faked an accident - meaning and definition. What is faked an accident
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What (who) is faked an accident - definition

UNANTICIPATED INTERACTION OF MULTIPLE FAILURES IN A COMPLEX SYSTEM
System Accident; Normal accident

Work accident         
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  • Health and safety [[warning sign]]
OCCURRENCE DURING WORK THAT LEADS TO PHYSICAL OR MENTAL HARM
Industrial accident; Workplace accident; Occupational accident; Work accidents; Industrial accidents; Workplace accidents; Occupational accidents; Workplace death
A work accident, workplace accident, occupational accident, or accident at work is a "discrete occurrence in the course of work" leading to physical or mental occupational injury. According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), more than 337 million accidents happen on the job each year, resulting, together with occupational diseases, in more than 2.
Faked death         
CASE IN WHICH AN INDIVIDUAL LEAVES EVIDENCE TO SUGGEST THAT THEY ARE DEAD
Fake death; Faking your own death; Faking a death; List of pseudocides; Pseudocide; Faked suicide; Death fraud; Staged death; Pseuicide
A faked death, also called a staged death or pseudocide, is the act of an individual purposely deceiving other people into believing the fallacy that the individual is dead, when the person is, in fact, still alive. People who commit pseudocide can do so by leaving evidence, clues, or through other methods.
Accident (fallacy)         
INFORMAL FALLACY
Fallacy of the accident; Fallacy of the Accident; Fallacy of accident; Fallacia accidentalis; Accident fallacy; A dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid; Noncentral fallacy; Accident fallacies
The fallacy of accident (also called destroying the exception or a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid) is an informal fallacy and a deductively valid but unsound argument occurring in a statistical syllogism (an argument based on a generalization) when an exception to a rule of thumb is ignored. It is one of the thirteen fallacies originally identified by Aristotle in Sophistical Refutations.

Wikipedia

System accident

A system accident (or normal accident) is an "unanticipated interaction of multiple failures" in a complex system. This complexity can either be of technology or of human organizations, and is frequently both. A system accident can be easy to see in hindsight, but extremely difficult in foresight because there are simply too many action pathways to seriously consider all of them. Charles Perrow first developed these ideas in the mid-1980s. William Langewiesche in the late 1990s wrote, "the control and operation of some of the riskiest technologies require organizations so complex that serious failures are virtually guaranteed to occur."

Safety systems themselves are sometimes the added complexity which leads to this type of accident. Maintenance problems are common with redundant systems. Maintenance crews can fail to restore a redundant system to active status. They are often overworked or maintenance is deferred due to budget cuts, because managers know that they system will continue to operate without fixing the backup system.