That's essentially my outlook as well. Basically, any instance where you will most likely suffer death and want to:.
This begs the question of what you think constitutes a reason for suicide that is both intelligent and necessary.
IMHO, such a reason could be that a person has a 100% fatal and incurable disease (pancreatic cancer, perhaps?), wishes to spare him- or her-self the indignity and pain of the terminal phase, and wants his or her heirs to not grieve extensively. In other words, to just get it over with and avoid most of the mess and fuss of a protracted dying process. But that's just my opinion.
1) Take your own life yourself.
2) Stop some kind of intense and unbearable suffering that will likely never end.
Or a lack of rationale anyway. Whatever line of thinking drives someone to suicide is a broken line of thinking. Much like the majority thinking that drives someone to kill another person is a broken line of thinking.There's your problem, assuming there is a "rationale" at all.
Suicide is not a reflex. Heading home and stringing yourself over a beam or pulling a revolver out of a drawer and putting it to your head involves some sort of rationale.
Had you committed suicide as a result of your trauma, would you consider any condemnation from your family members to be ignorant or arrogant?Yes. I've compartmentalised it and built walls around it and put up screens, but my daughter's death hurts just as much as it did then. I found reasons to keep going- my other two children- but I'm not about to fault someone who didn't. I know what they felt. You don't. That's why I consider your condemnation ignorant and arrogant.
Regardless, you've dealt with your loss in some way. You've built emotional walls or processed it in a way that made it hurt less and allowed you to move on with your life. It doesn't mean you are no longer sad, but you can manage.
What makes someone commit suicide? They weigh the painful consequence of some action or decision as being more unbearable than death. Some people decide death is preferable to continuing to live, some people don't. Why is there a difference? Some people are equipped to deal with extreme emotional distress and some are not.That's nothing more than your ignorant, pulled-out-of-your-arse assumption. I'd love to see any evidence to the contrary, though. Have any?
In what way is that view ignorant?
Aside from what I mention above with intense/irreversible suffering or impending/inevitable death, what reasonable justification do you believe there is for committing suicide?They are emotionly laden words, conveying that the person using them is making an emotional value judment rather than a reasoned one. In my mind, that conveys just as much ignorance as that which the useage is meant to condemn.
All words carry emotion with them. All reasoning has some emotional impact. Is a willful suicide not an emotional statement?
Indeed I am.Just confirming that you are making a judgement that you think you know better than they do what they are feeling.
I just found that to be incredibly ironic.Did you happen to notice how and why? Keep digging, you are just confirming your ignorance.
Because that's what I do every day. I am constantly making value judgments about people and their actions. It's a part of the human condition to make those judgments and to hold people to some standard of conduct.If they are incapable (which seems the only reasonable assement given your "determinism") then why make the value jugement?
Would you say that someone who commits suicide has made an incorrect judgment? In many cases, I would say they have.Yes, people make incorrect judments every day. That's not something to celebrate, and I don't consider it exculpatory for one's own incorrect judgments.
Much like someone who tries to pull into my lane without seeing me on the highway is an incorrect judgment on their part. I have a reaction to that misjudgment of theirs. Typically I will call them a stupid idiot.
If a member of my family committed suicide, I would likely find myself both very sad, very guilty, and incredibly angry. The guy who I knew who offed himself because his GF left him was my best friend's brother. I saw firsthand how their family reacted. It was definitely complex and went beyond "sad."
Do you ever call someone stupid? Are you ever angry at anyone? Of course you do, and of course you are. Welcome to humanity.I guess you can't help being arrogant in your ignorance, then? Is that what you're saying?
Who says my judgments are uncompromising? It depends on the rationale involved. I've said a number of times that most suicide seems frivolous given their triggers. Not all, just most. Depending on what drove the person to suicide, there is a sliding scale from "noble hero" to "complete idiot."It is perspective, certainly. Are you saying the degree to which you are comfortable making harsh and uncompromising judgements about people's actions to inversly relational to the amount of knowledge you have about them?
If someone offs themselves because the just learned that their entire family had been killed, you inherently carry a weight of understanding for their reaction. If someone offs themselves because someone cut in line at the supermarket and got the last of the Skittles, you'd likely call them an idiot.
Personally, I find the amount of empathy I have for someone who has committed suicide to grow depending on the cause and if I knew the person. What else would you expect?
If they don't do what most people do, they are statistical outliers. Someone who goes on a shooting spree because they were fired is usually looked upon as a crazy maniac. Maybe we're really just ignorant of the factors leading to their murderous rampage and we shouldn't be so quick to judge. Or we can see fit to judge everyone as we feel like we should. I think a guy who goes on a work place rampage is a maniac. I will usually think it's idiotic when someone kills themselves.Why does what "most people" do have anything at all to do with what any individual person does?
