The whole notion of putting a monetary value on life (human or nun-human) because of perceived "rationality" is a symptom of our fundamentally flawed culture.
That at some point the value of money begins to exceed to the value of human life so more time and energy can be spent on building roads to support an inherently unsustainable and destructive economic system is insane.
Feel free to start living by your own ethics.
If the value of life is infinite and we should devote as much resources as possible to keeping people alive, feel free to stop "insanely" squandering your money on the "destructive" pursuits of our capitalist system.
All you need to spend money on is basics like food, water, shelter, clothing and transport so that you can continue to work and produce income to use to help keep people alive.
There are plenty of children quite literally starving to death right now who would greatly appreciate it if you cut back on any luxuries you enjoy and instead gave the money to them to buy food and get clean water and medicine.
Surely any luxury you treat yourself to is an absolute waste of resources that could better be used to help those whose lives are in real jeopardy. Why are you wasting time on this forum instead of out working a second job to help the poor?
Obviously at some point you do value certain things more than human life, we all do. Until you pious cunts start living by your own idealistic, nonsensical ethics how about you shut the fuck up.
Basically if human life is truly regarded as invaluable then we must logically expend all of our resources in protecting it. To borrow a scenario from the other thread perhaps if we paid for a bushfire fighting force which was 4 times as large as the volunteer one then lives would have been saved. But at what cost? Tens, if not hundreds, of millions of dollars. Money which could perhaps be better spent on other things which did not save lives.
If stationing a police officer on every street could reduce the number of murders would it be a good thing? Or would the massive amount of money been better spent on education?
Within the invaluable human life framework you can certainly compare decisions based on their human cost but without translating humans into dollars there is no common measurement to consider non-human and human costs.
We place a value on human life all the time, insurance and employment are but two examples, however generally speaking we persist in espousing a misguided belief that human life is invaluable, while I understand the sentimentality involved I think that this hypocritical and counter-productive.
IMO the value of life can be calculated the same way as any investment by using Net Present Value, meaning the present value of all future income.
ITT: loquasagacious makes a brilliant post explaining the fallacy of the life is sacred argument. Everyone ignores it and throws in their two cents, going on precisely the same sentimental, emotionally charged rant he had already discredited, totally ignoring his challenge to explain their position.
Anyone care to explain how we deal with the problem of scarcity if we are view all life as infinitely valuable? How do we make decisions about how to ration finite resources.
Also if all life is equally valuable, should we spend the same amount of money saving the life of a 70 year old as on a 5 year old? Or the same amount on a convicted rapist as on a renowned scientist?