johnsher wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
'Ordinary' people have a capacity to display extra-ordinary errors of judgement, failures of assessment (of a situation or their own abilities) or other such screw-ups that defy all reasonable efforts to anticipate and capture or prevent them e.g.
yes but unless I've misunderstood that's not what you said above:
Rigpig wrote:
to me at least, that these few are not 'ordinary' in the sense that I understand the word to mean.
Er yes, I got myself tangled up trying to bash out a reply in short space of time

I meant that, in spite of being oridinary in the sense that I understood, they displayed extra-ordinary behaviours. Like my old boss, an ordinary bloke in all respects, who once admitted he hospitalised himself by copping an angle grinder to the ball sack
We are not however about to embark upon a program of banning domestic power tools or calling for training before anyone can walk into the cowboy ranch known as B&Q and buy one.
In other words, the ordinaryness of people who fall foul of something does not in itself provide a metric against which we can gauge the unworthiness or danergousness of whatever it was that caught them out, unless it is happening with startling regularity.
Yes I know I probably invented a word or two there but you get the gist... I hope!