TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,854
Disclaimer: This is NOT a pro-mortalist thread nor do I encourage or endorse people to die young, but merely exploring and explaining, from an objective perspective of those who have died young (especially those who chose to do so by their own hand), have managed to avoid potential immense suffering and all the problems that follow or will eventually come to pass as one continues sentience, or life.
I wished I had more characters to have a longer title, but this thread is more focused from an objective as well as pro-choice perspective on why dying young is still considered better. Anyways, in this thread, I will seek to explain in detail about why those people who died young are objectively (from the universe's perspective and from a logical perspective) as to why they are objectively better in general. Again, this is focusing on those who have died and why they are (from an objective standpoint and only focusing on them) in a better place, not suffering.
Consider an average, relatively healthy human being (US metric)
First off, with all humans, assuming the average person, be it male or female, and not to complicate things (so just keeping variables more/less the same, without too much deviation from the norm), the life expectancy is about 80 years in the US (chose 80 for an easy number and for hypothetical example purposes). So suppose one dies around age 30, and while to the survivors and people around said person (be it family, friends, and others) they feel sadness and view it as bad because they are sentient and looking in from the outsider's perspective, but for the individual person (the 30 year old), it is objectively better from a logical standpoint and from the universe's perspective. This is because then this 30 year old while he/she may miss out on many life's milestones and events, will also avoid many potential horrors in the next 50 (or more) potential years, as each day, month, year is always a gamble. Said person could get a health problem in their 40's or 50's, could end up in an accident, a victim of a crime, or other bad events in life could happen. But presuming that they lived up to 30, then passed away whether it be CTB or other cause, it is objectively better for them because they missed all the suffering that comes with life along without having to gamble for fleeting joy and pleasures.
On the contrary someone who lived to life expectancy or longer even
It is an indisputable fact that all living things, humans included will all expire, pass, succumb to death at some point in time, some sooner than others, some later than others. Again, with the same example, an average person who didn't die young, but lived until their life expectancy, perhaps even longer (at or over 80 years of age). Sure, each passing day, month, year for that person is another opportunity for potential fleeting joy and pleasure, but that is also a gamble in which the sentient must take where the non-sentient (non-existent or ones who are dead) do not have to experience. Assuming nothing extraordinary or unusual happens, even with a long duration of sentience, at 80 years or so, it is likely that even relatively healthy individuals may still run into health issues (cancer, stroke, heart disease, and many more). Most of which even with good conditions and ideal circumstances (ideal for the average person), they will still have to face the mundanity of day to day life as well as the suffering that comes during their twilight years. This is something that the non-sentient beings don't have to face. Sure, while it may be argued that this individual would have at least 50 (possibly more) years of sentience and opportunity to enjoy the pleasures and joys in life, it could also be argued that there are 50 years of gambling and unnecessary risk that comes with life itself that could easily go awry (disease, infirmity, victim of violence, and/or other forms of suffering) and then the individual's quality of life would plummet. Furthermore, the enjoyment of pleasures and joy may be fleeting and from a universal cost benefit analysis the amount of mundanity as well as potential for immense and unbounded suffering is not worth the temporary reprieve of fleeting pleasures and joy.
In conclusion, given the fact of life expectancies, uncertainty of sentience and life, the gamble of potential greater suffering in relation to fleeting moments of pleasure and joy, dying young is still objectively better at least from a universe's perspective. Of course, I don't encourage nor endorse that people should die young, but merely stating those who have died young are objectively better in the grand scheme of things. While I did mention that the survivors and outside observers (friends, family, peers, acquaintances, etc.) would be grieving, that is another thread altogether as this thread is solely focused on the perspective of the individual from the universe's perspective.
I wished I had more characters to have a longer title, but this thread is more focused from an objective as well as pro-choice perspective on why dying young is still considered better. Anyways, in this thread, I will seek to explain in detail about why those people who died young are objectively (from the universe's perspective and from a logical perspective) as to why they are objectively better in general. Again, this is focusing on those who have died and why they are (from an objective standpoint and only focusing on them) in a better place, not suffering.
Consider an average, relatively healthy human being (US metric)
First off, with all humans, assuming the average person, be it male or female, and not to complicate things (so just keeping variables more/less the same, without too much deviation from the norm), the life expectancy is about 80 years in the US (chose 80 for an easy number and for hypothetical example purposes). So suppose one dies around age 30, and while to the survivors and people around said person (be it family, friends, and others) they feel sadness and view it as bad because they are sentient and looking in from the outsider's perspective, but for the individual person (the 30 year old), it is objectively better from a logical standpoint and from the universe's perspective. This is because then this 30 year old while he/she may miss out on many life's milestones and events, will also avoid many potential horrors in the next 50 (or more) potential years, as each day, month, year is always a gamble. Said person could get a health problem in their 40's or 50's, could end up in an accident, a victim of a crime, or other bad events in life could happen. But presuming that they lived up to 30, then passed away whether it be CTB or other cause, it is objectively better for them because they missed all the suffering that comes with life along without having to gamble for fleeting joy and pleasures.
On the contrary someone who lived to life expectancy or longer even
It is an indisputable fact that all living things, humans included will all expire, pass, succumb to death at some point in time, some sooner than others, some later than others. Again, with the same example, an average person who didn't die young, but lived until their life expectancy, perhaps even longer (at or over 80 years of age). Sure, each passing day, month, year for that person is another opportunity for potential fleeting joy and pleasure, but that is also a gamble in which the sentient must take where the non-sentient (non-existent or ones who are dead) do not have to experience. Assuming nothing extraordinary or unusual happens, even with a long duration of sentience, at 80 years or so, it is likely that even relatively healthy individuals may still run into health issues (cancer, stroke, heart disease, and many more). Most of which even with good conditions and ideal circumstances (ideal for the average person), they will still have to face the mundanity of day to day life as well as the suffering that comes during their twilight years. This is something that the non-sentient beings don't have to face. Sure, while it may be argued that this individual would have at least 50 (possibly more) years of sentience and opportunity to enjoy the pleasures and joys in life, it could also be argued that there are 50 years of gambling and unnecessary risk that comes with life itself that could easily go awry (disease, infirmity, victim of violence, and/or other forms of suffering) and then the individual's quality of life would plummet. Furthermore, the enjoyment of pleasures and joy may be fleeting and from a universal cost benefit analysis the amount of mundanity as well as potential for immense and unbounded suffering is not worth the temporary reprieve of fleeting pleasures and joy.
In conclusion, given the fact of life expectancies, uncertainty of sentience and life, the gamble of potential greater suffering in relation to fleeting moments of pleasure and joy, dying young is still objectively better at least from a universe's perspective. Of course, I don't encourage nor endorse that people should die young, but merely stating those who have died young are objectively better in the grand scheme of things. While I did mention that the survivors and outside observers (friends, family, peers, acquaintances, etc.) would be grieving, that is another thread altogether as this thread is solely focused on the perspective of the individual from the universe's perspective.