Your OP says even those with a bad life are compelled to avoid death — Down The Rabbit Hole
No it doesn't. Sheesh. It says that we have 'reason to' avoid death. Reason to. Reason to. Reason to. Reason to. Not 'will'. Reason to. Not 'will'. Not 'desire to'. Not 'fear'. Reason to.
I replied pointing out that this is because we are hardwired to do so — Down The Rabbit Hole
Yeah, irrelevant. False. And irrelevant.
you then responded to others and me that it is "intuitive" and "self-evident" that we have reason to avoid death - I reiterated that it feels intuitive and self evident because of our hardwiring. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Again, false and irrelevant. It's called the genetic fallacy- the fallacy of thinking that if a belief or impression has a cause, then that automatically discredits the belief or impression. It works for any goddamn belief or impression of anything at all - so it's a really dumb argument. You keep making it. Draw the inference.
Let's cut out the middle bit, — Down The Rabbit Hole
You mean you want to rewrite my premise so that it is something different and then attack that one, yes? Why not rewrite it so it is a recipe for pesto and then tell me that I left out parmesan? No, don't cut out the middle bit - don't do a damn thing to it. Attempt to show it - it, not some other premise of your own invention - is false.
As you have indicated that death would be best for those in agony, the "we" would only be the majority of people. Therefore death would only harm and permanently alter the condition of the majority of people for the worse. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Er, what? No, I have argued that death harms everyone.
I'll try and take you through it (utterly pointlessly) by means of some examples.
Sarah and Jane both want to go to the cinema to see a film. Now, if Sarah sees the film, she'll really enjoy it. But if Jane sees the film, unbeknownst to her, she'll be kidnapped and tortured for years in a crazy person's basement. Okay? That's what happens if they go to the cineman: Sarah have good time; Jane have very bad time.
Now, they're both getting ready to go to the cinema, but unfortunately the ceiling of their house falls on top of them and painfully pins them to the ground and breaks many of their bones. So, rather than going to the cinema, they both spend the evening in agony under plaster and wood.
Have both Sarah and Jane been seriously harmed by the ceiling falling on top of them? Yes. They're both in agony with broken bones. They're both screaming in pain. It is not 'good' to have a ceiling fall on top of you and break your bones. It is not good for Sarah and it is not good for Jane.
However, Sarah has been deprived of a nice evening at the cinema, whereas Jane has been deprived of years or torture. So, Jane is 'better off' than she would otherwise have been, whereas Sarah is worse off.
Your logic tells you that it was good for Jane to have the ceiling fall on her. No it wasn't. It was bad. It was just 'better than' the alternative. 'Better than' does not mean 'good'. This distinction is, of course, too subtle for the internet.
If you're in agony with no prospect of it ending, then death may well be the better option. 'Better'. That doesn't mean it is good. It is not good to have a ceiling fall on you and cause you agony. It may be 'better than' many things, but it is not 'good'.
If you go to a restaurant that serves food all of which is foul, but you happen to order the least foul thing on the menu, that does not mean you had a good meal. You had a bad meal, but it was better than the alternatives.
So, if option a is better than option b, that doesn't mean option a is good for you. Death is better than some things - better than a life of unending agony. But that does not mean it is good. Indeed, it seems highly unlikely it is good, for we are told that it is the 'worse' option under almost all circumstances - the only kinds of circumstances under which it is the 'better' option are ones in which you're in absolute agony with no prospect of the agony ending so long as you remain here.
Death is an immense harm to everyone. Everyone. That's why we use it to punish people. Punishment isn't punishment unless it harms. The death penalty is a 'penalty'. It is a a harm. Death is a harm. A big one. For everyone.
How big? Well, you gage that by looking at how much harm you need to be suffering or prospectively suffering before it becomes rational to seek death. And the answer is: a lot of harm. And even then, if the harm you are undergoing will end soon, death seems irrational as a means to avoid it. So, if I can save my life by sawing my arm off, I seem to have reason to do that even though that'll cause me about as intense an amount of suffering as one can conceive of. So long as I stand a decent chance of surviving and not living in agony for the rest of my life, it makes sense to saw my arm off.
Going back to my restaurant example, imagine that there's a dish on the menu called 'shit soup'. Now, the waiter tells you that virtually everything on the menu is better than shit soup, even after you tell the waiter that several of the other items are ones that, if you eat them, will make you ill due to your allergies. The waiter says 'ah, yes, but shit soup is still worse than that - better to have stomach cramps for a week than eat the shit soup'. But then there's razor soup. The waiter says "ah, shit soup is better than razor soup". Now, do you conclude that shit soup is a nice soup? The waiter has told you that virtually anything else on the menu is better, including items that the waiter knows will make you ill. The only item the waiter says is worse than shit soup is razor soup - a soup filled with thousands of broken razors. What do you conclude about shit soup? That it is good?
So death is a whopping great harm, and furthermore it seems it alters our condition permanently, otherwise why is the rationality of suicide affected mainly by how likely it is that the harm you are using death to escape will come to characterize the rest of your life here, or will pass?
THus, the reasonable conclusion is that death is a portal to hell.
To return to the restaurant once more, imagine that anyone who enters this restaurant 'has' to end their meal with shit soup. No matter what you order, you have eventually to eat a bowl of shit soup. Everyone. You don't know what other dishes you'll be served - you may get served the finest truffles and venison and ice cream or you may start with razor soup and then more razor soup - but no matter what other courses you get served, you will be served shit soup at the end. And it is not a little bowl either, but a giant vat. And you have to eat it all. If you're half way decent, are you going to recommend visiting that restaurant? Are you going to take a friend to it?