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Advocacy of suicide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Existential viewpoint
Suicide
Related phenomena
A book about peaceful suicide methods

Advocacy of suicide, also known aspro-suicide, has occurred in manycultures andsubcultures.

East Asian cultures

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Confucianism holds that one should give up one'slife, if necessary, either passively or actively, for the sake of upholding the cardinal moral values ofren (altruism) andyi (righteousness).[1] Which is referred as "Death with Dignity" dying for a greater cause.

Seppuku was a Japanese practice of ritual suicide by disembowelment. TheJapanese military during World War II encouraged and glorifiedkamikaze attacks, and Japanese society as a whole has been described as "suicide-tolerant" (seeSuicide in Japan).

Internet

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Advocacy ofsuicide has also taken placeover the Internet. A study by theBritish Medical Journal found that Web searches for information on suicide are likely to return sites that encourage, and even facilitate,suicide attempts.[2] While pro-suicide resources were less frequent than neutral or anti-suicide sites, they were nonetheless easily accessible.[3] There is some concern that such sites may push thesuicidal person over the edge.[4] Some people formsuicide pacts with people they meet online.[5] Becker writes, "Suicidal adolescent visitors risk losing their doubts and fears about committing suicide. Risk factors include peer pressure to commit suicide and appointments for joint suicides. Furthermore, some chat rooms celebrate chatters who committed suicide."[6]

William Francis Melchert-Dinkel, 47 years old in May 2010, fromFaribault, Minnesota, alicensed practical nurse from 1991 until February 2009, stands accused of encouraging people to die by suicide while he watchedvoyeuristically on awebcam.[7][8][9][10] He allegedly told those contemplating suicide what methods worked best, that it was okay to die by suicide, that they would be better in heaven, and/or entered into suicide pacts with them.[7][11] Dinkel was charged with two counts of assisting suicide, for allegedly encouraging the suicides of a person in Britain in 2005 and another person in Canada in 2008.[7][12]

Suzy's Law would, in the US, ban sites that provide information onsuicide methods or otherwiseassist suicide.[13] There have been some legal bans on pro-suicide web sites, most notably inAustralia, but arguably such bans merely increase awareness of such sites and encourage site owners to move their sites to different jurisdictions.[14]

See also

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Suicide crisis
Social aspects
Suicide types
Epidemiology
History
Related
By subculture
By country

References

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  1. ^Lo, Ping-cheung (1999),"Confucian Ethic of Death with Dignity and Its Contemporary Relevance"(PDF),The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics. Society of Christian Ethics (U.s.),19, Society of Christian Ethics:313–33,doi:10.5840/asce19991916,PMID 11913447, archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2011-07-16
  2. ^World Wide Suicide: A Self-Termination Community Grows on the Web, Scientific American, April 14, 2008
  3. ^Recupero PR, Harms SE, Noble JM (2008). "Googling suicide: surfing for suicide information on the Internet".J Clin Psychiatry.69 (6):878–88.doi:10.4088/jcp.v69n0601.PMID 18494533.
  4. ^Hunter, Aina,"Death by Chat Room?",ABC News
  5. ^Jonathan Owen (10 September 2006),"Teens die after logging into 'suicide chat rooms'",The Independent,archived from the original on 2009-01-19
  6. ^When Kids Seek Help On-Line: Internet Chat Rooms and Suicide Journal article by Katja Becker, Martin H. Schmidt; Reclaiming Children and Youth, Vol. 13, 2005
  7. ^abcDavey, Monica (May 13, 2010)."Online Talk, Suicides and a Thorny Court Case".The New York Times. RetrievedJune 26, 2010.
  8. ^"Nurse may be linked to multiple suicides, tracker says".The Globe and Mail. RetrievedJune 26, 2010.
  9. ^Doolittle, Robyn (May 9, 2009)."Nurse urged 5 to commit suicide, U.S. police say".The Toronto Star. RetrievedJune 26, 2010.
  10. ^"William Melchert-Dinkel charged with encouraging suicides[dead link],The Sunday Times
  11. ^Doolittle, Robyn (February 28, 2009)."Teen urged to commit suicide on webcam".The Toronto Star. RetrievedJune 26, 2010.
  12. ^Davey, Monica (May 14, 2010),"Did he encourage suicide online?",NDTV
  13. ^Kara Rowland (July 24, 2008),"Mourning parents target suicide sites",The Washington Times
  14. ^Pirkis J, Neal L, Dare A, Blood RW, Studdert D (April 2009), "Legal bans on pro-suicide web sites: an early retrospective from Australia.",Suicide Life Threat Behav,39 (2), Suicide Life Threat Behav.:190–3,doi:10.1521/suli.2009.39.2.190,PMID 19527159
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