Dür Ktulhu
Member
- Dec 20, 2025
- 37
What do you think - strictly speaking - does a person deserve compassion if their motives are unworthy, someone who takes their own life due to base and material hardships (poor appearance, insecurities, etc.) rather than existential, metaphysical philosophical problems arising from the very fact of existence? Dostoevsky reflected on this, stating that no one commits suicide as a philosophical act, and concluded that although there have been hundreds of suicides, they are all petty and unworthy. He draws a distinction and devalues the act based on its causes and motives.
Does "unworthy" pain exist? I think it does. And you?
Is there a right to death?
Can we devalue another's agony if it lacks a lofty idea?
Should we respect despair that contains no philosophy?
Does "unworthy" grief deserve compassion?
Must suicide born of mundane pain transform into existential anguish and a philosophical act?
Does "unworthy" pain exist? I think it does. And you?
Is there a right to death?
Can we devalue another's agony if it lacks a lofty idea?
Should we respect despair that contains no philosophy?
Does "unworthy" grief deserve compassion?
Must suicide born of mundane pain transform into existential anguish and a philosophical act?