They are both dead now. — Paine
if suffering is self-caused (karma/east and you sow what you reap/west) then death (Algos' alterego Thanatos) must be too, oui? — Agent Smith
We're all committing suicide then, right? — Agent Smith
I have responded to many individuals who wanted to kill themselves. In every case I've seen it is because life has become unbearable through chronic pain, the loss of a loved one, major depression, sexual abuse, trauma - that kind of thing. Most people do find a way to work through the issues and
find reasons to live. — Tom Storm
Suicide causes immeasurable pain and suffering to those who knew the deceased. Parents never get over it. You'd be causing immeasurable suffering to your parents and siblings. — Moses
Do you agree that it is contrary to one's interest to kill oneself, extreme unending agony aside? — Bartricks
Nevertheless... we have to highlight that Adolf Hitler killed himself before seeing the loss of Nazi Germany — javi2541997
Not just he, but many other Nazis as well. — baker
It is imaginable that a serious suicide attempt (one where the reasonably predictable outcome of the method is death) brings about a special change in the person's cognition (on a biochemical level). — baker
A suicidal doesn't expect to fail the attempt — javi2541997
Presumably some suicide attempts are intended to fail to begin with — baker
Exactly, because those Nazi officials understood suicide as a honorable ending. — javi2541997
It was mainly driven by fear. Fear of being held responsible and of being put on display and frar of reprisals. — Tom Storm
They were more afraid of the reprisals than dying and end his life destroying everything they built during Nazi Germany. — javi2541997
How do you know that?
Can you substantiate your claim with empirical evidence, or is it just conjecture? — baker
Can you provide direct quotations? — baker
Your interpretation is not in line with Nazi ideology. — baker
It's not my interpretation — Tom Storm
and your assuming that actually Nazi's actually followed their ideology even in adversity.
Can you substantiate your claim with empirical evidence, or is it just conjecture? — baker
Extreme unending agony. — Bartricks
That requires belief in one's eternal damnation. — baker
I do not see that. — Bartricks
And that's why religions typically condemn it. It is, I think, primarily out of a concern to prevent someone harming themselves
Others defend the thesis that the killed themselves as an act of honour.
The second thesis, I completely believe it related to Japanese commanders. They did Seppuku as an act of honour towards the emperors for not winning the WWII. — javi2541997
In traditional Japanese culture, there is also the concept of rebirth tied in with suicide; there, suicide isn't seen as the total end of one's existence, the way it is usually seen in secular Western culture. — baker
Extreme unending agony is possible only in a scenario of eternal damnation. In most other scenarios, death of the body is taken to mean the end of suffering. — baker
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.