Johnnythefox

Johnnythefox

Que sera sera
Nov 11, 2018
3,129
Just came across this, it's author suffers from Si and what I read of it seems quite good.

https://www.newyorker.com/books/under-review/the-two-faces-of-suicide

An extract:
"An early chapter, for instance, wonders if suicide should be viewed as an evolutionary adaptation. He summarizes the neuroscientist Denys deCatanzaro, who pioneered the gene-centric view of suicide in the nineteen-eighties, as having said that suicidal thinking is "most common in people facing poor reproductive prospects" and who consume "resources without contributing to their family." Picture a thirty-year-old burnout who relies on the munificence of a more successful older brother. By committing suicide, this individual might insure his own genetic survival; from a biological standpoint, the older brother's offspring will have a better chance of thriving if the sponger no longer exists. (As Bering has noted, these "adaptive" decisions aren't conscious but result, instead, from latent, primordial triggers.) A similar logic underwrites the altruistic suicides that the explorer Knud Rasmussen observed among the Netsilik Inuit community in Canada, where elderly clan members truncated their lives to reduce the caretaking burdens on the next generation".
 
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21Neberg

21Neberg

Enlightened
Dec 17, 2018
1,624
Wow, the ideas you describe in your post are very interesting. I think it's great to have another book that looks at suicide in a sober way, and calmly even looks at the possible positive sides. I hope this book helps some pro-life people open their eyes to the truth that for some people, suicide is the only solution.

Thanks for sharing!
 
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