If our Tables say that the maximum safe current for a cable is 27A, will it really become unsafe at 27.1A ?
Do you think that it would be common sense to have a design load of over the tabulated maximum safe current because of that? Where does
your common sense say you should stop? 27.2A? 27.3A? 29.7A? What if somebody elses "common sense" stops at a different point? Who authoritatively decides which common sense is right and which one is not?
If some regulation refers to a maximum cable length of 3 m, would there really be a problem with 3.01 m ?
Ditto for 3.02m? 3.03m? 3.3m?
If it is deemed acceptable ('safe') to drive at 30 mph on a certain road, is it 'unsafe' at 30.1 mph ?
In reality, of course, the threshold for official sanctions is >30mph, but in principle the same type of ditto questions should be asked.
If the pass mark of an exam is 60%, is it 'fair' that someone with 59.9% fails ?
If you say it isn't, then what you have done is to say that you think the threshold should be 59.9%.
And then, inevitably, you have to turn your attention to the fairness of failing someone with 59.8%.
And so it goes on, unless you can explain why your common-sense threshold of X% is where the threshold should be, until you get down to 0%.
Do you not see?
In all of those cases, it is impossible "to explain, with reason and logic" why crossing the threshold has such a profound effect (toggling a binary change), but we have to live with that problem.
But you won't live with it.
You are given a threshold of zero, and will not accept it, and want to use what you term "common sense" to argue for a non-zero threshold.
Do you really not see that even if you do that then at some point you are going to bang up against
your threshold, and will have resolved absolutely nothing, for you will still have the profound effect of crossing it.
What is your real motive in proposing that the threshold should be what
you think rather than what the regulations prescribe?
This is therefore not, in itself, a compelling reason for not having a 'threshold' in the situation we are discussing.
We do have a threshold.
What is the compelling reason for saying it is wrong, and should be different?