I have lately thought of another way to answer the recurrentYes there are. In fact, quantum mechanics marked a major epistemic revolution : the end of certitudes. Everything must be evaluated in terms of probability. The world is not a perfect clockwork anymore.
Now for instance, let us say an event has a "negligibly small probability", if by definition there is less than one in a billion for it to occur during the age of the universe, in a volume equivalent to the size of the visible universe. It can safely be disregarded and should not prevent us from sleeping. There are probably more relevant questions to turn one's attention to.
It has just recently occurred to me that answering "
those probabilities are negligeable" is just not convincing enough. One should stress the more interesting point as to why we must talk in terms of probabilities in the first place. And give concrete orders of magnitudes only later. It reminds me of the fear to fly an airplane while driving a car on a daily basis. The more technology advances, the more fears become irrational.