Rigpig wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
The similarities are incidental and outweighed by the differences.
[...]
It is a logical fallacy to try and make such a connection.
The objective of any modern trasport system is to be safe, efficient and fast. We seem to have forgotten the benefits of "fast" but only for road traffic. The assumption that fast=dangerous is false because the speed and safety relationships are far more complex. Yes, "too fast" can be extremely dangerous. But when we're talking about traffic speed and speed limits, "fast=dangerous" is false because the terms of reference are too oversimplified.
Paul, I know this sir but I cannot for the life of me see how the argument is advanced one millimeter by attemts to draw comparisons between the 'randomness' and unpredictability of the road network with the controlled environment in which trains run.
I think the argument IS advanced a few millimetres when we examine policy and it's application. We can clearly see that policy makers have forgotten that faster is better when applied to road transport, but not when applied to railways. I'd call that predjudice.
All accidents on roads and railways are "system failures" of one sort or another. One great feature of our road safety systems is the degree of fault tolerance, with few errors leading to near misses, few near misses leading to crashes, few crashes leading to injuries, few injury crashes leading to serious injurires and few serious injuries being deaths.
btw, fatalities per passenger mile on the railways are are comparable to roads if "tresspassers" are included. From memory, railway deaths are about 300 per year, and the annual passenger mileage on railways is around 10% of that in cars.