liverpoolfan
Student
- Jun 10, 2019
- 189
Whilst I 'd accept that everyone is entitled to their personal beliefs, I feel the culture of telling people you'll see them 'on the other side' goes beyond personal belief and strays into enabling and/or encouraging people to take their lives who may not do so if the lure of an afterlife was not dangled in front of them.
Full disclosure: I am not a believer in an afterlife and have encountered zero evidence to support any conclusion other then when a living organism dies, its biological form decays, with the cells that decay fastest being brain cells - which of course are precisely the ones which generate or house consciousness. The argument that consciousness can exist separately from the organic matter which produces it is akin to thinking information stored on a hard drive would persist independently if the drive on which it was stored was vapourised.
Now, whilst again I'd stress that you are of course entitled to believe that your consciousness can exist independently from matter and that said consciousness somehow travels to an astral plane after death, I'd argue its not ethical to encourage other people to believe this, specifically on a board which by its very nature attracts people who are either desperate, afraid, in pain and/or looking for an end to their personal anguish.
I understand that the belief in the existence of an afterlife where one can exist in a world without pain and fear is a comfort. I also understand that telling people who are suffering that everything will be better in Heaven almost always comes from a place of kindness and empathy.
My concern is that by glossing over what we can reasonably surmise about death and dying [most of which, if we're honest, is not very pleasant] and replacing it with a sugar-coated version based on imaginary outcomes, vulnerable and or desperate people can be influenced by the reassurance that they will 'wake up' in a better place.
I'd argue that the more ethical approach would be something along the lines of "I hope your passing is as peaceful as possible and know that your pain and suffering will come to an end" - which is the same sentiment, but does not require magical thinking and, more importantly, doesn't reinforce or introduce the belief that all they need to do to wake up and experience a happier life than they one they have is to kill themselves.
Please read the above thoughts carefully before responding. It is not an attack or religion or spirituality per se, nor an argument against suicide. It's merely an entreaty that we maintain as much intellectual honesty on the subject as possible whilst being empathetic to one another's suffering.
Full disclosure: I am not a believer in an afterlife and have encountered zero evidence to support any conclusion other then when a living organism dies, its biological form decays, with the cells that decay fastest being brain cells - which of course are precisely the ones which generate or house consciousness. The argument that consciousness can exist separately from the organic matter which produces it is akin to thinking information stored on a hard drive would persist independently if the drive on which it was stored was vapourised.
Now, whilst again I'd stress that you are of course entitled to believe that your consciousness can exist independently from matter and that said consciousness somehow travels to an astral plane after death, I'd argue its not ethical to encourage other people to believe this, specifically on a board which by its very nature attracts people who are either desperate, afraid, in pain and/or looking for an end to their personal anguish.
I understand that the belief in the existence of an afterlife where one can exist in a world without pain and fear is a comfort. I also understand that telling people who are suffering that everything will be better in Heaven almost always comes from a place of kindness and empathy.
My concern is that by glossing over what we can reasonably surmise about death and dying [most of which, if we're honest, is not very pleasant] and replacing it with a sugar-coated version based on imaginary outcomes, vulnerable and or desperate people can be influenced by the reassurance that they will 'wake up' in a better place.
I'd argue that the more ethical approach would be something along the lines of "I hope your passing is as peaceful as possible and know that your pain and suffering will come to an end" - which is the same sentiment, but does not require magical thinking and, more importantly, doesn't reinforce or introduce the belief that all they need to do to wake up and experience a happier life than they one they have is to kill themselves.
Please read the above thoughts carefully before responding. It is not an attack or religion or spirituality per se, nor an argument against suicide. It's merely an entreaty that we maintain as much intellectual honesty on the subject as possible whilst being empathetic to one another's suffering.