
Hazrakaht
Member
- Apr 28, 2025
- 16
Is sasu compromised or something now?
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Exactly, they'd be selling, so why shouldn't we "sell" our lives on the downswing?the risk is undifined, therefore you shouldn't take the risk. If it was a stock in the stock market, no one would buy.
I appreciate that you understand what i'm saying, and i appreciate your critique.Interesting application of decision theory and probability. My rebuttal (I will not use mathematical notation and hope people not into maths can follow along):
You make a point that every action has an infinitely small possibility of hell, however only death will directly leads to it. Therefore, we should be afraid of death and avoid it if possible. There is a reason why people want to achieve immortality here in this world. Because they are afraid of death, and they should be. We should be.You posit that the probability of hell is an "infinitely small" number and its value is infinetly negative. However, multiplying an infinitesimal by an infinite value is mathematically undefined without context. Expected utility theory (which you're implying here) breaks down when infinities are introduced because it leads to paradoxes. For example: If hell has a value of negative infinity, then even if its probability is 1 in a googolplex (an insanely large number, google it) the expected utility would still be negative infinity. This would make any action with a non-zero chance of hell (no matter how small) irrational, not just suicide. Walking outside, eating food, or even breathing could carry some infinitesimal risk of leading to hell (e.g., via unintended consequences or divine punishment). That would lead to the result that no action is justifiable.
Also about the infinitely good afterlife, i assume the asymmetry argument to avoid that discussion. But, even then, if you do the maths, the answer will still be undefinable, but its more complex.This basically reads like a variant of Pascal's Wager, which has been extensively critiqued. If you're agnostic about hell, you must also be agnostic about the possibility of an infinitely good afterlife (e.g., heaven). If hell has almost zero probability and -inf value, then heaven could have the same probability and value. The expected utility would then be "(infinitely bad) times (almost zero)" plus "(infinitely good) times (almost zero)", which is also undefined. You can't arbitrarily ignore positive infinites while focusing on negative ones. There even could be afterlives with finite but extreme suffering, or afterlives where suicide is rewarded. Without knowing the probabilities or values, the calculation is meaningless.
I assign non existence a positive value because its positive compared to life. Everything has assigned a value compared to life.Philosophically, you assign non-existence a finite value (x), but even this is contentious. Many philosophers argue that non-existence has no value, not even neutral, because there is nobody to experience it. If non-existence is valueless (x=0), and other afterlives are uncertain, the calculation changes further.
here is where i STRONGLY disagree with you. We know nothing. Literally nothing. We only assume, based on inductive, scientific reasoning that probably there's no afterlife. Probably. The same way we assume that natural selection is the sole reason for evolution. Probably. We do not know. We don't know if there's a teapot orbiting Uranus. Probably not. But could be.Even if we grant that hell is a logical possibility, its probability is not just infinitesimal but arguably zero because:
1. There is no empirical evidence for hell (or any afterlife).
2. The concept of hell is culturally contingent (not all religions have it).
3. If we're agnostic about unobserved entities, we must also be agnostic about infinitely many other speculative horrors (e.g., "torture universes," "anti-heavens"). Assigning non-zero probability to all of them would be absurd.
I understand that. But thats why we shouldnt gamble unless we are pushed too much. It should be last resort. Can we agree on that?Your argument assumes that continuing life has a finite cost (the pain one wants to escape), while death has an undefined risk. But if life is sufficiently unbearable (e.g., unrelenting torture), the certainty of extreme suffering may outweigh an undefined risk. This is not an irrational gamble!
It is inherently the last resort in a creature that's made to fight for its own survival by instinct. Nobody is using it as a first option.I understand that. But thats why we shouldnt gamble unless we are pushed too much. It should be last resort. Can we agree on that?
I'll assume that you haven't taken calculus yet.
its called an assumption for a reason. But i can prove it without the assumption but its more complex.
the risk is undifined, therefore you shouldn't take the risk. If it was a stock in the stock market, no one would buy.
sorry being a dick is not my intention i just want to have a honest conversationIt seems like you just want to be a dickhead by arguing with people.
