Skip to main content
Bill of Health
  • About Bill of Health
  • Policies
  • Symposia
  • In Focus Series

Tag: nirvana fallacy

Fictional city of the future. Portrait of a Utopian society.

When Crafting Public Health Policy, the Perfect Shouldn’t Be the Enemy of the Good

March 9, 2023March 9, 2023 dgoldberg Leave a comment

By Daniel Goldberg

The nirvana fallacy “is the informal fallacy of comparing actual things with unrealistic, idealized alternatives.” Practice and policy guided by the nirvana fallacy discourages any action at all short of a perfect solution.

Sound familiar? It’s one justification for pandemic policy inaction in a nutshell.

Read More

Most popular

  • Modern Medical Research Laboratory with Computer Showing Virus Genome Research Software. Scientific Laboratory Biotechnology Development Center Full of High-Tech Equipment. How Artificial Intelligence is Revolutionizing Drug Discovery by Matthew Chun
  • Fictional city of the future. Portrait of a Utopian society. When Crafting Public Health Policy, the Perfect Shouldn’t Be the Enemy of the Good by dgoldberg
  • 3D Rendering Crispr DNA Editing. Responding to the Comeback of He Jiankui, ‘The CRISPR Baby Scientist’: Lessons from Criminal Justice Theory by Matthew Chun
  • The United States Capitol building at sunset at night in Washington DC, USA The End of Public Health? It’s Not Dead Yet by The Petrie-Flom Center Staff
  • La Plata, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina; 12 04 2020: Claim of legalization of abortion in Argentina. Woman with green scarves protested in front of the church. Decriminalizing Abortion in Argentina: 8 Takeaways from the Inflection Point of Legalization by Alicia Ely Yamin

Get our newsletter

Subscribe now

Hot Topics

Archives

Powered by

Pages

  • About Bill of Health
  • Policies
  • Symposia
  • In Focus Series

Sign up for our newsletter

Subscribe

Follow us

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Vimeo
  • LinkedIn
Petrie-Flom Center at Harvard Law School » petrie-flom [at] law.harvard.edu Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress