A
philosophical principle I have contemplated for many, many years.
It's basis is the common
complexity of
everyday decision making on a contrast with major, life-changing decisions.
Most major decisions in a person's life are either a fundamentally good thing to do, whether in the interest of the
decision maker or, less often,
someone else; or it is the societally
acceptable conclusion of what the "right" thing to do would be, being subject to widespread
moral opinion, intuition, or conjecture.