CONCURRING:
I am tempted to dissent with regard to the appellee, Galt, by quoting Perry v. Williamson for the principle that, at best, appellant Carney was a licensee and, “[i]f the hazard is obvious then it does not *513involve an unreasonable risk of harm to the licensee.” 824 S.W.2d 869, 874 (Ky. 1992) (internal quotation marks omitted). But I am compelled to concur with the majority because, counterpoised to such clear jurisprudence, we have McIntosh6 and its progeny.
Frankly, the Supreme Court already has tipped its hand. A majority of our justices read Perry v. Williamson as “abandoning status-based duties and replacing with simply the duty of reasonable care given the circumstancés.” Shelton v. Kentucky Easter Seals Soc., Inc., 413 S.W.3d 901, 909 fn.28 (Ky. 2013), as corrected (Nov. 25, 2013). Further, the Court is quite obviously ready to swap out our current three status categories (invitee/Iicensee/tréspasser) for the Restatement (Third) of Torts’ two status categories (entrant-flagrant trespasser). The Court stated in Shelton as follows:
The abandonment of. status-based distinctions for entrants to land—a concept which nearly half of the states have adopted in some form—would be consistent with the Restatement (Third) of Torts approach, which simply delineates between “flagrant trespassers” and “entrants.” See Restatement (Third) of Torts: Phys. & Emot. Harm M § 51 cmt. a (2012) (“[W]ith the evolution of a general duty of reasonable care to avoid physical harm ..., the status-based duties for land possessors are not in harmony with modern tort law”). Although we do not adopt this approach today, mainly because this case is easily decided without crossing that threshold, we do find it important to note that this Court has previously expressed, at the very least, interest in ridding our case law of the often nebulous and inconsistent process of assigning a plaintiff a particular status. As the law stands currently, a landowner has a general duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe manner; and the scope of that duty is outlined according to the status- of the plaintiff.
Id. Obviously, adopting this approach as this passage suggests, would not amount to abandoning status-based distinctions. We would simply be reducing the number of status categories from three to two. Whether this would bring much clarity is highly doubtful since the Restatement still “leaves to each jurisdiction employing the concept to determine the point along the spectrum of trespassory conduct at which a trespasser is a ‘flagrant’ rather than an ordinary trespasser [which equates to a mere entrant].” Restatement (Third) of Torts § 52 cmt a. Additionally, “[t]he critical aspect of this Section” is an aspect already present in our current three-status jurisprudence—“that a distinction is made, and different duties of care are owed depending on” the status of the person who entered upon the land. Id.
Notwithstanding my belief that it is ill-advised and unnecessary, the Supreme Court’s clarion signal of its readiness to embrace § 51 and § 52 of Restatement (Third) is alone sufficient to justify my concurrence in the majority opinion.
However, I also write separately to voice concern that the recent series of open-and-obvious - cases, and Shelton in particular, did more than merely erode the open-and-obvious doctrine. And, with all due respect to the Supreme Court, I cannot agree that what these cases have accomplished “is not a radical departure.” Carter v. Bullitt Host, LLC, 471 S.W.3d 288, 298 (Ky. 2015).
The holdings in Shelton wrest decision-making—-that is, law-making and policy-making—responsibility away from the trial *514judge and give it to the jury as fact determinations. Based on McIntosh and its progeny, the bar and bench have good reason to believe the Supreme Court has moved fully away from a relational concept of duty as Judge Cardozo expressed it in Palsgraf,7 and as it has evolved in our jurisprudence,8 in favor of a universal duty of care owed to society at large. This is one of the foundational concepts of the Restatement (Third) of Torts.9
Furthermore, Shelton has broader implications than mere rejection of the no-duty analysis of the open-and-obvious doctrine. It could well be argued that the Court’s rejection of foreseeability as a factor in determining whether a duty exists, combined with acceptance of the universal duty of care, effectively eliminated the need for all no-duty determinations (that is to say all duty determinations) in Kentucky personal injury law.10
It is, of course, the prerogative of our Supreme Court to steer the course of our jurisprudence, even to veer from a trajectory formed firmly over a century. And that is what happened when the Court declared these changes.
