Yes, the Stoics, would have advocated suicide in strict conditions. Such mandates were imposed to prevent the needless loss of life at your very own hands. — Posty McPostface
Had Marcus Aurelius committed suicide, he would have been remembered as a proto-Jesus, above and beyond that of Socrates. — Posty McPostface
I don't think it's a matter of manliness as you portray it. After all, Stoicism appealed to women also. — Posty McPostface
What do you mean by that? — Posty McPostface
What is it that dies? Who is it that dies? And who is it that is died for? For whom does the soldier die? For whom or what did Socrates die? For whom or what do we die in lots of little ways when not completely? — macrosoft
True, I meant to just highlight the fact that egalitarianism commands otherwise. — Posty McPostface
A memory dies. That's unacceptable. But, true, people commit suicide, and then the world keeps on turning. It's just such a futile act though. — Posty McPostface
Sure, and I'm a 'blue' guy in a 'blue' city. But as a philosopher, I don't take on the moral fads without criticism or reservation. [Which is not to say that you are and do, but only to clarify my position.] — macrosoft
What in me dies when I die? My particular memories? Yeah. But what was the best part of me all along? What it my little particular face? Was it my little habits?
Or was the virtue that lit up my life the same virtue that lit up other people's lives? Is essential virtue a flame that leaps from melting candle to melting candle? I'd say so. So death loses some of its sting as we sincerely find ourselves in the flame and not the candle. — macrosoft
I just fail to see the merit to martyrdom with suicide. Sure, people get remembered for it; but, so what? — Posty McPostface
But, what is life without suffering? — Posty McPostface
I agree. And most people don't want to die, so much so that they will believe unlikely stories to fend off the notion of being erased as particular persons. My point would be that facing death 'forces' the lit candle to identify more with the flame than the wax. — macrosoft
Hmm. You drive a hard bargain. I'm a fan of logotherapy and have read Viktor's Man's Sear for Meaning. We always have the chance to choose our attitudes; but, not circumstances towards death. — Posty McPostface
Understood. I was unsure what you meant by that analogy. But, thanks for clarifying. — Posty McPostface
Yes, this sounds like something Wittgenstein would say. I agree. What is life without death? Just something? Not really. — Posty McPostface
If I use my imagination, I'd say that life without death would be very different. There would always be time to procrastinate. You could always go back to take the right path having at first taken the wrong path. In some ways it would be nice. But it would also reduce life to a flat kind of video game. Decisions would have no real weight. — macrosoft
So, what are your thought's about Buddhism, and the cessation of suffering? Is it all mumbo-jumbo or is there some truth to all of it? — Posty McPostface
I'm no expert, but I have dabbled. I'd say that there is some truth to it and some mumbo-jumbo. — macrosoft
Even crappy philosophers can be transformed into gold by the right kind of seriousness. — macrosoft
Traditions are nice, but show me the individual. — macrosoft
Yes, this is the moral dilemma that the simulation hypothesis faces. It's a path that one can always take, but, would you be willing to forsake death, which is going to become a reality sooner or later? — Posty McPostface
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