
Superdeterminist
Enlightened
- Apr 5, 2020
- 1,875
Suicide brings an end to our individual experience, and we can't experience death, so we will only ever know life. Even if we grant that death can be experienced however, this leads to the same conclusion of being bound to experience, only we would become bound a new reality of death, whatever that could possibly look or feel like. Assuming, reasonably, that only life can ever be experienced, this would mean that we are condemned to a new life immediately after death, i.e. reincarnation (it's more suitable to call it incarnation). As long as brains continue to be birthed, this will continue indefinitely.
This idea doesn't at all invalidate suicide however, because we know that our experiences are localised to ourselves as individuals, so suicide would effectively just be a kind of re-roll of the dice. The implementation of assisted suicide then becomes even more appealing, because it would allow these dice to be re-rolled far more quickly and efficiently when people wish to do so, so that life can roll high more often when it feels it has rolled too low, resulting in a world consisting only of happy people (they are happy enough to want to stay).
Thoughts, opinions, refutations welcome.
This idea doesn't at all invalidate suicide however, because we know that our experiences are localised to ourselves as individuals, so suicide would effectively just be a kind of re-roll of the dice. The implementation of assisted suicide then becomes even more appealing, because it would allow these dice to be re-rolled far more quickly and efficiently when people wish to do so, so that life can roll high more often when it feels it has rolled too low, resulting in a world consisting only of happy people (they are happy enough to want to stay).
Thoughts, opinions, refutations welcome.
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