How Corporations Value Human Life

in #philosophy7 years ago

Before I start this article, I want to just flat out spoil the ending and say its impossible to value human life. Its impossible to value to moments we share, the people we love and their impact, however small on the world as a whole. However that being said, there is a way that corporations and other agencies value human life and most of the time it has to do with risk. Every company does the calculation differently and most people don’t really want to know the calculation because it’s a grim topic. Companies are always going to do the calculation regardless of if you know it or not.

I once met a man at a career fair and asked him what he did for a living, which was work for a major car company as a statistician. I have always been interested in the topic of valuing human life and I had heard about a specific topic before involving recalls. I asked if he had ever done the calculation of human life and he smiled. He said he personally didn’t deal with those calculations but he knows the people who do and every time a product has a problem they need to see what one of their customers life is worth.

The way they do this is by calculating the percent of someone dying or being injured by their product, the percent chance they would be sued and ultimately what the settlements would cost. If the price is higher than what it would cost to do a full product recall, they won’t bother and let the person get injured and settle. An example would be if Apple created a new Iphone and it had a one in a billion chance of exploding and killing the user. They estimate a recall would cost 100 million , but if that person died , they could settle for 10 million. If likely only 7 people on the planet will die from the iphone, it will only cost them 70 million versus the 100 million recall, so they wont bother doing it.


Whether or not this is right or wrong, companies need to calculate their risk versus reward just to operate effectively, and we do it as well. When we go on a rollercoast, some people have higher risk tolerance than others. Some calculate the risk to go on it isn’t worth it so we pass up the fun we might have. Unknowingly we are doing it every day of our lives without really knowing. Risk is so imbedded in the normal person’s brain that it just seems like second nature to them.

Corporate cases are interesting, but I find the more interesting cases to be ones where people are convicted of a crime, then released years later after more evidence comes to light. These people who have been imprisoned may have lost the best 10 years of their life and now a judge must decide how much each day, filled with potential experiences, people, love and life was worth. The majority of the time it ends up being vastly understated and the wrongly convicted would have rather had the time on the outside. Ask yourself how much would it take for you to go to jail for 10 years?

Valuing human life is a very tricky and not pleasant subject, but it is something that needs to be done. Like I said in the beginning when I spoiled the ending, it really isn’t possible to value a life. Mostly this is because it is impossible to know what life may bring a certain individual. However, there need to be an alternative way to estimate the risk a life poses to a company and how much money they would lose. It is a bad situation when it happens, but corporations need to be equipped to handle it.


Thanks to @Elyaque for the badges

Sort:  

I don't think there's really a way to expect companies to do anything besides coldly crunch numbers like that. And we wouldn't really want them to -- having a smart phone at an affordable price adds to human wellbeing and is in turn saving lives in some abstract way.

So Apple stepping away from their cold hard calculation hurts us too.

I'd probably prefer living in small self-sustainable communities over the way the world is now. And then you naturally value the people around you. But there's just no way to have the world like it is now and then expect Apple to treat their millions of customers in a human to human way. It just kind of has to operate as a "program" to work at all.

I agree. A company isn't some Grinch sitting in his/her office. It's a collection of individuals who have jobs to improve efficiency in small pieces. Some of those pieces are reducing costs, increasing revenue, etc....so anything that involves reducing the liability will usually be done by someone at a large company.

ALL LIVES MATTER
Keep on steemit.

Interesting topic. And airline companies give human life an estimated value every time they are doing maintenance service on their planes. They calculate how much more money will be needed to save more lives statistically speaking

yeah definitely, if they dont calculate it they might take on much more risk than desired.

Sounds a lot like the movie 'fight club' where he explained this on the plane. :) You may be living a double life...

"Valuing human life is a very tricky and not pleasant subject, but it is something that needs to be done"

I don't think it 'needs' to be done inherently. It only is necessary in our current economic reality where money could ever equate to human life. Or any other life for that matter. There are plenty of cultures who never had to make such determinations.

It has to be done from the company's perspective because they could essentially overleverage themselves and end up going bankrupt off of a single bad product.

Great point about how its a tricky matter putting a value on human life. People dont like to hear it, but most sucessful business's have to do this.

Human life is always a touchy subject, but handled well here in this article by @calaber24p.

These two combined short quoted statements sum up the article well:

Valuing human life is a very tricky and not pleasant subject, but it is something that needs to be done.

Companies need to calculate their risk versus reward just to operate effectively, and we do it as well.

Thank you for your honest vantage and great viewpoints.

I post regularly about Steemit, Bitcoin and other crypto related material, check out my Steemit page and follow and VOTE UP for the fastest active news you can run with!

Thank you,

Jeffrey Anderson
Editor in Chief
The Anderson Report
@cryptoNEWScoins on Twitter

Screenshot_2017_07_24_at_5_41_03_PM

Thank you , its a tricky subject and one that a lot of people dont like to hear, but in a weird way it needs to be done.

its a really good article and a good topic @calaber24p some airlines dont have good service but most are try to give every one a good service for safe life everyone

When the robots take over, we all will be worth a whole lot less, thanks for your post.

Valuing human life is a hard job but someone has to do it... calaber you are master of writing !!! your postings are the best .

Upvoted and RESTEEMED!

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.16
TRX 0.12
JST 0.026
BTC 60479.65
ETH 2906.15
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.43