08-13-2005, 01:10 AM | #11 | ||||||
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The japanese, for example, viewed suicide as the pinacle of a person's mental fortitude: he would take his own life to repent for a shameful deed. Such a person wasn't a moron or a retard for doing so; they were strong enough to admit to being wrong and repaid the debt. How would a theme park dedicated to suicide be offensive to them? It would be an expression of the immensity of human endurance, not a display of cowardice. Quote:
People kill themselves. This statement is true and tragic. People often do not talk about why or how people kill themselves. This statement is also true and tragic. I'd prefer to only have one of those two statements be true, and i know which one can be changed. |
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08-13-2005, 09:36 AM | #12 | |
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...Lucas
I really don't know what Quote:
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Last edited by Mirai Gen; 08-13-2005 at 09:42 AM. |
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08-13-2005, 10:51 AM | #13 | |||||
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The damage that suicide does, versus those other deaths isn't to the person, but to their family as a result of social stigma. A suicide implies that those closest to the victim were completely inept which has nothing to do with the actual events. Mischaracterizations, such as the "suicide is a product of self loathing", are a prime reason for such social rationalizations, leading the victim's family and friends battling the scorn of society and the loss of a loved one. Most suicide victims go through a phase to minimize this pain, in which they put their life's affairs into order before leaving. This includes writing a note, will, settling of debts, forgiving grudges, etc. These behaviors are atypical of someone who loathes himself or who faces severe mental problems, but rather the actions of someone who has rationally decided to take his life. Quote:
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Last edited by Lucas; 08-13-2005 at 10:56 AM. |
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08-13-2005, 04:38 PM | #14 |
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Now we're just talking about theories about suicide, when the topic is whether making an attraction themed about suicide is a good idea.
The stigma of suicide comes from the fact that every human has the innate need to survive. Truly, a human would do many things in order to stay alive. For a human to willingly overgo that need and actually end their survival themselves, for whatever reason, is what makes it so strange. Now, in my personal opinion, I don't think it's a good idea. I don't think it's alright to exploit the deaths of over twenty people to make money. However, that's not why I think it's not a good idea. Really, it's not going to get them much money. Who is really going to go out of their way to stay in a house where people killed themselves? Maybe a morbid or curious person, but it won't get much pull. That's why it's not good. It's not worth putting the effort into making an attraction that won't bring in much revenue.
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08-13-2005, 06:38 PM | #15 | |
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I disagree, Raiden. Some of the biggest attractions are places where "such and such celebrity died," or "x amount of people were killed--" not genocide; (most) people don't revel in going to holocaust sites, but individual, isolated, almost legend-like places attract people. And when
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08-13-2005, 10:23 PM | #16 | |
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Lucas in post #11, your last quote... whom were
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08-13-2005, 11:22 PM | #17 | ||
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He was talking to me, adamark, and mostly they were my quotes.
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It's not a debate. Stop trying to 'rule out insubstantial arguements' and 'stating incorrect facts.' I thought it could be done correctly, though it would be tricky because suicide is a darker topic than death itself, and I disagreed that death and suicide are close enough to warrant being irrelevent in this topic. My post's point was that I; 1 - disagreed with 2 - Thought it was a bad idea, unless it de-sensitized the deaths in a more light-hearted way, 3 - think that a tourist attraction based off of suicide almost begged for trouble from the public. I don't care how suicide is defined, I don't care how I might have misphrased it, and I don't care about my evidence or words being incorrect.
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08-14-2005, 12:40 PM | #18 | |
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Actually, I think Lucas was doing well in calling
I doubt he's mad, I doubt he's all up in arms; this is a jumpstart for a discussion, and if There's this weird phenomenon that I notice all too often. When
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08-14-2005, 05:21 PM | #19 |
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I realize he was calling me on stuff that I didn't explain well, but we were getting WAY too off topic reguardless of what I think or what I said. I'm not trying to back out of this debate, I'd be more than willing to continue, but I feel it's more spammy and off-topic than it is helpful to the subject at hand. Plus, there's the fact that we agreed to begin with, so him correcting and telling me the faults in my arguement is really moot.
Or maybe I was just a little thrown off by the multiple-paragraph quote from a psychology website in reply to something I said.
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Last edited by Mirai Gen; 08-14-2005 at 05:25 PM. |
08-14-2005, 08:47 PM | #20 | ||
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Its rather simple. We're talking about something relating to suicide, and most people have no idea how suicide works. Thus things like
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Is that correct? No. It isn't. How does a human have a need to survive? If he dies, isn't he just... dead? Isn't an innate need something like "in order to live, one must eat"? Is that where the stimga comes from? No, there are other cultures in which death by suicide are praised. Bushido and honor come to mind. The stigma is created by the social myth surrounding the issue, and when no one knows anything about the issue, the myth can be anything. Thus, if we're to discuss the propriety of an establishment which "exploits" suicide, we have to understand suicide itself, lest our conversation be a constant barrage of "well, suicide is bad, mmmkay" "why?" "uh... cuz i like life, lol!". My original argument is that suicide isn't an often explored issue, thus people would be more inclined to talk about it when its brought into the public arena. People thus far haven't attacked this: no one has said that this theme park wouldn't increase the public exposure to death or suicide, nor have they stated that doing so in this form would be detrimental to the public's understanding of such events. That being said, had those points come into question, i would have had plenty of support for them. Now, i believe this themepark, if done respectfully/classily would be good for the reasons i outlined in my first post. Having people afterwards spouting common western suicide myths only reinforces my point. Its like saying "we need children to take more math in school" and the next 4 posters say "OMFG UR DUMB 3+2=4 LOL!". Is it the fault of said posters that they never learnt about math? No, which is why i'm advocating it in schools. This isn't a tirade against anyone, Mirai Gen in the least, its just the way things are. If anything, i'd say that asian culture, having a large history with buddism, is far more prepared to accept in depth discussion about death... but here's the thing: they already do have such public discourse, on a level far higher than we in the west do, making them far more ready to accept such attractions compared to us. This explains why the proposal was made in the first place. Quote:
Also: i agree with all of Locke's post. |
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