Any thoughts on the following exchange between Jeremy Sealey, David Coyne and a psychiatrist? Do you think the psychiatrist is mostly right?
JEREMY SEALEY: A 40 year old lady wants to kill herself. This is not a view that she has come to lightly. She has been thinking about suicide fairly systematically for the last five years – ever since she turned forty in fact. She can think of reasons to live – her sister, for example, will miss her if she’s gone – but she can think of many more reasons not to live. She would say that she is not depressed exactly. It is more that she is profoundly bored: she is suffering from seemingly terminal ennui. She has thought hard about the morality of suicide. She knows that there are religious objections to the taking of one’s own life. She is aware, for instance, that the Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church states that suicide is ‘seriously contrary to justice, hope, and charity’. But she isn’t religious, and doesn’t believe in the afterlife, so she isn’t much impressed by such pronouncements. She has taken into account that some people, such as her sister, will mourn her death. But she does not believe that their suffering will be very great, and certainly not great enough to outweigh what she sees as her right to do as she wishes with her own life – including ending it. She is also aware that she might feel differently about things at some point in the future. However, she thinks that this is unlikely, and, in any case, she is not convinced of the relevance of this point: certainly, she does not think that she has any responsibility towards a purely hypothetical future version of herself. She has canvassed other people’s opinions about suicide, but so far she has heard nothing to persuade her that killing herself would be wrong. She is frequently told that she ‘shouldn’t give up’, that ‘things will get better’, and that she ‘should just hang on in there’, but nobody has been entirely clear about why she should do these things. For her part, she can’t really see that she stands to lose much of anything by ending her life now. She does not value it, and in any case, if she’s dead, she’s hardly going to regret missing out on whatever it is that might have happened to her had she lived. Would it be wrong for this woman to commit suicide? If so, why?
DAVID COYNE: I can find nothing wrong with Dorothy’s decision although I’d prefer that she have the opportunity to talk to somebody about it before carrying out the act. To me this is a relatively non-controversial point.
PSYCHIATRIST: Well, I'm a practicing psychiatrist who has spent the last 35 years trying to prevent people from committing suicide (among other clinical pursuits) so of course my opinion is tainted by what I do. This is not just some hypothetical scenario *for me.* It's what I actually do, daily. The main problem with this is the idea that.... "She is also aware that she might feel differently about things at some point in the future. However, she thinks that this is unlikely" when it is not unlikely at all, much the opposite. The vast majority of people who attempt suicide and get rescued (that is, are not allowed to die) or fail in their attempt (like in a botched attempt that doesn't kill them) come to change their minds in the future and to feel grateful for having been saved (or for having survived). This in itself invalidates her whole edifice of argumentation. Does she have a right to do it? Yeah, sure, in certain regards, depending on where she lives. Should she do it? Hell, no.
And also I can't really accept this: "It is more that she is profoundly bored: she is suffering from seemingly terminal ennui."
Oh, come on. Ennui?.... Give me a break. All that she is doing is a big rationalization, in huge denial that there is something wrong with her -- such as anhedonia. Yes, allowing boredom to prevail over the survival instinct does indicate in my opinion a very pathological state, because it is certainly not what the *natural* state is. I'd tend to call this, abnormal. At the very least, it escapes the statistical concept of the norm, because the norm is that most people want to survive.