(a) The more serious the harm, the more likely it is that the law will impose an obligation to prevent that harm from occurring. The gravity of the likely harm is therefore relevant in deciding what, in particular circumstances, a reasonable person would do to avoid that harm.
(b) The law only distinguishes between trivial and non-trivial harm. No obligation arises to avoid trivial harm, but there is always an obligation to avoid harm that cannot be dismissed as merely trivial.
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