I'm out too. What a waste of time.
Good enough. But i think that many people who don't have to die still doIt is inherently the last resort in a creature that's made to fight for its own survival by instinct. Nobody is using it as a first option.
Every decision in life is a gamble, including dying or staying alive. It's not a good argument. "Don't die because you don't know what comes next" okay but this can also be twisted into "don't live because you don't know what comes next". Except there's a higher chance of me being mauled by a bear or getting cancer thanBut thats why we shouldnt gamble unless we are pushed too much.
Whether they have to or not is irrelevant. It is THEIR life and THEIR choice what to do with itGood enough. But i think that many people who don't have to die still do
Yeah, as far as I know, lots of people actually killed themselves expecting a better afterlife.What if actually, killing yourself is the only way to avoid hell and get into heaven? By your logic that infinitely small chance of this being true means everyone should kill themselves now. It's bs.
maybe not but definitely a crackpotI swear i don't do crack.
I will attempt to prove mathematically, using probability theory and calculus, on why suicide might be a poor decision. I swear i don't do crack. This might be a whole lot of bullshit that i would want to delete afterwards, but yolo. I believe that this place is open to different perspectives and welcomes discussion for and against suicide. Also, I will assume two philosophical ideas. Agnostic atheism, and asymmetry of pain and pleasure. I figured that I can prove that suicide is irrational even without the asymmetry argument, but the maths are more complex, and i strive to keep it simple. So here we go:
Assume that there is an infinitely small probability for hell. Just as likely for a teapot to be orbiting Uranus. Very unlikely, but you never know. That's what the agnostic atheists believe. But the value of hell is minus infinity, meaning it is infinitely bad. So the probability is dx, which is an infinitely small number, but the value of the random variable is -inf. Now, if the probability of hell is dx, then the probability of anything else is 100%-dx or 1-dx. Anything else is most likely non-existent, but it's also the possibility of some other afterlife, like heaven or something else which could be good or bad. If we say that the nonexistence has a value of x, which is a real positive number, and that the value of anything else minus hell has an expected value of y, which is a real number which could be positive or negative depentend on the propabilities of different afterlifes which are unknown, then the total value is x+y with a propability of 1-dx. (x and y are real non infinite numbers because of the premise of the assymetry argument. Nor heaven or non-existence have infinite value). So the total expected value is (1-dx)*(x+y)+dx*(-inf) which is approximately ≈(x+y)-inf*dx where (x+y) is a real number which could be positive or negative, and -inf*dx which is undefined. So the total expected value is undefined. So the risk of suicide is undefined and therefore it's an irrational decision. To put it in more understandable words, its like opening a box, where there is no limit on how bad the item inside can be. This possibility of limitless disaster is what makes suicide irrational, even if the probability of such disaster is extremely low. I dont know if my theory makes any sense. I often make theories that I later revoke. But I wanted to share this one.
Long story short: the possibility of hell makes suicide irrational, even if the probability is extremely low.
Do not think of hell as in the traditional Christian form. Its just the limit of how bad the afterlife can get. Just keep in mind that the uncertainty of what comes after death is so wide that the worst possible outcome is possible, and that makes death scary enough to be avoided, even if the probability of such outcome is extremely low.
