Robert J. Gunter, CHP
Operations Support Manager
Safety
and Ecology Corporation
East Tennessee Technology Park
Bldg 1020, Rm
18
Mail Stop 7404
Oak Ridge, TN
Ph: (865) 241-9748
Pg:
(865) 873-0078
E: rgunter@sec-tn.com
-----Original Message-----For better or worse, politicians, voters, and homebuyers don't have to pass your "reality test." The decisions they make are the reality we have to live with. (If most people think the world's flat, the map makers better comply if they want to stay in business.) It's called democracry; just deal with it.
From: owner-radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu [mailto:owner-radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu]On Behalf Of William V Lipton
Sent: Monday, March 11, 2002 7:29 AM
To: RuthWeiner@AOL.COM
Cc: dkosloff1@EMAIL.MSN.COM; radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu
Subject: Re: NIMBY for Nevada residentsThe opinions expressed are strictly mine.
It's not about dose, it's about trust.
Curies forever.Bill Lipton
liptonw@dteenergy.comRuthWeiner@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 3/8/02 2:24:09 PM Mountain Standard Time, liptonw@DTEENERGY.COM writes:
Perception is reality; just deal with it.No, it isn't (I actually have an editorial in Risk Analysis on this topic). Instead of bombarding the list with examples that anyone can come up with, just remember the Flat Earth Society. Even better is Aristotelean mechanics: a moving object will stop of its own accord. That was not only perception, but observation. It took Newton to correctly identify the laws of motion: a moving object stops when there is an opposing force that stops it.
The little mantra that "perception is reality" does nothing but promote and lend credibility to, junk science. It isn't a harmless idea that anyone is entitled to have (sorry, Bill).
Ruth Weiner, Ph. D.
ruthweiner@aol.com