Jacques Derrida: “A just, appropriate decision is always necessary immediately, at once, right away. It cannot first go about getting hold of infinite amounts of information, the limitless knowledge of the conditions, the rules, the hypothetical imperatives that could justify it. Even if it had such a knowledge, even if it took the necessary time to appropriate the necessary knowledge, despite this, the moment of decision, this moment as such would always be a finite moment of urgency and precipitancy, at least if one assumes that this moment cannot be and must not be the consequence or the effect of this theoretical or historical knowledge, of this reflection or cognitive consideration, and that this moment always represents an interruption to the juridical, ethical or political considerations which must and should precede it. The moment of decision is, as Kierkegaard writes, a madness.”