Resistance to resistance may be futile, since we actually want it as much or even more than we hate it. Most of us are sufficiently invested in life so that suicide is not a 'living' issue and that instead concrete situations are our living issues. Philosophy does give us wise rules-of-thumb (reminds for particular purposes) and an overall orientation in existence. — macrosoft
Suicide is always futile. It's an idealistic dream world. I'm surprised so many people find it comforting when the uncertainty of existence points the other way. I would want to live forever, not erase myself. Such are the pangs of existence, yes; but, suicide is too big of a leap to overcome via rationality. I heard that suicide is done either by passion or cold analysis. I can't fathom what kind of analysis must operate to lead to such a conclusion. Time to eat something then. That's simpler and easier to obtain rather than eternal bliss in a never-ending dream. — Posty McPostface
I've contemplated suicide before. It is the coldest calculation imaginable. It is truly arctic, terrifyingly arctic. — macrosoft
Can one face the prospect of suicide with a straight face? I don't know. — Posty McPostface
Why don't more people realize that resistance against resistance is futile? — Posty McPostface
BTW, do you believe in the simulation hypothesis of reality? — Posty McPostface
Why not? If one commits oneself to the prospect of eternal bliss that is suicide, then they ought to think about it abstractly. — Posty McPostface
I'm an avid fan of the simulation hypothesis. It seems as though each person exists on a plane of solitude and loneliness sometimes. But, the simulation hypothesis renders suicide as futile in-of-itself. — Posty McPostface
I don't know the details. Can you sketch the hypothesis? — macrosoft
Indeed. That's true. But, after all, resistance is futile in the case of suicide. — Posty McPostface
But, wasn't their loss tragic in some sense? I would hate to leave more pain behind than happiness and such. — Posty McPostface
Sure. It was tragic. But having been in some very dark states of mind, I understood it too well to feel judgmental. The suicidal person feels like a disease. So they think they are doing good by doing away with themselves. They feel the guilt of being an individual, the guilt of entanglement. And even being loved is part of the entanglement. In a certain state of mind, being loved is terrifying. The fantasy is to be in a place without the 'guilt' that comes with mattering. — macrosoft
Usually the psyche involved is aware of too many contradictions. Reality is cracked through the center of their soul. They want opposite things, and it is hell, like being torn apart. And they 'see' that it is their own nature that is their hell. They are their own prisons. They don't have the comforting illusion that the problem is outside them. — macrosoft
Profound. I guess we're delving too deeply into the topic when things start sounding profound. — Posty McPostface
Maybe. I've always been comfortable in all of this deep stuff and bored when things are just cutesy small-talk. So people come to me sometimes when they are desperate. I'm a good friend for heavy conversations, but maybe not much fun when frivolity is called for. — macrosoft
I see you added this. I don't know what to think about suicide. If one believes in unrestrained individualism, then so be it? — Posty McPostface
I'm just trying to paint how they see it, or at least how I've seen it.
When it comes to suicide, the political question seems unimportant to me. Because you can't stop it, and a successful suicide transcends all law enforcement and whatever people will say about it. It leaps into the 'truth.' That's part of its allure. Death is transcendent. — macrosoft
I'm an advocate for philosophical quietism, despite my rampage of posts. I don't know what to think about 'profoundness'. It seems like lipstick on already red lips. — Posty McPostface
I can relate to any ambivalence. But I guess for me it's a form of stimulation. I need 'hard' conversation, risky conversation, heavy conversation. It's clear to me though that I am tuned so that I am on one side of the spectrum. Don't get me wrong. I'm pretty good at playing the usual games. I'm a charming extrovert when I have to be. But 'really' I am a creature of solitude and heavy thoughts. — macrosoft
Don't you find the prospect of suicide, as a no win game? I mean, there's nothing to be gained at the end of the day, when one thinks too seriously about suicide. It's just another act of 'resistance' from futility. — Posty McPostface
Well I am far from being pro-suicide, but I think that suicide connects to some other profound issues. For instance, is it better to risk your life in a fight when you are being abused? Should a person tolerate slavery to increase longevity? Should we prioritize long lives over brave lives? — macrosoft
Cynicism would point out that 'profoundness' is a symptom of a mediocre life. I try and live my life as mediocre as possible though. — Posty McPostface
Surprising. I usually think of profound as something like the opposite of mediocre. The profound is dark, hidden, esoteric. Or it is associated with 'limit' situations that we all face, the birth and death of loved ones, falling in love, conceptual revolutions with which we re-invent ourselves, etc. — macrosoft
The Stoics warranted suicide under strict conditions. Seneca must have welcomed the idea of suicide as salvation from a despotic ruler. As to delineating when suicide is warranted instead of unwarranted could be an interesting topic question.
What do you think? — Posty McPostface
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