View attachment 166574
The asymmetry argument:
Fuck your math…I will attempt to prove mathematically, using probability theory and calculus, on why suicide might be a poor decision. I swear i don't do crack. This might be a whole lot of bullshit that i would want to delete afterwards, but yolo. I believe that this place is open to different perspectives and welcomes discussion for and against suicide. Also, I will assume two philosophical ideas. Agnostic atheism, and asymmetry of pain and pleasure. I figured that I can prove that suicide is irrational even without the asymmetry argument, but the maths are more complex, and i strive to keep it simple. So here we go:
Assume that there is an infinitely small probability for hell. Just as likely for a teapot to be orbiting Uranus. Very unlikely, but you never know. That's what the agnostic atheists believe. But the value of hell is minus infinity, meaning it is infinitely bad. So the probability is dx, which is an infinitely small number, but the value of the random variable is -inf. Now, if the probability of hell is dx, then the probability of anything else is 100%-dx or 1-dx. Anything else is most likely non-existent, but it's also the possibility of some other afterlife, like heaven or something else which could be good or bad. If we say that the nonexistence has a value of x, which is a real positive number, and that the value of anything else minus hell has an expected value of y, which is a real number which could be positive or negative depentend on the propabilities of different afterlifes which are unknown, then the total value is x+y with a propability of 1-dx. (x and y are real non infinite numbers because of the premise of the assymetry argument. Nor heaven or non-existence have infinite value). So the total expected value is (1-dx)*(x+y)+dx*(-inf) which is approximately ≈(x+y)-inf*dx where (x+y) is a real number which could be positive or negative, and -inf*dx which is undefined. So the total expected value is undefined. So the risk of suicide is undefined and therefore it's an irrational decision. To put it in more understandable words, its like opening a box, where there is no limit on how bad the item inside can be. This possibility of limitless disaster is what makes suicide irrational, even if the probability of such disaster is extremely low. I dont know if my theory makes any sense. I often make theories that I later revoke. But I wanted to share this one.
Long story short: the possibility of hell makes suicide irrational, even if the probability is extremely low.
Do not think of hell as in the traditional Christian form. Its just the limit of how bad the afterlife can get. Just keep in mind that the uncertainty of what comes after death is so wide that the worst possible outcome is possible, and that makes death scary enough to be avoided, even if the probability of such outcome is extremely low.
View attachment 166574
The asymmetry argument:
View attachment 166575
Your first unwarranted assumption is that dying by suicide means you will go to hell, if hell exists. If you slip arbitrary assumptions into your reasoning, you can "prove" anything you want.I will attempt to prove mathematically, using probability theory and calculus, on why suicide might be a poor decision. I swear i don't do crack. This might be a whole lot of bullshit that i would want to delete afterwards, but yolo. I believe that this place is open to different perspectives and welcomes discussion for and against suicide. Also, I will assume two philosophical ideas. Agnostic atheism, and asymmetry of pain and pleasure. I figured that I can prove that suicide is irrational even without the asymmetry argument, but the maths are more complex, and i strive to keep it simple. So here we go:
Assume that there is an infinitely small probability for hell. Just as likely for a teapot to be orbiting Uranus. Very unlikely, but you never know. That's what the agnostic atheists believe. But the value of hell is minus infinity, meaning it is infinitely bad. So the probability is dx, which is an infinitely small number, but the value of the random variable is -inf. Now, if the probability of hell is dx, then the probability of anything else is 100%-dx or 1-dx. Anything else is most likely non-existent, but it's also the possibility of some other afterlife, like heaven or something else which could be good or bad. If we say that the nonexistence has a value of x, which is a real positive number, and that the value of anything else minus hell has an expected value of y, which is a real number which could be positive or negative depentend on the propabilities of different afterlifes which are unknown, then the total value is x+y with a propability of 1-dx. (x and y are real non infinite numbers because of the premise of the assymetry argument. Nor heaven or non-existence have infinite value). So the total expected value is (1-dx)*(x+y)+dx*(-inf) which is approximately ≈(x+y)-inf*dx where (x+y) is a real number which could be positive or negative, and -inf*dx which is undefined. So the total expected value is undefined. So the risk of suicide is undefined and therefore it's an irrational decision. To put it in more understandable words, its like opening a box, where there is no limit on how bad the item inside can be. This possibility of limitless disaster is what makes suicide irrational, even if the probability of such disaster is extremely low. I dont know if my theory makes any sense. I often make theories that I later revoke. But I wanted to share this one.
Long story short: the possibility of hell makes suicide irrational, even if the probability is extremely low.
Do not think of hell as in the traditional Christian form. Its just the limit of how bad the afterlife can get. Just keep in mind that the uncertainty of what comes after death is so wide that the worst possible outcome is possible, and that makes death scary enough to be avoided, even if the probability of such outcome is extremely low.