It is not idle concern that Kentucky jurisprudence turned away from Judge Cardozo’s relational philosophy of duty expressed in his majority opinion in Palsgraf as follows: “risk reasonably to be perceived defines the duty to be obeyed, and risk imports relation.” Palsgraf, 162 N.E. at 100 (quoted, in part, in Pathways, Inc. *515v. Hammons, 113 S.W.3d 85, 89 (Ky. 2003)). In its place, the Supreme Court shifted to Judge Andrews’ view, even quoting his dissent in Palsgraf that we all are duty bound to “protect society from unnecessary danger, not to protect A, B, or C alone.” Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 908 fn.26 (emphasis added; quoting Palsgraf, 162 N.E. at 102 (Andrews, J., dissenting)). If the Supreme Court has fully embraced Judge Andrews’ view, as its signals to the bar and bench indicate, the first element of a negligence claim soon might be satisfied by an irrebuttable presumption that duty always exists, for that first element is a “universal duty owed by all [ie., each member of society] to all lie., society in the abstract].” Id. at 908 (citation and quotation marks omitted). The trial judge’s role of determining, as a matter of law, whether a duty exists could well be a vestige of the past, replaced by citation to the universal duty alone.
This first shift goes hand-in-hand with a second—removing “the reasonable-foreseeability analysis” from the judge and placing it “in the hands of the fact-finders, the jury.” Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 904. This second shift also serves to eliminate the need for the analytical skills of the trial judge whose responsibility, heretofore, was to determine the duty involved by considering “[t]he most important factor in determining whether a duty exists[,] foreseeability.” Pathways, Inc., 113 S.W.3d at 89 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Should we believe a duty analysis is still necessary? At least some commentators simply do not; they have concluded that “the concept of duty itself is incoherent—even if not meaningless or a ‘nullity’—if stripped of a foreseeability component.” 11
The Supreme Court considers our new jurisprudence part of a national trend “to modernize our tort law and eliminate unfair obstacles to the presentation of legitimate claims.”12 Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 904. But is that correct? The fact is that there are “three main camps in the contest over the nature of duty in tort law.”13 And whatever trend our Supreme Court may see, the Indiana Supreme Court chose last year not to be a part of it. After acknowledging that “the concept of foreseeability as a component of duty is not universally embraeed[,]” the Indiana justices were persuaded by a decision of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, noting that court’s observation that “[w]hile there have certainly been able and skillful critiques of the role that foreseeability plays in determining whether a duty exists, the majority of courts continue to use foreseeability as a central component of their analyses.” Goodwin v. Yeakle’s Sports Bar and Grill, Inc., 62 N.E.3d 384, 389-90 (Ind. 2016) (citing Satterfield v. Breeding Insulation Co., 266 S.W.3d 347, 366 (Tenn. 2008) (citations omitted)). Both states “decline[d] to chart a different course” and maintain the view that “foreseeability plays a role in the analysis of duty.”14 Id. But, back to Kentucky.
*516Shelton suggests that, although “a court no longer makes a no-duty determination!;,]” it will be able to apply legal principles to “make[] a no-breach determination, dismissing a claim ... when there is no negligence as a matter of law, the plaintiff having failed to show a breach of the applicable duty of care.” Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 904. According to the Supreme Court, for a premises liability defendant,15 “liability can be limited, not because a duty does not exist but because there is no negligence—no breach—as a matter of law.” Id. at 908. But how can it be that a judge makes this determination if we still hold that “[b]reach and injury, are questions of fact for the jury to decide.” Henson v. Klein, 319 S.W.3d 413, 423 (Ky. 2010) (citation and quotation marks omitted). The fact is that the only time a trial judge may “make[] a no-breach determination” or may find “there is no negligence—no breach—as a matter of law[,]” is when the plaintiff totally fails to present enough evidence to create a genuine issue as to the material fact of breach, one of the elements of the negligence claim.
Considering McIntosh and its progeny as a whole, I simply cannot agree with the Supreme Court that these changes:
... should not be viewed as a major change in our law. The questions are not changing, their locations are. To say, as we have in the past, that a defendant had no duty, under particular circumstances, to foresee a particular harm is really no different from saying that the defendant’s duty to take reasonable care was not breached, under those circumstances, by its failure to foresee the unforeseeable.
Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 917 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Perhaps it is true that the questions are not changing; but it is most certainly true that who answers the questions has changed. That will have an effect on the evolution of our jurisprudence.
Determining whether a duty exists had always been the purview first of the trial court which, applying factors including foreseeability, made a legal or policy determination, i.e., drew a line of demarcation between where the claimed liability is too attenuated and where it is not. Cumulatively, those trial court decisions were processed into Kentucky jurisprudence by our appellate courts whose role it is to harmonize them. If, in our “attempting to be faithful to precedent, [the appellate] courts, including this Court, have muddied the water and confused the issues[,]” id. at 910, then shame on us for not doing our job well enough. But the answer, it seems to me at least, is not for judges to stop making these determinations, allowing juries to do so in the name of comparative fault.
