I’m not sure that’s true in general. I can think of situations where the prudent course of action is to act as fast as possible. For instance, if you accidentally set yourself on fire on the cooker, if you are acting prudently, you will stop, drop and roll, and do it hastily.
The more I look at this, the less sure I am what “hastily” means.
More precisely… if I understand “hastily” to mean, roughly, “more rapidly/sloppily than prudence dictates”, then this statement is trivially true. If I assume the statement is nontrivial, I’m not sure how to test whether something is being done hastily.
A good observation. I was going to suggest throwing a live hand grenade out of your tent as a counter-example—but you don’t want to do it so hastily that it misses the opening bounces back and lands in your lap.
Publilius Syrus
I’m not sure that’s true in general. I can think of situations where the prudent course of action is to act as fast as possible. For instance, if you accidentally set yourself on fire on the cooker, if you are acting prudently, you will stop, drop and roll, and do it hastily.
The more I look at this, the less sure I am what “hastily” means.
More precisely… if I understand “hastily” to mean, roughly, “more rapidly/sloppily than prudence dictates”, then this statement is trivially true. If I assume the statement is nontrivial, I’m not sure how to test whether something is being done hastily.
Trivial statements are often useful as reminders of facts, particularly when those facts are tradeoffs we would rather not have to face.
A good observation. I was going to suggest throwing a live hand grenade out of your tent as a counter-example—but you don’t want to do it so hastily that it misses the opening bounces back and lands in your lap.