-2020
"Into the blue again; in the silent water
Under the rocks, and stones; there is water underground" Talking Heads
postulate:
- - assume something: to assume or suggest that something is true or exists, especially as the basis of an argument or th…
- - claim something: to demand or claim something
In traditional logic, an axiom or postulate is a proposition that is not proved or demonstrated but considered to be either self-evident, or subject to necessary decision. Therefore, its truth is taken for granted, and serves as a starting point for deducing and inferring other (theory dependent) truths.
- - something assumed true: something that is assumed or believed to be true and that is used as the basis of an argument…
In mathematics, the term axiom is used in two related but distinguishable senses: "logical axioms" and "non-logical axioms". In both senses, an axiom is any mathematical statement that serves as a starting point from which other statements are logically derived. Unlike theorems, axioms (unless redundant) cannot be derived by principles of deduction, nor are they demonstrable by mathematical proofs, simply because they are starting points; there is nothing else from which they logically follow (otherwise they would be classified as theorems).
corollary:
natural consequence: something that is a natural consequence of or accompaniment to something else
- - statement easily proved from another: a proposition that follows, with little or no further reasoning, from the proof…
-skip
- - obvious deduction: something that is very obviously or easily deduced from something already proven
"Learning the techniques of others does not interfere with the discovery of techniques of one's own." B.F. Skinner, 1970.
"Have you ever noticed
When you're feeling really good
There's always a pigeon
That'll come shiat on your hood?" John Prine 4-7-2020
"Into the blue again; in the silent water
Under the rocks, and stones; there is water underground" Talking Heads
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