Desire for pleasures only applies if you are alive, if you die there is no need for any of that. Same with love, friendship, food, money, etc. — Darkneos
Well I have never found a "good argument" for suicide either. Afaik, empirically, suicide does not solve any unsolvable problems or change anything that cannot be changed (e.g. past events, past actions, persisting consequences) and often only deeply harms the suicide's own family, former lovers and/or close friends.I’ve struggled to find a good argument against suicide ... — Darkneos
The argument against suicide is that it is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. — LuckyR
This discussion doesn’t belong here. You should talk to a therapist, not listen to a bunch of socially awkward, pseudo philosophers. You won’t find appropriate answers here and the consequences could be serious. — T Clark
:fire:This is the first and last question that philosophy must answer - 'What's the point?' The answer is "love". If you wonder what love is, I can only tell you that it is what you lack, whenever you ask this question. Suicide makes sense if there is no love, but only self. We are not here to be satisfied, but to become satisfactory. — unenlightened
The words and usage here is slippery. What exactly is your issue? You have received answers and are dismissive. Maybe it would help if you gave closer thought either to what your point is or how you're expressing it. One approach to boil it down to a single, simple "whether" question. E.g., whether it is better to X or better to Y. Then consider, analyze, and weigh the two alternatives (rinsing and repeating as necessary).To me arguments for staying alive or for meaning only work if you HAVE to live. Filling life with good things, doing what you love, all that junk only has logical weight if one is unable to die until a set time. Barring that I see no reason for living. — Darkneos
The words and usage here is slippery. What exactly is your issue? You have received answers and are dismissive. — tim wood
To me arguments for staying alive or for meaning only work if you HAVE to live. — Darkneos
Suicide makes sense if there is no love, but only self. — unenlightened
Love isn't a reason it's just platitudinous nonsense, same with making meaning. I gave the case at the start why such reasons don't hold water. — Darkneos
As long as you think only of yourself, you will keep coming back to the same miserable thoughts again and again. — unenlightened
Unlikely — T Clark
Pretty sure they don't do that. — Darkneos
I guess this is a good a place as any. — Darkneos
Let me see if I can use other words that you can accept more. If one considers only oneself, and only from one's own point of view, then it is clear that satisfaction is only ever transitory, suffering and death are inevitable and the sooner life is over the better. — unenlightened
Therefore, I posit (but offer no proof) a reason for living that is self-overcoming, or self- transcending. This is illustrated in the film Groundhog Day, in which suicide fails utterly to end life but results in a repeating life that goes nowhere. This repetition only ends when everything is put into the day to make it better for everyone. — unenlightened
As long as you think only of yourself, you will keep coming back to the same miserable thoughts again and again. I wish I could be more clear about this for you, but I cannot disprove the platitudinous nonsense of your "platitudinous nonsense". If you want to understand, you will begin to understand, but if you don't want to, then you will have make do with the thin satisfaction of winning the argument, and you will miss all the richness of life. — unenlightened
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