deflationary
Fussy exister. Living in the epilogue
- Mar 11, 2020
- 529
Seems like you're being willfully confused if you think it's a nonsensical question.The original question wasn't about rationality, but about what is the more accurate view of the world (again, whatever that means). Fundamentally, it's a nonsensical question, but the answer cannot be that suicidal people have a more "accurate" view of the world than others. At best it's just as valid a view, at worst it's very distorted because of the very rare circumstances that would drive a person to such a point of despair that they view ctb as the only way out. In any case, the view is not *more* accurate.
And what is rational is subjective, and again we see that for the overwhelming majority, being suicidal is irrational--living is worth more than dying. So one can't say as a general matter that suicidal people have a more rational view of the world than people who aren't. It's a nonsensical comparison. It's like asking whether buying a minivan is more rational than buying a truck. Depends on who is doing the buying.
Presumably there is some sort of an objective reality out there outside of our subjective experiences. I very much doubt that you deny that across the board. The question then is whether suicidal people as a group tend to track that objective reality more accurately (with less biases, less fictions they cling to, more rationality, whatever) than the non-suicidal. I don't necessarily agree that suicidal people are more realistic as a group but posing the question makes perfect sense.