- Registrado
- 22 de Mayo, 2017
Short answer: No, a person's life belongs only to themself. It is a bit perverse to assume that a person should exist merely as a convenience for others.
Long answer: Suicide and its ideations are a difficult to approach topic. A suicidal person is almost never of a sound mind and thus should never be presumed to have the intellectual capability to decide if they wish to end their life. Instead of asking if suicide is "selfish", as if wanting to end an existence of endless suffering was a bad thing, it would be wiser to ask if a person should given medical help against their will. The underlying problem with declaring suicide as a selfish act is that it creates a social stigma without offering a solution, and creates a debate around whether or not it is ever socially acceptable to kill oneself, instead of, as I would prefer, a debate around how best to prevent suicide.
Long answer: Suicide and its ideations are a difficult to approach topic. A suicidal person is almost never of a sound mind and thus should never be presumed to have the intellectual capability to decide if they wish to end their life. Instead of asking if suicide is "selfish", as if wanting to end an existence of endless suffering was a bad thing, it would be wiser to ask if a person should given medical help against their will. The underlying problem with declaring suicide as a selfish act is that it creates a social stigma without offering a solution, and creates a debate around whether or not it is ever socially acceptable to kill oneself, instead of, as I would prefer, a debate around how best to prevent suicide.