tsg
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2005
- Messages
- 6,771
Agreed, however are these really the odds? I would also suggest that many people's choices to buy insurance of this type (myself included) is not the result of rational analysis of the odds of needing to claim it, but rather for the "comfort" of knowing it's there should "something" happen. In many ways this would be no more rational a choice than playing the lottery.
Obviously. I would argue just as strongly against insuring for something for the sole purpose of "peace of mind" if the odds of it happening were as unlikely as winning the lottery. Their fear, in this case, is just as irrational as the lottery player's hope.
My point here is that while you are arguing the logic of a rational vs. irrational choices I don't think we can exclude the indivual's motivation for the choice. What seems a rational choice to you, could have been made irrationally by somebody else.
It is possible to reach a good decision by bad reasoning just as it is to reach a bad decision by bad reasoning. It is the reasoning I am concerned with, not the decision.
I honestly don't know if I'm getting value for my health insurance dollar (I'm in Canada, so the costs are somewhat shrouded in mystery for us) but I'm certainly glad to have the insurance. Am I being rational in that case? I can't say that I fully understand or have reasoned through the cost/reward benefits of my situation.
I have no experience with Candadian health insurance, but the sheer cost of medical treatment in the US makes it almost impossible to get treated without health insurance. The fear of having enormous medical bills is far from an irrational one.