J
Jean Améry
Enlightened
- Mar 17, 2019
- 1,098
It is often said that suicidal behaviour stems from mental illness chief among them mood disorders like 'depression'. On this forum aswell many people identify as 'mentally ill'. Of course everyone has a right to their opinion but I do not agree with the characterisation of consistently and profoundly low mood as constituting disease/illness. Especially since it comes with such a heavy price tag in terms of discrimination, stripping of rights, sometimes losing one's livelihood, losing one's dignity and even freedom.
Since the stigma attached to suicide and the prosecution of the suicidal is clearly tied to this notion (so called 'mental health laws' allowing for the incarceration of the suicidal by psychiatry with the blessing of society and the state) and even rests on this assumption it's worthy of investigation as a chief criterium in any involuntary commitment law or statute is always 'mental illness'.
Note that this cannot and therefore has never been proven objectively (i.e. person X has mental illness Y as shown by test Z) by anyone: in practice a psychiatrist or other 'mental health professional' (in some jurisdictions even any MD) offers his or her opinion and it is magically treated as an indisputable fact upon which a person who isn't guilty of a crime is nevertheless convicted and condemned to incarceration and violation of one's human dignity through the torture of forced drugging, electrocution, emotional abuse and sometimes forced feeding as if he/she were an animal.
I do not have the time nor the inclination at this point to offer a thorough answer to or at least analysis of this problem at his point but I think it's worth offering this viewpoint from a man whom I consider to be wise and a true philosopher: Gary Inmendham ('Inmendham' is his pseudonym).
Key points:
Since the stigma attached to suicide and the prosecution of the suicidal is clearly tied to this notion (so called 'mental health laws' allowing for the incarceration of the suicidal by psychiatry with the blessing of society and the state) and even rests on this assumption it's worthy of investigation as a chief criterium in any involuntary commitment law or statute is always 'mental illness'.
Note that this cannot and therefore has never been proven objectively (i.e. person X has mental illness Y as shown by test Z) by anyone: in practice a psychiatrist or other 'mental health professional' (in some jurisdictions even any MD) offers his or her opinion and it is magically treated as an indisputable fact upon which a person who isn't guilty of a crime is nevertheless convicted and condemned to incarceration and violation of one's human dignity through the torture of forced drugging, electrocution, emotional abuse and sometimes forced feeding as if he/she were an animal.
I do not have the time nor the inclination at this point to offer a thorough answer to or at least analysis of this problem at his point but I think it's worth offering this viewpoint from a man whom I consider to be wise and a true philosopher: Gary Inmendham ('Inmendham' is his pseudonym).
Key points:
- 'mental health' is not a fact but a matter of perspective: it's impossible to properly define it and clearly deliniate 'mental illness' from being 'mentally healthy'
- the moral evaluation of 'depression' as sick, bad and unhealthy springs from the philosophical position of optimism
- optimism isn't the product of reason but of nature
- nature has equipped us with a system that rewards certain behaviours: we are in fact addicted to life and whatever seems to reward our cravings (consumption, reproduction)
- addiction can never be a sure sign of (mental) health yet this is this society's yardstick of 'mental health'
- 'depression' might very well mean one has seen through the illusion and observed life as what it is: a futile, pointless game that we simply cannot win
- extreme 'depression' might be the simple acknowledgement that it would indeed be better not to exist at all
- this philosophical position is called pessimism (he does not identify it as such in this video but it's what it's commonly called): the antithesis of optimism
- pessimism (which may or may not lead to suicide) might very well be the most accurate description and evaluation of life on earth and thus the highest wisdom (or 'point of clarity' as Inmendham calls it)
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