This is contentious... while it is true that many people are not diagnosed as having a problem before their suicide how many people exactly will visit a psychologist for an evaluation? Post-suicide it is often evaluated that something like 90% of individuals who commit suicide were suffering from some form of a psychiatric disorder. Now of course it can be said that such results are biased in that they may just assume someone committing suicide will have an issue, but if it were true this is also the exact result we would expect."The majority of individuals who commit suicide do not have a diagnosable mental illness. They are people just like you and I who at a particular time are feeling isolated, desperately unhappy and alone. Suicidal thoughts and actions may be the result of life's stresses and losses that the individual feels they just can't cope with."
Appleby and Condonis, "Hearing the cry: Suicide Prevention", 1990.
Let's look at the causes for suicide:
A lot of these seem fairly imperminent or like they could be fixed, in cases for instance where there is some sort of physical suffering continually after a long period of time I would be willing to consider suicide is an acceptable outcome.Causes of suicide
There are a variety of reasons posited or given for suicide:
* Mental disorders
* Suffering
* Unrequited love
* Stress
* Grief
* Withdrawal or discontinuation of psychoactive substances
* As philosophically or ideologically motivated move
* To escape punishment or an abusive environment
* Guilt or shame
* Playing Russian Roulette
* Catastrophic injury
* Financial loss
* Self sacrifice
* As part of a military or social strategy (e.g. suicide attacks)
* Belief that life has no inherent value (e.g. absurdism, pessimism, nihilism)
* As part of a religious cult
* Loneliness
* To restore honor (e.g. seppuku)
* Curiosity for post-life occurrences
* Fear of aging
Nah it can perhaps be rational especially at the time given their circumstances, but sometimes people in situations feel like there's 'no way out' when really there is... If they could come to see that there is hope for the future (i.e. that they'll get over X girl) then perhaps they would not kill themselves. I mean you seem to be suggesting that programs such as beyond blue should be shut down, I mean if people feel like killing themselves who are we to try to stop them/help them?I think the opposition to legalised suicide comes from a view that suicide is never a rational act, and that if the individual recieved appropriate treatment they would lose their negative feeling. It is a fallacy to my mind to assume that everyone has the potential to live a content life. It is the healthy presuming to know the minds of the discontent.
It's for themselves i.e. How many people who don't comit suicide are later glad they did not?What is so special about someone else's life, that it must be protected from themselves when they have no wish and no purpose to continue? Simply, without god, what reason is there to force a man to live?
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