Feeling safe and being safe are two very different things.
That's the point I'm getting at, people keep opting for what
feels safer, regardless of whether it actually is or not.
I'm not sure what "question begging" is
If you
presume the point at issue instead of
demonstrating it, that's called begging the question.
In order to be rational, any argument/debate has to start from a set of
axioms: propositions that are deemed self-evidently true by both/all parties to the debate, and it then proceeds by logical reasoning:
if x and y, then z, etc. If you presume that a proposition is axiomatic when you know that it isn't, then that's called begging the question: the question being
is the proposition true or isn't it.
In this case you're debating whether cycle paths are actually safer than cycling on the road with an opponent you know is taking the position that they aren't, but you then make statements like:
"Most people don't want to bother, they just want to get from one place to another quickly and easily without taking their lives in their hands every day."
This doesn't offer any reasoned argument or evidence attempting to
demonstrate that cycle paths are safer, it simply
presumes that they are, and in so doing it begs the question:
are they safer or aren't they.
Got it in one.
Very few things done in the name of safety actually make one any safer, regardless of common sense, anecdote or perception. Indeed, many such tactics can make life more dangerous.
If its not been reasonably proven to make you safer on the road then it probably doesn't.
Recently I was arguing about risk compensation with someone in the car industry who was involved in designing side impact protection for cars. I asked him repeatedly if there was any evidence that it had reduced the number of deaths, but he just danced around the issue, evading it with manipulative question begging like "you should talk to the families of people who have died".
1. Measured by whom, where, when, how? What are you quoting there?
The quote is a link, if you click on it you'll see a peer-reviewed paper.