Investigations on the causes of suicide are empirical issues. It's hard to see how it wouldn't involve any science.I think there enough suicides warrant an investigation into the phenomenon and factors that might cause it (outside of sociology text books) — Andrew4Handel
I don't see why you can't find social circumstances and values predisposing people to suicide, but they will never be the whole story.It could be that social circumstances and values are leading to suicide because there are communities and countries where suicide rates are significantly lower such as the difference between catholic and protestant suicide rates. — Andrew4Handel
a profound statement. — Andrew4Handel
By this I mean what does this lead us to believe about a persons values and beliefs, mental state, their stance on life and so on. — Andrew4Handel
What do you think that statement is? the nearest I can get is a universal and definitive "Fuck off!", but I'm not sure that 'profound' is how I would describe it. — unenlightened
I am not even sure that the voices of the mentally ill and generally distressed get heard or responded to — Andrew4Handel
This prejudice against death, however, is a kind of xenophobia. Discrimination against death is simply assumed good and right. — Heisman
Most people are so prejudiced on this issue that they simply refuse to even consider the possibilities of death.
Viviocentric provincialism is exposed through an enlarged view from our planet, our solar system, our galaxy, and the limits of our knowledge of the larger cosmos we live in.
Overcoming the prejudice against death, then, is only an extension and continuation of the Western project of eliminating bias, especially biologically based biases (i.e. race or sex based biases).
. But dead people don't post, and have no philosophy. — unenlightened
I can't believe that that Durkheim statistic still holds up. The Protestant faith learned nothing from his work. — thewonder
1.3k
. But dead people don't post, and have no philosophy.
— unenlightened
But they do study the causes of death. — Andrew4Handel
I think if this life was truly fulfilling and lacked harm we would not be eager for death.
Death is inevitable as well as being a big unknown. I would prefer to die naturally whatever that means and not feel forced to depart life prematurely.
i don't want anyone to feel forced to kill themselves because of the nature of life as it is now. Also I don't want the world after I die to be a terrible place that I leave behind.
There is a kind of paradox here that if the afterlife is something great then why persist in this place? This is question for the religious or simply any believer in a better afterlife.
But what concerns me is that people are ignoring the ramifications of up to a million people a year killing themselves and these people not having a voice in the politics despite the implications of what is a drastic or severe action.
Maybe killing yourself is a courageous and revolutionary act? But when is it appropriate to do it? — Andrew4Handel
Viewing suicide as a kind of philosophical stance which can be interpreted to be indicative of just whatever, it's romanticising. — Judaka
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