From a purely rational standpoint,
are there sound, logical reasons to commit suicide? — Vera Mont
are there sound, logical reasons to commit suicide?
Are there frivolous and silly ones that nevertheless compel people to do it? If so, why do they?
Are there reasons that seem to make sense from one POV, but not from another?
Should other people intervene?
That being said, these are decisions you really cannot make on your own, and need other rational people to analyze the situation with you. — Philosophim
I was asking it as pragmatic question. Or a legal one, if one were to make an argument in court.How can anyone answer this if you are precluding ethics from the discussion? Isn't this fundamentally an ethical question? — Bob Ross
My question was not an argument. Neither is the vacuous postulation about the universe."are there sound, logical reasons to commit suicide?
This is vacuously true. That the cookie monster created the universe is a logically sound argument. — Bob Ross
"What is actually good" in your book is unknown to me. I don't have the capacity to take all points of view on good and evil into account.I would say it is only silly or frivolous relative to what is actually good; which you precluded from the discussion. — Bob Ross
Yes, if you like. It's a question about your opinion.Should other people intervene?
This is a moral question. — Bob Ross
Where do you find these rational people in this situation? Not family members: they're emotional and have their own self-interest to consider - from both sides. — Vera Mont
If you talk about the burden your continued incapacity will place on them, they feel pressured to demur, say they'd rather have you than the money or free time or use of the living room, even though they secretly wish you had died in the accident and feel guilty as hell about that. — Vera Mont
You could take a chance on your doctor, I guess. If you have the ability to speak intelligibly. — Vera Mont
For some people, that's fine. Some families discuss end-of-life decisions long before the situation arises; they have time to prepare mentally and emotionally.Rationally you want people who are invested in your well being in the picture. — Philosophim
Not everyone, but many.Thinking everyone who cares about you means they can't think clearly, is not rational. — Philosophim
Maybe so. But who says all the minds in a given situation are rational? Or that the person who has a rational reason for one particular decision isn't emotional about his relationships? He might want to protect his wife from the stigma, or his children from the guilt, or his family's reputation in a religious community. Every person has a different set of circumstance and a different mind-set.A rational mind understands that an isolated mind is much less capable then a good group of people with a common purpose. — Philosophim
What? If your throat is blocked by a feeding tube, you can't think?f you don't have the capability to ask your doctor, then you're not being rational in a decision to commit suicide. — Philosophim
All you need is a finger on the button that controls the morphine feed and permission to use it.You can kill yourself but can't ask a doctor? — Philosophim
Other people are, unfortunately, stuck with religious, volatile, sentimental, emotion-driven relatives, with whom you can't discuss anything serious. — Vera Mont
Thinking everyone who cares about you means they can't think clearly, is not rational.
— Philosophim
Not everyone, but many. — Vera Mont
A rational mind understands that an isolated mind is much less capable then a good group of people with a common purpose.
— Philosophim
Maybe so. But who says all the minds in a given situation are rational? — Vera Mont
What? If your throat is blocked by a feeding tube, you can't think? — Vera Mont
All you need is a finger on the button that controls the morphine feed and permission to use it.
But my question wasn't about physical capabilities. It was only about reasons. — Vera Mont
Only, they are invested. Deeply. They just have very different points of view and beliefs. I've come across relatives with the power of attorney who absolutely forbade measures the patient herself requested. In that case, the medical staff is bound by the law.If these people are not invested in your well being, don't rely on them. — Philosophim
No, it's a factual response. If the people who don't think the same way you do are your family, with the power to decide your fate - as in a life-support situation - consulting them is foolish. Friends may be a different story, assuming you have friends who are still ambulatory and compos - many old people have run out of friends through attrition.again, this is an irrational response. Of course there are people who can't think rationally. Don't rely on those people. But don't shun your family and friends and think they can't be rational because they care about you. That's foolish. — Philosophim
You're in a wheelchair or hospital bed, housebound. You go no place. Maybe you can use a computer and have one; maybe you can still see the screen and keyboard. Or not.You go to multiple people. — Philosophim
Some are. But it doesn't take genius to decide whether your own life, or the anticipated future, is worth your continued attendance.An isolated mind is not smart or a genius. — Philosophim
Can't. They - or rather the lack of them - are the most common of rational reasons. They're not part of the question; they're part of the answer.Then lets leave the physical capabilities out of it. — Philosophim
That would be true, if that had been my question.The problem is that your question fundamentally makes no sense when taken as a whole: if it is just a question on "purely pragmatic" grounds, then there is no right answer — Bob Ross
The Christian-based law is a whole other can of brainworms. Starting with : Where does a judge or legislator get off telling an autonomous adult what is permissible to do with his own life?In terms of a legal question, all legalities stem back to morality; unless you are asking just for what particular legal systems (that currently exist) consider a legally permissible form of suicide (and not what people think should be legally permissible). — Bob Ross
If these people are not invested in your well being, don't rely on them.