Do you think this "fundy" should have killed himself? Surely you have made some tentative judgment about him and his character given what we know.It is grotesque when one uses the generality to dictate what other people's behaviors "should be".
Everyone is judged. For a person who did not commit suicide, you see them as strong, grieving and working through their pain. For the person who committed suicide, they may also be judged. Depending on the rationale they held when killing themselves, they may be judged as being an idiot.Why does that have anything at all to do with someone who does?
Unless his wife were unable to work and he were convinced that his wife and child would have to resort to prostitution in order to get by, I can't see how giving them money through death is preferable to any other alternative.Maybe. Maybe he has a large insurance policy on his own life that will at least get his own family out of trouble. (and no, not all insurance policies have exclusion clauses for suicide. The exclusion clauses for suicide in the policies my company sells expire after two years.)
In this case, we don't know. But I'm just willing to bet that I'd judge it to be a pretty frivolous trigger unworthy of suicide. I may be wrong, but I guess we'll see if any news of this bubbles up.
A judgment or an opinion. Otherwise I'd be calling it a fact.And when those judgments are based on insufficient information, what do you call that?
Sure I do. You can gauge and make judgments about how people think by their behavior.Drop the "everyone" bit. You're not a mind reader. You don't know the first thing about what "everyone" thinks.
Everyone does this. Everyone with a functioning brain has expectations of others and are thrown off when someone does not meet those expectations. The expectations may differ from person to person, but they are there. You have your set of expectations and apparently your set of expectations involves not making negative judgments about people who have committed suicide.Go ahead and say it, we already know. You have notions of how everyone should act in general. You don't like it when someone is acting outside of your expectations. That's all right. You're not a bad person for thinking that way. It is okay to be wrong.
How can I not judge them? Judgments of others range from being told of the existence of a person by name in a random conversation, all the way to judging a spouse or a child. When you are aware of a person, we immediately make judgments. You walk down the street and you make judgments about every person you see. Your judgments may or may not be correct, but you do make them. I make judgments too, whether or not I know the whole story. Same as you. My judgments may differ from yours, but it doesn't make them right or wrong, just different.But if they were unable to act otherwise, why judge them at all?
Well, aside from the fact that most people do no take their own lives, that's about the only bit of fact I've dished out in this thread. The rest is judgment, opinion and speculation and I think I'm entitled to that.Of course not. Nothing you've posted in this thread has the slightest bit of reason or evidence behind it, that is perfectly clear.
Do you think that most people are driven to suicide at some point in their life? No? Neither do I. You and I can make this observation pretty plainly. Unless the majority of us knowingly commit suicide shortly after fertilization, I think it's pretty safe to assume that suicide is a statistical anomaly. Wouldn't you agree?Wait- I thought you were "not trying to provide proof of anything"- this implies that you have some kind of statistical analysis to which you are referring. Or are you ignorant that the term "bell curve" wasn't just some "general" metaphoric device, but actually meant something specific?
So, the family of my best friend. When his brother put a gun in his mouth and ended his life, were they entitled to be angry? Of course they were. Am I entitled to think that it was a stupid act? Of course I am. It doesn't make it right or wrong, it's just my opinion.You are certainly allowed to be wrong, yes. And as arrogant and ignorant as you please. You can even wave it around for everyone to laugh at, as you do here.
To him, it was obviously advantageous to end his life. His emotional suffering was too much to bear. Viewed through the lens of my experiences, I couldn't help but view it as a stupid act. From what I gathered, they felt it was a pretty needless and stupid act as well.
I never said I was aware of their motivations. I am aware, however, that most people who are subjected to emotional distress will not kill themselves. Though emotional distress will drive more people to suicide. Given my perspective I will make judgments accordingly, as will everyone else. Your judgments may vary.And you are fully aware of all their motivations, are you? How?
Who said I was trying to treat or cure thoughts of suicide? I'm just making a judgment. I'm giving my opinion. Were I trying to keep someone from suicide, this wouldn't be my approach at all.I see. Since every person should have the same reaction to stimulus, any deviation from that makes them an idiot. Of course, it doesn't matter what happened before the event that made them an idiot-suicide because they should have already dealt with it.
After all, it's so very, very easy for these idiots to get help. So what if there is bias against people (excuse me, potential idiots) who experience depression. They really just need to deal with it, right? Then again, your well-researched and hyper-empathetic approach should take care of any need for treatment.
Read my "murderous workplace rampage" example above. We judge the actions of others and are often unaware of the stimulus leading to their response. We all judge the actions of others, and at some point people are responsible for how they react to the circumstances in their lives.
If someone goes out and commits murder, we judge that person. If someone goes out and becomes a philanthropist, we judge that person. If someone commits suicide for specific reasons, we judge that person.
Again, welcome to the human condition. Just because we are unaware of every stimulus leading to a given reaction doesn't mean we aren't judging or shouldn't judge those reactions based on how we feel or how society feels they should have reacted.
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