View attachment 166574
The asymmetry argument:
View attachment 166575
You follow Christian rules | You don't follow Christian rules | |
Nothing happens after death | 0 (neutral) | 0 (Neutral) |
Heaven/Hell exists | PLUS Infinity value (You go to heaven) | MINUS Infinity value (You to go hell) |
You died in combat | You did not die in combat | |
Nothing happens after death | 0 (neutral) | 0 (neutral) |
Valhalla/Hel exist | PLUS Infinity value (You go to Valhalla) | MINUS Infinity value (You to go Hel) |
You have 3 gummy bears | You don't have 3 gummy bears | ||
Nothing after death | 0 (neutral) | 0 (neutral) | |
Teleporter exists | PLUS Infinity value (You go to a place of eternal happiness) |
|
I totally understand your theory and I definitely did not ask chatgpt to explain to me as if I were a 10-year-old.... <3I will attempt to prove mathematically, using probability theory and calculus, on why suicide might be a poor decision. I swear i don't do crack. This might be a whole lot of bullshit that i would want to delete afterwards, but yolo. I believe that this place is open to different perspectives and welcomes discussion for and against suicide. Also, I will assume two philosophical ideas. Agnostic atheism, and asymmetry of pain and pleasure. I figured that I can prove that suicide is irrational even without the asymmetry argument, but the maths are more complex, and i strive to keep it simple. So here we go:
Assume that there is an infinitely small probability for hell. Just as likely for a teapot to be orbiting Uranus. Very unlikely, but you never know. That's what the agnostic atheists believe. But the value of hell is minus infinity, meaning it is infinitely bad. So the probability is dx, which is an infinitely small number, but the value of the random variable is -inf. Now, if the probability of hell is dx, then the probability of anything else is 100%-dx or 1-dx. Anything else is most likely non-existent, but it's also the possibility of some other afterlife, like heaven or something else which could be good or bad. If we say that the nonexistence has a value of x, which is a real positive number, and that the value of anything else minus hell has an expected value of y, which is a real number which could be positive or negative depentend on the propabilities of different afterlifes which are unknown, then the total value is x+y with a propability of 1-dx. (x and y are real non infinite numbers because of the premise of the assymetry argument. Nor heaven or non-existence have infinite value). So the total expected value is (1-dx)*(x+y)+dx*(-inf) which is approximately ≈(x+y)-inf*dx where (x+y) is a real number which could be positive or negative, and -inf*dx which is undefined. So the total expected value is undefined. So the risk of suicide is undefined and therefore it's an irrational decision. To put it in more understandable words, its like opening a box, where there is no limit on how bad the item inside can be. This possibility of limitless disaster is what makes suicide irrational, even if the probability of such disaster is extremely low. I dont know if my theory makes any sense. I often make theories that I later revoke. But I wanted to share this one.
Long story short: the possibility of hell makes suicide irrational, even if the probability is extremely low.
Do not think of hell as in the traditional Christian form. Its just the limit of how bad the afterlife can get. Just keep in mind that the uncertainty of what comes after death is so wide that the worst possible outcome is possible, and that makes death scary enough to be avoided, even if the probability of such outcome is extremely low.
View attachment 166574
The asymmetry argument:
View attachment 166575
There's really not a lot I can add to it. (I will get slightly more mathematical and scientific now, I'm sorry readers)I appreciate that you understand what i'm saying, and i appreciate your critique.
This assumes suicide uniquely triggers hell, but again: the agnostic framework provides no basis for privileging suicide over other actions. If hell's existence is speculative, its connection to specific actions (suicide vs. eating breakfast) is equally speculative. To claim suicide "directly" leads to hell requires theological assumptions inconsistent with agnostic atheism. Without evidence, the risk of hell applies to all actions, not just suicide. If infinitesimal probabilities matter, then all decisions carry infinite risk, making paralysis, not suicide avoidance, the only "rational" choice. This is absurd.Therefore, we should be afraid of death and avoid it if possible.