While my confidence in the jury system is unflagging, I fail to see the wisdom in abdicating the law-making and policy-making role of the courts to an ever-changing group of individuals, untrained in law or policy and unaware of the importance of and need for a predictable trajectory of jurisprudence.16 I find it ironic that we complain about how the increased use of alternative dispute resolution deprives our courts of opportunities to develop our ju*517risprudence, and yet we relinquish to lay jurors the responsibility of determining, on a case-by-case basis, what yesterday was law and policy, but having them do so without the guidance of precedent, without the guardian of stare decisis, and without the aspiration of predictability. I am confident that Kentucky lawyers and judges will not, to paraphrase the Supreme Court, “confuse a finding for the [plaintiff or] defendant on the facts of a particular case with a rule of law for all cases[.]” Id. at 912. Consequently, our jurisprudence will not evolve based on those jury decisions. Those decisions, decided as questions of fact, will be more difficult to assail on appeal, and that will mean less opportunity for the appellate courts to impact jurisprudence.
Furthermore, if the Supreme Court’s attraction to the Restatement (Third) of Torts extends beyond § 51 and § 52, as Shelton indicates,17 then we should warn the bar and bench that its adoption will “reshape[] traditional negligence principles and parlance” and will utilize “risk and scope of liability terminology and concepts that are] seemingly awkward compared to the traditional terms and expressions.” 18 And we should alert them to the Restatement (Third)’s own weaknesses articulated by numerous and varied critics.19 At the very least, we should warn them that the Restatement (Third) of Torts is “a fundamental reconfiguration of the duty, breach, and proximate cause elements of the negligence cause of action.”20
Perhaps we should also be concerned that the further removed we are from pre-1984 tort law, the more we seem likely to misperceive as tainted every tort concept we then embraced. In fairness, we all generally look to the past as through a glass darkly, remembering what best suits our purpose. Justice Scott did that when he *518said the traditional era of Kentucky tort jurisprudence coincided with a period of the “greatest opportunity and economic growth this nation has ever known [and] the cause of this growth [was] personal responsibility^]” Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 920 (Scott, J., dissenting). We can all agree this is too general to be the whole truth.
But, with due respect, the Shelton majority misstated the interplay between personal responsibility and the law of contributory negligence. Those justices said “if the plaintiff was negligent to any degree, under a contributory-negligence standard, then the defendant could not be found liable.”21 Carter, 471 S.W.3d at 292 (emphasis in original). One need not read many contributory negligence cases to learn that this passage overstates the harshness of the jurisprudence of that time. See, e.g., Green River Rural Elec. Co-op. Corp. v. Blandford, 306 Ky. 125, 206 S.W.2d 475 (1947) (where the plaintiff recovered $15,790 from the electric company for his injuries after lifting in the air, from a well he was repairing, a wet thirty-foot pipe and accidentally touching it to an uninsulated power line).
But if the Court’s mindset is that little, if any, tort jurisprudence from that era is viable today, then we are likely in for the rejection of other contributory negligence era concepts. The Supreme Court has already said “the rationale for the doctrine of superseding cause has been substantially diminished by the adoption of comparative negligence.” Commonwealth, Transp. Cabinet, Dept. of Highways v. Babbitt, 172 S.W.3d 786, 793 (Ky. 2005).22 The Court of Appeals addressed the issue in Cadle v. Cornett, 2010-CA-001063-MR, 2013 WL 3604642 (Ky. App. July 12, 2013), not to be published. In a split decision, this Court concluded that nothing in comparative fault doctrine prevented the trial judge from ruling the plaintiffs’ recovery was foreclosed either by superseding cause or remote cause—two concepts developed during the contributory negligence era.23 Id. at 9-10. The Supreme Court granted discretionary review in that case; however, the parties settled before the Court could rule. Although the Court of Appeals *519did not designate the opinion for publication, the Supreme Court ordered it depub-lished and removed its text from the West-lawNext digital research database.24
Each of these matters is an important one to consider and to be prepared for. All are worthy of more in-depth treatment than has been offered by judges, lawyers or scholars.
