
Alucard
Wizard
- Feb 8, 2019
- 606
An unconditional right to painless suicide for any adult would be the guarantor of our existential freedom. Only this right would allow us to dispose of our life, to look death in the face and to assume the human condition serenely.
If we dared to depart from our habit of thinking consisting in opposing life to death in a Manichaean way, we would quickly understand that a right to a gentle death would not only help to die better, but also – and above all ! - to live better. Not to be held prisoner in life, to always have a way out in case misfortune strikes us, to be treated as a grown-up human being capable of thinking for himself and moving towards a peaceful conclusion: wouldn't these be reassuring prospects for becoming freer and happier?
Existential freedom would be the power to leave life easily and peacefully when one chooses. Whether it's cults, prisons, mafias or romantic relationships with "narcissistic perverts", the environments from which one cannot leave without reprisals are never healthy. However, life is a prison if you cannot leave it easily when you want, because then our desertion cannot be bought with horrible suffering. Wouldn't doing justice to life amount to stripping it of its prison characteristics to make it look like a poetry club? To love a person or a thing, it must be chosen freely, that is to say without constraint: the exaltation of "the love of life" should therefore begin with the defense of the right to painless suicide.
Perverse instrumentalization of the idea of free will
We are often told that we are not forced to live since we are always free to commit suicide. Certainly, we can always cut our veins, defenestrate ourselves, immolate ourselves… But the invocation of free will is not enough to solve the ethical problem of existential confinement. A slave, always free to disobey his master, is nevertheless forced to obey him under pain of sanctions. At the same time, without methods of peaceful death within our reach, we are certainly always free to commit suicide, but we nevertheless remain constrained to live, because by committing suicide we expose ourselves to excruciating pain and the risk of failure. In a word, free will does not exclude coercion. To do something out of fear of the consequences if you don't do it is to do it under duress. To live for fear of dying is therefore to live by constraint. Only a painless right to suicide would therefore make it possible to truly live by personal decision – which would give life an irresistible taste of freedom…
Autonomy and happy lucidity
To consider that human beings should not have the right to kill themselves gently when they want is to think that their life does not belong to them, that they are nothing but the property of others, of society and the state. This is what is called, in philosophy, reification: the fact of being considered as a thing. To dispose of one's life is above all to have the choice between keeping one's life or not, without the second option being made horribly painful. To be deprived of this fundamental right constitutes a serious violation of our dignity as human beings. Power hates the possibility of suicide, because it is a means of independence: when you are no longer afraid to die, you dare more to boldly disobey and "live your life".
The right to painless suicide would allow us to be at the same time lucid, serene and respectful of the laws. We would know that no matter what, we could always unchain ourselves from misfortune, which would be infinitely reassuring. Existence, on the temporal plane, would consist of a trek towards a peaceful end. Finally, we could prepare ourselves for a dignified death without plunging into illegality: a beautiful reconciliation between the legal and the legitimate. As the physicist Bernard Diu wrote, there should be a right to IVV, to "Voluntary Interruption of Life", "there should be the simple right to leave".
(Translated with Google Translate)
Gabriel Noncris
If we dared to depart from our habit of thinking consisting in opposing life to death in a Manichaean way, we would quickly understand that a right to a gentle death would not only help to die better, but also – and above all ! - to live better. Not to be held prisoner in life, to always have a way out in case misfortune strikes us, to be treated as a grown-up human being capable of thinking for himself and moving towards a peaceful conclusion: wouldn't these be reassuring prospects for becoming freer and happier?
Existential freedom would be the power to leave life easily and peacefully when one chooses. Whether it's cults, prisons, mafias or romantic relationships with "narcissistic perverts", the environments from which one cannot leave without reprisals are never healthy. However, life is a prison if you cannot leave it easily when you want, because then our desertion cannot be bought with horrible suffering. Wouldn't doing justice to life amount to stripping it of its prison characteristics to make it look like a poetry club? To love a person or a thing, it must be chosen freely, that is to say without constraint: the exaltation of "the love of life" should therefore begin with the defense of the right to painless suicide.
Perverse instrumentalization of the idea of free will
We are often told that we are not forced to live since we are always free to commit suicide. Certainly, we can always cut our veins, defenestrate ourselves, immolate ourselves… But the invocation of free will is not enough to solve the ethical problem of existential confinement. A slave, always free to disobey his master, is nevertheless forced to obey him under pain of sanctions. At the same time, without methods of peaceful death within our reach, we are certainly always free to commit suicide, but we nevertheless remain constrained to live, because by committing suicide we expose ourselves to excruciating pain and the risk of failure. In a word, free will does not exclude coercion. To do something out of fear of the consequences if you don't do it is to do it under duress. To live for fear of dying is therefore to live by constraint. Only a painless right to suicide would therefore make it possible to truly live by personal decision – which would give life an irresistible taste of freedom…
Autonomy and happy lucidity
To consider that human beings should not have the right to kill themselves gently when they want is to think that their life does not belong to them, that they are nothing but the property of others, of society and the state. This is what is called, in philosophy, reification: the fact of being considered as a thing. To dispose of one's life is above all to have the choice between keeping one's life or not, without the second option being made horribly painful. To be deprived of this fundamental right constitutes a serious violation of our dignity as human beings. Power hates the possibility of suicide, because it is a means of independence: when you are no longer afraid to die, you dare more to boldly disobey and "live your life".
The right to painless suicide would allow us to be at the same time lucid, serene and respectful of the laws. We would know that no matter what, we could always unchain ourselves from misfortune, which would be infinitely reassuring. Existence, on the temporal plane, would consist of a trek towards a peaceful end. Finally, we could prepare ourselves for a dignified death without plunging into illegality: a beautiful reconciliation between the legal and the legitimate. As the physicist Bernard Diu wrote, there should be a right to IVV, to "Voluntary Interruption of Life", "there should be the simple right to leave".
(Translated with Google Translate)
Gabriel Noncris