- History of suicide
Among the famous who have taken their own lives are
Boudicca ,Brutus ,Mark Antony ,Cleopatra VII of Egypt ,Judas Iscariot ,Hannibal ,Nero ,Virginia Woolf ,Sadeq Hedayat ,Sigmund Freud ,Adolf Hitler andEva Braun ,Ernest Hemingway ,Alan Turing ,Sylvia Plath ,Marina Tsvetaeva ,Yukio Mishima ,Hunter S. Thompson ,Ludwig Boltzmann ,Kurt Cobain , andVincent van Gogh .Classical antiquity
In general the pagan world, both Roman and Greek, had a relaxed attitude towards the whole concept of suicide, a practice that was only finally outlawed with the advent of the Christians, who condemned it at the
Council of Arles in 452 as the work of the Devil. In theMiddle Ages , the church had drawn-out discussions on the edge where the search formartyrdom was suicidal, as in the case ofMartyrs of Cordoba . Despite these disputes and occasional official rulings, Catholic doctrine was not entirely settled on the subject of suicide until the later 17th century. For instance,John Donne 's "Thoughts on Emergent Occasions" is a long argument in favor of suicide as divinely appointed opportunity.There is some echo of later Christian hostility in ancient Greek thinkers.
Pythagoras , for example, was against the act, though more on mathematical than moral grounds, believing that there was only a finite number of souls for use in the world, and that the sudden and unexpected departure of one upset a delicate balance.Aristotle also condemned suicide, though for quite different, far more practical reasons, in that it robbed the community of the services of one of its members. A reading of "Phaedo " suggests thatPlato was also against the practice, inasmuch as he allowsSocrates to defend the teachings of theOrphics , who believed that the human body was the property of God, and thus self-harm was a direct offense against divine law. Yet, it's not quite so simple, because after Socrates says than no man has a right to suicide, this is then qualified by the statement "...unless God sends some necessity upon him, as has now been sent upon me."In Rome suicide was never a general offense in law, though the whole approach to the question was essentially pragmatic. This is illustrated by the example given by
Titus Livy of the colony ofMassalia (the present dayMarseilles ), where those who wanted to kill themselves merely applied to the Senate, and if their reasons were judged sound they were then givenhemlock free of charge. It was specifically forbidden in three cases: those accused of capital crimes, soldiers and slaves. The reason behind all three was the same - it was "uneconomic" for these people to die. If the accused killed themselves prior to trial and conviction then the state lost the right to seize their property, a loophole that was only closed byDomitian in the first century AD, who decreed that those who died prior to trial were without legal heirs. The suicide of a soldier was treated on the same basis as desertion. If a slave killed her or himself within six months of purchase, the master could claim a full refund from the former owner.But the Romans fully approved of what might be termed "patriotic suicide"; death, in other words, as an alternative to dishonour. For the
Stoics , a philosophical sect which originated in Greece, death was a guarantee of personal freedom, a way out of an intolerable existence. And so it was forCato the Younger , who killed himself after the Pompeian cause was defeated at theBattle of Thapsus . This was a 'virtuous death', one guided by reason and conscience. His example was later followed by Seneca, though under somewhat more straightened circumstances. A very definite line was drawn by the Romans between the virtuous suicide and suicide for entirely private reasons. They disapproved ofMark Antony not because he killed himself, but that he killed himself for love.Military
In ancient times, suicide sometimes followed defeat in battle, to avoid capture and possible subsequent
torture , mutilation, or enslavement by the enemy. The Caesareanassassin s Brutus and Cassius, for example, killed themselves after their defeat at the battle ofPhilippi . InsurgentJew s died in a mass suicide atMasada in74 CE rather than face enslavement by the Romans.During
World War II , Japanese units would often fight to the last man rather than surrender. Towards the end of the war, the Japanese navy sentkamikaze pilots to attack Allied ships. These tactics reflect the influence of thesamurai warrior culture, whereseppuku was often required after a loss of honor. It is also suggested that the Japanese treated Allied POWs harshly because, in Japanese eyes, by surrendering rather than fighting to the last man, these soldiers showed they were not worthy of honorable treatment. In fact, the Japanese unit in Singapore sentenced an Australian bombing unit to death in admiration for their bravery.In modern times,
suicide attack s have been used extensively byIslamist Militants . However, it is important to note that suicide is strictly forbidden byIslamic law , and the Muslim clerics who organize these attacks do not regard them as suicide, but asmartyrdom operation s. Clerics argue the difference to be that in suicide a person kills himself out of despair, while in a martyrdom operation a person is killed as a pure act. [http://www.opendemocracy.net/madrid11/suicide_210607]Spies have carried suicide or pins to use when captured, partly to avoid the misery of captivity, but also to avoid being forced to disclose secrets. For the latter reason, spies may even have orders to kill themselves if captured – for example,
Gary Powers had a suicide pin, but did not use it when he was captured.ocial protest
The Kaiowas tribe in the South American rainforest committed a mass suicide to attract attention to their claim that their government was taking away their land. Their efforts successfully attracted massive international and national attention to their cause.
In the
1960 s,Buddhist monks, most notablyThích Quảng Đức , inSouth Vietnam gained Western praise in their protests against PresidentNgô Đình Diệm by burning themselves to death. Similar events were reported ineastern Europe , such asJan Palach following theSoviet invasion ofCzechoslovakia . In 1970 GreekGeology studentKostas Georgakis burned himself to death inGenoa ,Italy to protest against theGreek military junta of 1967-1974 .During the
Cultural Revolution in China (1966 -1976 ), numerous publicly-known figures, especially intellectuals and writers, are reported to have committed suicide, typically to escape persecution, typically at the hands of theRed Guards . Some, or perhaps many, of these reported suicides are suspected by many observers to have, in fact, not been voluntary but instead the result of mistreatment. Some reported suicides include famed writerLao She , among the best-known 20th century Chinese writers, and journalistFan Changjiang .ee also
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Philosophical views of suicide
*Religious views of suicide References
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