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Real-Life Decision Making

Marine navigators must often adhere to strict guidelines when they face a decision.

John Mackie was a marine navigator in the coast guard. He says that any decision you make to alter the course of your vessel has to be in accordance with existing maritime traffic rules.

On the other hand, you cannot always navigate a vessel by the textbook.

You are a marine navigator. Your ship is steaming through a deep-sea channel at reduced speed to make a certain destination at a certain time. Another vessel is behind you. It is going faster than your ship and wants to pass you.

Under marine traffic rules, your ship can maintain its present course and speed. It does not have to get out of the way. It is the responsibility of the other ship to change course and speed if it wants to overtake you, just as it is the case on any land road.

But as the other ship attempts to pass, both ships approach a particularly narrow section of the channel. The channel widens again soon after, but there is a chance the two ships might get uncomfortably close.

What do you do?

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