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Article Dans Une Revue Safety Science Année : 2016

Zero vision and a Western salvation narrative

Résumé

This paper sets the zero accident vision in the historical–cultural context of a Western salvation narrative, which suggests that a world without suffering is desirable and achievable. Tracing the development of what is an archetype in our thinking, it shows how a Western ethic typically ascribes moral responsibility for suffering (and its avoidance) to individuals’ choices. If taken literally into a ZAV then this can paradoxically produce new kinds of suffering—for example, the sanctioning of workers involved in incidents. It can also create an illusory world without suffering by making suffering disappear from view (e.g., hiding incidents/injuries). Alternative readings of ZAV might suggest that suffering is inevitable and universal, and that human moral choice should focus on efforts to relieve its effects, rather than pretend that it can eradicate its cause
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Dates et versions

hal-01354239 , version 1 (18-08-2016)

Identifiants

Citer

Sidney W.A. Dekker, Robert Long, Jean-Luc Wybo. Zero vision and a Western salvation narrative. Safety Science, 2016, 88, pp.219-223. ⟨10.1016/j.ssci.2015.11.016⟩. ⟨hal-01354239⟩
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