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Real-Life Decision Making

John Murray is a commercial fisher. He says that fishing vessel skippers (captains) must decide where to set the nets. Fishers must be able to figure out the direction the fish are swimming by watching the area and the stage of the tide.

If the fish are plentiful but running close to shore, the skipper must pilot his vessel close enough without hooking the net on any obstacles and without damaging the vessel.

You are on a fishing vessel and your net has caught on a rock. The tide begins to go out and you are concerned that the water will become too shallow for your vessel. The net pulling in one direction and the tide pulling in another begin to make the vessel difficult to control.

But nets are a big part of your livelihood and the cost of replacing one would cut deeply into profits. There are three crewmembers with you. Only you and one crewmember are highly experienced. You have tried for half an hour to disentangle the net.

What do you do?

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