Again: This is arbitrary. If we assign hell a probability (dx) and value (-infty), symmetry demands we assign heaven (dx) and (+infty). The expected utility becomes:asymmetry argument
This is subjective. If life is net suffering, non-existence might be preferable (as argued by Benatar's asymmetry). However, if (x) is finite and hell's risk is ( -infty times dx ), the calculation remains:I assign non existence a positive value
This misapplies epistemic humility. Agnosticism does not require assigning equal consideration to all imaginable claims.We know nothing
This is a moral stance, not a mathematical one. If life's suffering is certain and extreme, while hell's risk is undefined, the decision hinges on whether "Undefined risks" should be treated as prohibitive (your view) or "Certain suffering" outweighs speculative, unquantifiable risks (my view). I can give you at the very most that neither position is provably "correct." but yours is a value judgment, not the logical imperative you present it as.It should be last resort. Can we agree on that?
What do you mean found him? He's around. He's the friendly neighborhood cat.Found you!
I do this game when I see him posting, I reply with "Found you" haha. I just randomly thought of doing that. I was away from SS a bit, but now when I'm back - I continued my own little game lolWhat do you mean found him? He's around. He's the friendly neighborhood cat.
But like fr I thought the same thing. I was like "there's no way I'm on sasu rn" lolIs sasu compromised or something now?
Don't be a scaredy cat @Pluto .we want to find you.don't hide pleaseI do this game when I see him posting, I reply with "Found you" haha. I just randomly thought of doing that. I was away from SS a bit, but now when I'm back - I continued my own little game lol
Yeah @Pluto Come out wherever you are! I need the friendly neighborhood cat now than ever!Don't be a scaredy cat @Pluto .we want to find you.don't hide please![]()
Omg!
I will attempt to prove mathematically, using probability theory and calculus, on why suicide might be a poor decision. I swear i don't do crack. This might be a whole lot of bullshit that i would want to delete afterwards, but yolo. I believe that this place is open to different perspectives and welcomes discussion for and against suicide. Also, I will assume two philosophical ideas. Agnostic atheism, and asymmetry of pain and pleasure. I figured that I can prove that suicide is irrational even without the asymmetry argument, but the maths are more complex, and i strive to keep it simple. So here we go:
Assume that there is an infinitely small probability for hell. Just as likely for a teapot to be orbiting Uranus. Very unlikely, but you never know. That's what the agnostic atheists believe. But the value of hell is minus infinity, meaning it is infinitely bad. So the probability is dx, which is an infinitely small number, but the value of the random variable is -inf. Now, if the probability of hell is dx, then the probability of anything else is 100%-dx or 1-dx. Anything else is most likely non-existent, but it's also the possibility of some other afterlife, like heaven or something else which could be good or bad. If we say that the nonexistence has a value of x, which is a real positive number, and that the value of anything else minus hell has an expected value of y, which is a real number which could be positive or negative depentend on the propabilities of different afterlifes which are unknown, then the total value is x+y with a propability of 1-dx. (x and y are real non infinite numbers because of the premise of the assymetry argument. Nor heaven or non-existence have infinite value). So the total expected value is (1-dx)*(x+y)+dx*(-inf) which is approximately ≈(x+y)-inf*dx where (x+y) is a real number which could be positive or negative, and -inf*dx which is undefined. So the total expected value is undefined. So the risk of suicide is undefined and therefore it's an irrational decision. To put it in more understandable words, its like opening a box, where there is no limit on how bad the item inside can be. This possibility of limitless disaster is what makes suicide irrational, even if the probability of such disaster is extremely low. I dont know if my theory makes any sense. I often make theories that I later revoke. But I wanted to share this one.
Long story short: the possibility of hell makes suicide irrational, even if the probability is extremely low.
Do not think of hell as in the traditional Christian form. Its just the limit of how bad the afterlife can get. Just keep in mind that the uncertainty of what comes after death is so wide that the worst possible outcome is possible, and that makes death scary enough to be avoided, even if the probability of such outcome is extremely low.
View attachment 166574
The asymmetry argument:
View attachment 166575