psychedelicsoul
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2015
- Messages
- 726
Well, it seems we have reached an impasse. I respect your opinion and thank you for taking the time to discuss this with me.
no problem.
Well, it seems we have reached an impasse. I respect your opinion and thank you for taking the time to discuss this with me.
I don't see how anybody could possibly establish it as being true.
Are you intentionally asking an unanswerable question to make your opposition look foolish?
Now... I'm not so much asking what you personally think of suicide, but how you percieve the moral status of one who does it? I guess a few questions can be asked that shows that it's pretty complex.
1. If someone commits suicide, and nobody is around to morn their loss, then is it still a tragedy? If so... Then you must believe his life has inherent value. If not, then his live has no value as there are no others to give his life value
2. Is suicide wrong because of how it harms loved ones? If so, then that means that the only reason the person has value and should continue on living is for the sake of those around them. What if the majority of people hated you, and would delight in your death? Would that make your suicide a just act of kindness?
3. If a person chooses to commit suicide, and you stop them, are you not infringing on their individuality? Are you not simply forcing your will onto them?
4. Shouldn't religious suicide be considered a just and proper form of free exercise. As long as the participants are adults?
5. Let's say a child is very unsociable, and by his own fault, doesn't get along with peers. He kills himself as a result. Are the kids responsible for shunning him? Should children be made to get along with one another, simply to avoid the possibility of suicide? If nobody likes a kid and doesn't wanna be their friend, is it really their fault?
6. Is it wrong to assist in suicide for petty reasons, or make money off it? If I ran a Futurama-style suicide booth, would that make me a bad person?
7. At what point is suicide unreasonable. Let's say a child is beat up and bullied all his life and grows up to move pastit. But lets say another child faces only a fraction of what the other kid did, but killed himself... Isn't that other kid weak?
If me calling you names will make you kill yourself, how are you not weak? Kids bully other kids by nature. Primates display bullying too... For all of you who think bullying is something abnormal that comes as a result of societal programming and environment, you're wrong. Bullying is natural behavior in humans or chimpanzee's.
Basically the most common reason people give to say suicide is wrong is that it hurts the ones closest to the victim.. but I don't know. Why should someone have to live for other peoples sake?
IMO we are all free within ourselves. To judge another's motives without getting into their skin so to speak is the height of folly and arrogance . So for me suicide is the absolute right of every individual and if there be such a thing as free will then suicide would be the ultimate expression of it. Saying to the universe, "you can't fire me, I quit".
I have every intention on leaving the world in this way. Personally I'll feel a little disappointed in myself otherwise.
When I was 15 I got in trouble. Trouble is relative, it was something that to most people here would seem silly, but I had strict parents and was on the sensitive side of the spectrum, so it seemed like my world was falling apart. I decided then and there that suicide was the only way out. I wrote a note, took a large dose of lorazepam (not even close to large enough, but I didn't know that, and didn't do my diligence to find out). Honestly it was a bit amateur hour when it came to the whole thing. I woke up the next day alive and concluded "never again." I did manage to slice up my arm real good after the failed attempt and didn't conceal that, so people would ask me what happened and I'd promptly lie. Leaving a doubt was all I could get away with then to share with others my pain.
Point is that period in my life has passed. I've since fucked up much worse than I did that day and it is really hard for me to understand how I would have been so willing to give up so easily back then. There was noting objective about my decision to end my life. The OP is a misanthrope BTW, so even though his arguements are sometimes well thought out, strip him of his arguements and I suspect there is a whole lot of hate towards everyone and everything in life. Sorry if that's ad hominem, but it's relevant toward his valuing of life. Nothing would make him happier than for some poor depressed bloke to take their own life (of their own free will that is) and he'd likely cheer you on.
You sound like you've already made up your mind Cosmic Trigger and honestly, speaking of folly and arrogance, that sounds like you got some of that going on yourself. Peoples minds change, they always have, and you are no exception. I hope you'll entertain the possibility that your mind may change, and when it does, I hope you won't have dug yourself in so deep as to conclude your mind changed incorrectly. Being suicidal is a part of the human condition, and it saddens me. The decision to go through with it is a freedom I value as well, so I don't presume to know if yours is actually one of the percentage of suicides that have merit on humanitarian grounds. That said, presuming you know now and forever what is right for you is cruel. I'd be suicidal too if suicide was the only just outcome I could envision for my life. You've rigged it so if you don't go through with suicide it'll be only because you are a failure. I hope you can stop torturing yourself that way. It's not worth romanticizing this stuff. Take care
In most cases, the person who wants to commit suicide does so because their life is a constant suffering that they feel they cannot take any longer, or do not see any possible change in the future. Sure, their death would most likely hurt their close ones, but what about the opposite? Basically the "close ones" are forcing the person to live a life of suffering just so they can feel better themselves by having the person around. Tell me that isn't selfish.
If the suicide is planned and there's a high degree of certainty that it's the right choice for the person, then it's an acceptable choice and governments should provide euthanasia service.