The predominant view is that suicide is a sign of mental disturbance. — Cuthbert
In the modern West, any connection of suicide to honour and disgrace or to sin and damnation is forbidden and will attract the strongest condemnation. — Cuthbert
Doesn't matter how controversial suicide is I think is a respectful act which reflects individualism. We have to respect when someone decides to end their life and not condemn it. — javi2541997
This is true if we adopt value neutral individualism, but the Judeo-Christian tradition is not fundamentally individualistic. In Judaism -- out of which Christianity comes from -- our bodies are not on our own, but rather basically considered on loan from God. — Moses
If you say that a suicide is somehow to be blamed then people will think you are cruel and heartless and have no understanding of the sadness and mental disturbance that leads to someone taking their own life. — Cuthbert
But I am not agree. I just see it as the average religious subterfuge which only prolong our suffering. It is not fair the statement that I hurt God killing myself but not when I am suffering previously.
If we constantly use the argument of "not hurting" God we are forced to always suffer — javi2541997
If there is no soul we will already spend the vast majority of time in nothingness so nothing really matters — Moses
Everyone suffers, and often in their own unique way. Others can often help us alleviate our own suffering — Moses
One of the tricky things here is individualism itself is a very western idea, influenced a lot by Judeo-Christian ideas.Doesn't matter how controversial suicide is I think is a respectful act which reflects individualism. We have to respect when someone decides to end their life and not condemn it
Perhaps one could make an argument in places like Japan where space was limited suicide was more condoned for this reason — Paulm12
At the end of the day you're going to make the final decision: Life or death. Love or lovelessness. It's up to you. — Moses
Most people do find a way to work through the issues and find reasons to live.
Is up to me but whatever I would do it would make some suffer or pain to others, for example my parents or others who care about me. It is not so easy to make "own decisions" — javi2541997
You'd be causing immeasurable suffering to your parents
The bottom line is that it's such a great harm to die we want to prevent people from doing it in moments of stupidity — Bartricks
:fire:Organised religion forbids the miserable serfs and slaves from any escape from their exploitation. Because the organisation wants to continue to exploit. Just as the shrinks used to treat attempting to escape as a mental illness (drapetomania), so the modern shrink treats the attempt to escape oppression and exploitation by suicide as a mental illness today. Any resemblance between religion and psychiatry is purely un-coincidental. — unenlightened
What's the hurry? Why seek a permanent escape from temporary problems? How can you be so optimistic that the end is certainly the end of suffering? — 180 Proof
Why seek a permanent escape from temporary problems?
How can you be so optimistic that the end is certainly the end of suffering?
Then you disputeUnfortunately, they are not temporary but perpetual. — javi2541997
or the finding that many suicide-attempt survivors realize they did not really want to die?Most people do find a way to work through the issues and find reasons to live — Tom Storm
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