K
kaizenmaster
New Member
- Jul 3, 2024
- 4
Preface
Hello. This is my first post. I want to write a series contesting justifications for coercive suicide "prevention". The title of every post will be the same except for the number and the justification being challenged. Tell me what you think about this idea. If you come up with critiques, feel free to comment them. I'm not that good at writing, but I will try to be "slow" in my writings so that everyone can understand what I'm saying, but if people want me to change my style of writing, I can do so.
In addition to the above, the posts in this series will be edited as I hone my arguments. I will add the edit as an amendment. I might also polish my writings, so don't be surprised if the text changes. The message itself won't be changed.
The justification that this post will challenge is the sentiment "suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem".
Clarifying the opposition's position
The sentiment might sound great as a slogan, but is nonsensical as a justification.
Let's assume that the sentiment means that suicide has permanent and irreversible consequences. Why is this viewed as being the case specifically in the case of suicide (and other things, such as getting an abortion, having a kid, getting a tattoo, etc.)? What makes suicide (and the others) special in this connection? Well, suicide results in death, and dead people cannot do anything. The fact of not being able to do anything is the permanent consequence of suicide. So, the idea is that suicide is a permanent decision by virtue of resulting in death.
Compare this to, say, getting a tattoo. For the sake of simplicity, when I speak of getting a tattoo, I am referring to getting a tattoo during times when it was impossible to remove them.
Alright, so people say that this is a permanent decision as well. Why? Because tattoos stay on your body. Because they stay on your body permanently, they permanently affect the rest of your life. You go to a bar, someone sees your tattoos, and instantly makes conclusions about your character. You cannot escape this.
In sum, when people say "suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem", they are seemingly saying "this action will result in you being dead indefinitely". I will show that this is only partially true - that when people use the word "permanent" to describe getting tattoos and committing suicide, they are not just impartially describing the nature of the action, but also making a value judgement about it, thus making all this talk about "permanence" into rhetoric.
The critique
I will try to show that all decisions and their consequences are equally permanent.
Say you eat ice cream today. For the sake of the opposition's position, let's say that the ice cream leaves absolutely no change on your body. Nobody calls this kind of decision permanent. Yet, by eating ice cream, you have permanently imprinted in time the fact of having done so. In addition, your next action will be "taken off of" the circumstances at the end of having eaten the ice cream. So, strictly speaking, the consequences of having eaten ice cream last until the day you die. In fact, they last until the end of the universe, as your behavior determines the location, time, and circumstance of your death. The universe will then "pick up" off of those circumstances. In fact, since you affect other people and other things, and those people and things will go on to affect other things as well, your death is irrelevant to the fact that every decision you make has consequences beyond your lifetime.
This applies in the case of getting tattoos as well. People say that it is a permanent decision, and that by virtue of it being a permanent decision one should not do it. But, as I hope I've shown, every decision is a permanent decision.
What I am essentially saying is that viewing some decisions as having permanent consequences and others as not having permanent consequences is a mistake. (I should add here that by virtue of doing something, such as eating ice cream, you will always not be doing something else. Thus, every decision is a permanent decision in that sense as well. By eating ice cream, you have now permanently not done something else at that particular time, which has consequences of its own. For instance, what if instead of eating ice cream you went to drink milk, spilled it, slipped, and died?)
Interestingly, even the decision to continue to live is ipso facto a permanent decision, as you cannot "unlive" the time you have lived nor can you "undo" the things you have done (strictly speaking, all you can do is do something else). In addition, living has permanent consequences as well, as I've shown above. Yet, you don't see the anti-suicide crowd making the case for abandoning "suicide prevention" because the decision to live has permanent consequences. Nobody has ever said "Don't live! It's a permanent and irreversible decision to live another day!"
This should make it clear that the appeal to permanence is a value judgement masquerading as a neutral statement of fact. It is a selective indignation.
NOTE: What I was trying to say in the second to last paragraph is that you can decide to affect things by living or you can decide to affect things by dying. Either way, you will affect things. Your choice.
