This is just a thought, but do you think that labels such as "smoking kills" are unintentionally wrong?
For instance, If I smoke 40 a day, it is very likely that I will die before someone who does not smoke (based on statistics).
However, what if we think about it this way:
- Every cigarette supposedly takes away "x minutes" from your life.
- This means that every cigarette potentially increases the arrival of your death at an accelerated rate.
So the act of smoking is a strictly increasing function with reference to death, the more you smoke, the quicker your death should come.
However, this is where the label "smoking kills" is wrong in my opinion. If smoking kills you, you are dead.
You are then dead, relative to non-death, which is life... since we have to assume that we exist.
So your death on the most basic level is then a result of your life (of course this is an assumption we can't escape).
But what I'm trying to say, on a basic level... our death is an inevitable result of life as we are mere mortals.
So I think it is more appropriate to say that "smoking kills you faster" as opposed to the absolutist statement of "smoking kills".
Of course, this is with direct reference to smoking, as it is generally done in increments, I'm not trying to generalise this to something else. E.g. if you get head shot by a sniper, you would most likely drop dead, so there is no incremental "decay" of life involved.
What are your thoughts?
http://media.treehugger.com/assets/images/2011/10/marlboro-smoking-kills.jpg