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| Loss and Grief by Patrick Emerson |
You can estimate the economic value of a life. Look at two jobs which are similar in every regard except 1) pay and 2) risk of death. Next, multiply the hourly wage difference by 1 over the difference in the percentage chance of death. Multiply that number by the number of hours they would otherwise live. That gives you an estimation of their life's economic value according to what they demand in compensation for reduced safety. If it takes 5 dollars more an hour for a person to take a riskier job, all else equal, then that difference in safety during that hour is valued at 5 dollars, and that information can be extrapolated to estimate how much a person values the rest of their life.
This calculation bothers some people. Why? I think because we recognize that there is a value in people beyond this life, evidenced in part by the pain associated with the death of loved ones.
The depth of our feelings also indicates that there is an afterlife. I experience non-physical feelings, spiritual feelings, when I am with my family and/or talking about God and His plan for our families. I have felt such happy and tender emotions towards my family that I don't think that the death of my body could make those spiritual feelings go away.
Perhaps my greatest comfort with regard to death is my overall testimony of God. I know that He lives and loves us, that He answers our prayers and has a plan for our eternal selves. While I still worry a lot, I know that I can find joy by anxiously serving God in this life and in that way, I can find a fullness of joy in the next life.


Well I am seriously underpaid! I bet of all my family members I have the most dangerous job yet I get paid the least!
ReplyDeleteHa ha, your compensation must be the great joy you get from helping people.
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