I have offered more than one reason for my concurrence in this case. I will offer another. Despite the Supreme Court’s assurances that “summary judgment is still available to a landowner” in a premises liability case, Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 916, we have not seen one affirmed by the Supreme Court since before Kentucky River Med. Ctr. v. McIntosh, 319 S.W.3d 385 (Ky. 2010). This case offers that opportunity. My prediction is that a different opportunity will be seen here—the opportunity to expand liability under our jurisprudence by adopting more of Restatement (Third) of Torts and to declare, under § 52, that the appellant here was a mere entrant on the appellee’s premises and not a flagrant trespasser.
. Kentucky River Med. Ctr. v. McIntosh, 319 S.W.3d 385 (Ky. 2010).
. Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R. Co., 248 N.Y. 339, 162 N.E. 99 (1928). In Palsgraf, the literal concept "of a 'universal duty of care’ was rejected ... and the 'relational negligence’ theory was adopted instead.” Middleton v. Vill. of Nichols, 114 Misc.2d 596, 599, 452 N.Y.S.2d 157, 160 (N.Y.Sup.1982).
. Generally following this evolution, see, e.g., Trainer’s Adm'r v. Keller, 257 Ky. 840, 79 S.W.2d 232, 234 (1935)("Negligence is the breach of a duty which one owes to another by reason of the relationship existing or the circumstances presented.”); Mann v. Kentucky & Indiana Terminal R.R. Co., 290 S.W.2d 820, 824 (Ky. 1955) C‘[I]n the law of negligence generally, legal duty [exists] in respect to ... man’s relation to other persons .... ”); Edward F. Heimbrock Co., Inc. v. Marine Sales and Serv., Inc., 766 S.W.2d 70, 72 (Ky. App. 1989) ("the rule ... is the traditional approach of foreseeability as it relates to duty and proximate cause” (citing Pals-graf)); Sheehan v. United Servs. Auto. Ass'n, 913 S.W.2d 4, 6 (Ky. App. 1996) ("Grayson Fraternal Order of Eagles[ Aerie No. 3738, Inc. v. Claywell, 736 S.W.2d 328 (Ky. 1987)] ... indicates that ‘liability for negligence expresses a universal duty owed by all to all.' However, and this is a point frequently overlooked by some, the duty to exercise ordinary care is commensurate with the circumstances. Id. at 330. The statement of whether or not a duty exists is but a conclusion of whether a plaintiff's interests are entitled to legal protection against the defendant’s conduct. Id.").
. See John H. Marks The Limit to Premises Liability for Harms Caused by "Known or Obvious" Dangers: Will It Trip and Fall over the Duty-Breach Framework Emerging in the Restatement (Third) of Torts?, 38 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 1, 2 fn.5 (2005) ("The draft accepts Judge Andrews' proximate cause allocation of issues about unforeseeable plaintiffs. See Proposed Final Draft, supra note 3, § 29 cmt. n, illus. 9. It explains that Judge Cardozo’s duty allocation improperly allows a judge to make 'amorphous evaluative judgments’ about questions that turn on 'the specific facts of a case.’ Id. § 29 cmt. f.”).
. This is what the Restatement (Third) of Torts calls for regarding personal injury torts. It says;
"The rule stated in § 7 is that an actor ordinarily has a duty to exercise reasonable care. That is equivalent to saying that an actor is subject to liability for negligent conduct that causes physical harm. Thus, in cases involving physical harm, courts ordinarily need not concern themselves with the existence or content of this ordinary duty. They may proceed directly to the elements of liability....”
Restatement (Third) of Torts: Phys. & Emot. Harm § 6 cmt f (2010) (emphasis added).
. Alani Golanski, A New Look at Duty in Tort Law: Rehabilitating Foreseeability and Related Themes, 75 Alb. L. Rev. 227 (2012) (quoting W. Jonathan Cardi, Purging Foreseeability: The New Vision of Duty and Judicial Power in the Proposed Restatement (Third) of Torts, 58 Vand. L. Rev. 739, 771 (2005)).
. A majority of the Supreme Court in Carter also seem to believe "the benefits defendants have been receiving from having their duty defined" by the trial judge have gone on long enough. Carter, 471 S.W.3d at 298.
. Golanski, supra fn.5, at 229.
. "When faced with the issue, thirty-three (of fifty-one) courts hold with fair consistency that whether the plaintiff was a foreseeable victim is a question to be decided in the duty context.” W. Jonathan Cardi, The Hidden Leg*516acy of Palsgraf: Modem Duty Law in Microcosm, 91 B.U.L. Rev. 1873 (2011).
. If there is a rationale for limiting these analytical concepts to premises liability torts only, it escapes me.