— Philosophim
Only, they are invested. Deeply. — Vera Mont
But don't shun your family and friends and think they can't be rational because they care about you. That's foolish.
— Philosophim
No, it's a factual one. — Vera Mont
You're in wheelchair or hospital bed. You go no place. People come to you, if they're willing, or they shun you because you remind them of their own mortality. — Vera Mont
An isolated mind is not smart or a genius.
— Philosophim
Some are. But it doesn't take genius to decide whether your own life is too hard to bear. — Vera Mont
Nope. Just mentioning the realities you didn't take into account.Look, are you just going to keep inventing scenarios for every answer I give? — Philosophim
Not what I said. I said not all families are able to think clearly or unemotionally when it comes to the potential death of a loved one. Nor are they always in agreement. Families vary.A. My friends and family care about me.
Therefore they cannot think rationally about me. — Philosophim
It's rarely a news item, but this happens quite a lot in families, whether the patient is able to participate or not.A fierce, highly public battle took place between her parents....and her husband... Terri's husband argued that his wife would not have wanted her life artificially prolonged, with no hope of recovery.
You think old age, illness, disability and despair are silly? Implausible? I hope you have a long wait to find out.I'm going to one up your silliness. — Philosophim
Ever have bone cancer?"Too hard" is an emotion. — Philosophim
Look, are you just going to keep inventing scenarios for every answer I give?
— Philosophim
Nope. Just mentioning the realities you didn't take into account. — Vera Mont
A. My friends and family care about me.
Therefore they cannot think rationally about me.
— Philosophim
Not what I said. I said many families that care about one another are also emotional when it comes to the potential death of a loved one. You can't necessarily count on them thinking objectively. — Vera Mont
You think old age, illness and disability are silly? I hope you have a long wait to find out. — Vera Mont
That is what I have been attempting to do. Your rules apply in some cases, but do not cover many of the likely scenarios that real people in the real world have to face.First try to see if the rational rules I gave can adapt to the situation. If they don't, show me why they don't. — Philosophim
I have solved them for myself. I cannot; nor can you, for anyone else. We can have opinions about their situation, we can even judge them, but we can't persuade them to think as we do.Show me you're thinking about the discussion instead of peppering me with questions you haven't tried to solve on your own first. — Philosophim
Point is, they're not random. They are all too real and too common.No, I think your posting random scenarios without thinking about how they play in what has been discussed so far is silly. — Philosophim
Did that, too. I've been in your perspective, but that was a long time ago.Apply what I've noted to your scenarios, then point out why they do not work. — Philosophim
You keep stating the same thing over and over. I didn't ignore it; I pointed out where it doesn't apply.Ignoring what I've said and just bulldozing ahead to specific scenarios without analysis to what's already been said is disorganized, and ignores what I've stated so far. — Philosophim
That is what I have been attempting to do. Your rules apply in some cases, but do not cover many of the likely scenarios that real people in the real world have to face. — Vera Mont
Show me you're thinking about the discussion instead of peppering me with questions you haven't tried to solve on your own first.
— Philosophim
I have solved them for myself. — Vera Mont
Point is, they're not random. They are all too real and too common. — Vera Mont
Apply what I've noted to your scenarios, then point out why they do not work.
