In those cases these measures are not taken to prevent intentional death but rather accidental death; preventing intentional death is an addition. — darthbarracuda
We generally agree that if one is in a coercive institution that restricts one's choice to such a complete extent that they have no non-trivial choices left to make on pain of violence, forcible restraint, etc. then they are not free in any interesting sense, as with going to prison.
I am simply pointing out that birth is such an institution, though people do not acknowledge this. — The Great Whatever
But this thesis more resemble a philosophically loaded nihilistic view of human existence than it does resemble a truism that one can simply "point out". — Pierre-Normand
but literally anybody has the right (and moral entitlement) to forcibly stop you if they see you trying to? — The Great Whatever
No human action takes place in an environment without the presence of some sort of force which limits or threatens the actor involved. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It is the contradiction between the body's will and the mind's will that leads to the Absurd. Is this the kind of "coercion" that you are speaking of, that the mind sees true that suicide is rational yet the body prevents it from annihilation? — darthbarracuda
This does not follow. Whether an idea is right or not can be judged by its own internal coherence and explanatory merit. Whether it was coerced or determined or not makes no difference to the quality of an argument, nor does it make it 'meaningless.' — The Great Whatever
Free will is necessarily deterministic and requires the absence of absolute "freedom." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Unfortunately, life itself is such a coercive situation, since it is impossible to consent to being born, and all 'decisions' made while alive are within the context of that coercive establishment. — The Great Whatever
and all 'decisions' made while alive are within the context of that coercive establishment. — The Great Whatever
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