Hello. This is my first post. I want to write a series contesting justifications for coercive suicide "prevention". The title of every post will be the same except for the number and the justification being challenged. Tell me what you think about this idea. If you come up with critiques, feel free to comment them. I'm not that good at writing, but I will try to be "slow" in my writings so that everyone can understand what I'm saying, but if people want me to change my style of writing, I can do so.
In addition to the above, the posts in this series will be edited as I hone my arguments. I will add the edit as an amendment. I might also polish my writings, so don't be surprised if the text changes. The message itself won't be changed.
The justification that this post will challenge is the sentiment "suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem".
Clarifying the opposition's position
The sentiment might sound great as a slogan, but is nonsensical as a justification.
Let's assume that the sentiment means that suicide has permanent and irreversible consequences. Why is this viewed as being the case specifically in the case of suicide (and other things, such as getting an abortion, having a kid, getting a tattoo, etc.)? What makes suicide (and the others) special in this connection? Well, suicide results in death, and dead people cannot do anything. The fact of not being able to do anything is the permanent consequence of suicide. So, the idea is that suicide is a permanent decision by virtue of resulting in death.
Compare this to, say, getting a tattoo. For the sake of simplicity, when I speak of getting a tattoo, I am referring to getting a tattoo during times when it was impossible to remove them.
Alright, so people say that this is a permanent decision as well. Why? Because tattoos stay on your body. Because they stay on your body permanently, they permanently affect the rest of your life. You go to a bar, someone sees your tattoos, and instantly makes conclusions about your character. You cannot escape this.
In sum, when people say "suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem", they are seemingly saying "this action will result in you being dead indefinitely". I will show that this is only partially true - that when people use the word "permanent" to describe getting tattoos and committing suicide, they are not just impartially describing the nature of the action, but also making a value judgement about it, thus making all this talk about "permanence" into rhetoric.
The critique
I will try to show that all decisions and their consequences are equally permanent.
Say you eat ice cream today. For the sake of the opposition's position, let's say that the ice cream leaves absolutely no change on your body. Nobody calls this kind of decision permanent. Yet, by eating ice cream, you have permanently imprinted in time the fact of having done so. In addition, your next action will be "taken off of" the circumstances at the end of having eaten the ice cream. So, strictly speaking, the consequences of having eaten ice cream last until the day you die. In fact, they last until the end of the universe, as your behavior determines the location, time, and circumstance of your death. The universe will then "pick up" off of those circumstances. In fact, since you affect other people and other things, and those people and things will go on to affect other things as well, your death is irrelevant to the fact that every decision you make has consequences beyond your lifetime.
This applies in the case of getting tattoos as well. People say that it is a permanent decision, and that by virtue of it being a permanent decision one should not do it. But, as I hope I've shown, every decision is a permanent decision.
What I am essentially saying is that viewing some decisions as having permanent consequences and others as not having permanent consequences is a mistake. (I should add here that by virtue of doing something, such as eating ice cream, you will always not be doing something else. Thus, every decision is a permanent decision in that sense as well. By eating ice cream, you have now permanently not done something else at that particular time, which has consequences of its own. For instance, what if instead of eating ice cream you went to drink milk, spilled it, slipped, and died?)
Interestingly, even the decision to continue to live is ipso facto a permanent decision, as you cannot "unlive" the time you have lived nor can you "undo" the things you have done (strictly speaking, all you can do is do something else). In addition, living has permanent consequences as well, as I've shown above. Yet, you don't see the anti-suicide crowd making the case for abandoning "suicide prevention" because the decision to live has permanent consequences. Nobody has ever said "Don't live! It's a permanent and irreversible decision to live another day!"
This should make it clear that the appeal to permanence is a value judgement masquerading as a neutral statement of fact. It is a selective indignation.
NOTE: What I was trying to say in the second to last paragraph is that you can decide to affect things by living or you can decide to affect things by dying. Either way, you will affect things. Your choice.
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