— Philosophim
Did that, too. I've been in your perspective, but that was a long time ago. — Vera Mont
You keep stating the same thing over and over. I didn't ignore it; I pointed out where it doesn't apply. — Vera Mont
Sure, it would be nice to think everyone can contemplate their own debility, suffering and death unemotionally, and that everyone has many friends and relatives, all available for consultation, all able to assess the situation and think clearly. — Vera Mont
I have done that. Real people, in pain and fear, cannot be unemotional about their situation. Rule 1. bites the dust at the diagnosis of cancer or the repossession of someone's house.Explain how your scenarios explicitly are not covered by the three points I posted. You have not done that. — Philosophim
That is the most difficult piece of advice, and I have told you why, several times. Other people are also emotional. They can't turn it off just because you tell them to.That being said, these are decisions you really cannot make on your own, and need other rational people to analyze the situation with you. If you don't want to tell anyone that you're thinking of doing it for example, then you shouldn't do it. — Philosophim
Absurdism is the philosophical theory that the universe is irrational and meaningless. It states that trying to find meaning leads people into a conflict with the world. Absurdism claims that existence as a whole is absurd.
Various possible responses to deal with absurdism and its impact have been suggested. The three responses discussed in the traditional absurdist literature are suicide, religious belief in a higher purpose, and rebellion against the absurd.
suicide is not always irrational
— creativesoul
Perhaps, but my point is that suicide is always either unsound (choice) or involuntary (abject / pathological). — 180 Proof
Rationality is a feature/quality we attribute to a plurality of individual thoughts, beliefs, and/or statements thereof. How well are they strung together. — creativesoul
"The universe is irrational and meaningless" is false on its face. We are elements within the universe. We make rational meaningful claims. The universe is not irrational and meaningless. — creativesoul
Unknown. Judging the unknown irrational and meaningless is irrational. We can only apply reason to that which we know, or think we know.To the unspiritual rationalist, the foundations of our universe are irrational and meaningless. — Tarskian
According to what observable reality?Hence, atheism comes at an important long-term probabilistic cost. — Tarskian
"The universe is irrational and meaningless" is false on its face. We are elements within the universe. We make rational meaningful claims. The universe is not irrational and meaningless.
— creativesoul
There is no rationale for why the universe exists. — Tarskian
According to what observable reality? — Vera Mont
The volunteer manning the suicide prevention hotline will try to give his user hope by means of some adhoc crash course in informal spirituality.
Apparently, the Biden administration has approved a yearly budget increase of $100 million (or $200 million) for this approach.
In my opinion, it may already be too late in the game for such last-ditch effort. You cannot give hope to someone who does not even believe in the fundamentally irrational notion of hope. That is why everybody knows that there is simply no hope for the hopeless.
In that sense, this approach is largely an expensive waste of time and resources. They cannot make a visible dent in the problem just by throwing money at it. — Tarskian
Helping those who can be helped with life by spiritual teaching is fine if it helps. — creativesoul
Hopeless, to you, evidently means not worthy of help. — creativesoul
And all of this has exactly what relevance to the universe being absurd and meaningless? — Vera Mont
https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2024-04-15/study-deaths-of-despair-move-higher-among-blacks-than-whites
The term “deaths of despair” emerged in the public consciousness following a seminal study showing a reversal and yearslong rise in all-cause mortality among middle-aged whites in the U.S that was driven heavily by deaths from suicide, alcohol and drug overdoses.
Now, new findings published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry reflect a significant shift in deaths of despair among middle-aged adults. The study tracked rates of mortality from suicide, alcoholic liver disease and drug overdose from 1999 to 2022 among people 45 to 54 years old. Researchers found that in 2013, the rate of these deaths among whites was approximately double that of Blacks, at 72.15 per 100,000 population compared with 36.24 per 100,000.
But by 2022, the rate of deaths of despair among middle-aged Blacks had nearly tripled to 103.81 per 100,000, topping that of whites at 102.63 per 100,000.
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/february/black-american-nones-faith-unaffiliation-nothing.html
Black Americans See the Biggest Shift Away from Faith
But black “nones” are growing. With 3 in 10 adults in the US claiming no religious affiliation on surveys, the rise of the nones has touched every corner of American society.
Over more than a decade, the share of Black Americans who say that they have no religious affiliation has risen more dramatically than whites, Hispanics, or Asians.
How do you know? Where is the evidence?In terms of pure reason, the very existence of the universe is irrational and meaningless. — Tarskian
Now, that's what I call a silly and frivolous reason!Hence, I underwrite the main idea in the absurdist philosophy, which is that the pure rationalist will first fail to struggle with the absurd and then end up contemplating suicide. — Tarskian
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