. However, the Supreme Court more recently said: "Shelton re-affirms that whether a duty exists is a purely legal decision that can be made by the [Supreme] Court as a matter of social policy.” Carter v. Bullitt Host, LLC, 471 S.W.3d 288, 303 (Ky. 2015).
. See the Supreme Court’s references to the Restatement (Third) of Torts at Shelton, 413 S.W.3d at 909 fn.28, 912 fn.43, 913 fn.44 & fn.45, 916 fn.56 & fn.58.
. Tory A. Weigand Duty, Causation and Pals-graf: Massachusetts and the Restatement (Third) of Torts, 96 Mass. L. Rev. 55, 55 (2015).
. See, e.g., John C.P. Goldberg & Benjamin C. Zipursky, Shielding Duty: How Attending to Assumption of Risk, Attractive Nuisance, and Other “Quaint” Doctrines Can Improve Decisionmaking in Negligence Cases, 79 S. Cal. L. Rev. 329, 333 (2006) (The authors “strongly criticized the late Gary Schwartz for using his perch as Reporter of the ‘general principles’ component of the Restatement (Third) to impose California's brand of instru-mentalism on the entire nation's negligence law.”); John C.P. Goldberg & Benjamin C, Zipursky, Intervening Wrongdoing in Tort: The Restatement (Third)’s Unfortunate Embrace of Negligent Enabling, 44 Wake Forest L. Rev, 1211 (2009) (regarding remote tortfeasors, the Restatement (Third) is "a recommendation of how negligence law should treat such actors, not a description of how it does treat them. The Reporters nonetheless defend their approach as a necessary prophylactic against judicial usurpation of the jury’s province"); Mark A. Geistfeld, Social Value As A Policy-Based Limitation of the Ordinary Duty to Exercise Reasonable Care, 44 Wake Forest L. Rev. 899, 901 (2009) (“The Restatement (Third)'s treatment of duty has been sharply criticized”); Aaron D. Twerski The Cleaver, the Violin, and the Scalpel: Duty and the Restatement (Third) of Torts, 60 Hastings L.J. 1, 7 (2008) ("The Restatement’s view that no-duty limitations should only apply to broad categories of cases and should not be utilized to negate liability in individual cases is simply wrong. Courts have repeatedly made duty determinations based on the particular facts of the cases before them. Indeed, it is hard to fathom how they could reach the no-duty conclusion without doing so,”); Frank J. Van-dall, A Critique of the Restatement (Third), Apportionment As It Affects Joint and Several Liability, 49 Emory L.J. 565 (2000) (“The ALI’s massive reform of joint and several liability and apportionment is an extreme overreaction”),
.Marks, supra fn.4, at 2.
. The Supreme Court also said: "Because the law of contributory negligence placed the entire burden for his safety on the plaintiff himself, all the fault was assigned to the plaintiff." Carter, 471 S.W.3d at 292,
. But see Branham v. Rock, 449 S.W.3d 741, 751 (Ky. 2014) ("court determines whether an intervening event is a superseding cause”) (citing Miller ex rel. Monticello Banking Co. v. Marymount Med. Ctr., 125 S.W.3d 274, 287 (Ky. 2004) (citing House v. Kellerman, 519 S.W.2d 380, 382 (Ky. 1974) ("The question of whether an undisputed act or circumstance was or was not a superseding cause is a legal issue for the court to resolve, and not a factual question for the jury.”))). In House, Justice Palmore, writing for a unanimous high court, went even further and said: "As a matter of fact, there is much to be said for the proposition that basic causation itself should be treated as a question of law, the jury deciding only the issues of negligence.” House v. Kellerman, 519 S.W.2d 380, 382 fn.2 (Ky. 1974). Modern tort law indicates the opposite trend.
.The plaintiffs were struck from behind on 1-64 by an eastbound semi, 1.34 miles away from the scene of an earlier accident in which one westbound vehicle entered the wide, grassy median and collided on the west-side abutment of an overhead bridge. That accident could not be seen from the eastbound lanes until the bridge was passed. The plaintiffs sued the driver involved in the otherwise unrelated first accident because that accident caused emergency vehicles to be dispatched, and that caused "rubber-necking” by people in vehicles traveling east, and that caused eastbound traffic to reduce their speed, and eventually caused vehicles 1.34 miles from the first accident (including the plaintiffs' vehicle) to stop, and that caused the semi, which did not stop, to collide with the rear of the plaintiffs’ vehicle. Not quite the butterfly effect, but close. Cadle v. Cornett, pp. 1-2.
. Fortunately, the case can still be found on the Court of Appeals website.