Talk:Suicide/Archive 4

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Middle Ages Muddled?

As currently worded, it is implied that St. Augustine's discussion of suicide was in the middle ages, and that Justinian's work predated St. Augustine's. But the truth is the opposite: Augustine having died in 430, before the middle ages began; and Justinian having been born after the middle ages began. . I don't feel quite up to rewriting the section in a creditable way: perhaps someone else can take this on? Publius3 (talk) 05:56, 10 March 2009 (UTC)

  • Talk:Suicide/archive02
    for comments August 2004 - April 2005
  • Talk:Suicide/archive03
    for comments April 2005 - April 2007

Familicide

I just created a new page on Familicide but it quickly became a candidate for speedy deletion due to its limited, dictionary-definition content. It is my wish that the psychology and crime scholars among you help me expand the article's content so that it will no longer be considered beneath Wikipedia standards. Thank you. J.A.McCoy 00:37, 18 August 2007 (UTC)

Japan?

I know that Japan's suicide rate is high, but why is this? It sounds morbidly interesting. The Wiggle Fish 11:55, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

Once you get a job (the standard "9-5" deal) in Japan without an extremely good degree, chances are that if you quit or are fired you will not get hired again. Even if you do keep your job, they are often unsatisfying and leave very much to be desired, causing a spiral of depression. When I was in Japan for two weeks, my subway train was delayed on two different occasions due to men that had jumped off of bridges over the tracks.71.178.227.4 02:04, 30 August 2007 (UTC)

suicide as a social fact?

as a sociology student i can't help to notice the lack of a sociological point of view in this article. bieng "suicide" by Durkheim one of the most important pieces on this topic, where he statistacally shows that the main causes of the sucide rate are social, rather than psycological or otherwise. i'm planning on working a little bit on this direction, but i want to registrate as a user and hear some opinions before donig so.

gabriel

ps. i may have several ortography mistakes, forgive me for i am not a native speaker.

National suicide rates - contradictory and unclear

Contradiction: "National suicide rates sometimes tend to be stable"; "National suicide rates, apparently universally, show an upward long-term trend."

Citations with insufficient detail: "Australian Bureau of Statistics, 1983; Lester, Patterns, 1996, p. 21"

Unclear: The sentence beginning "For example, the 1975 rates ...". Nurg 21:02, 10 February 2007 (UTC)

Suicide notes contradiction

While this article affirms that "the practice is fairly common, occurring in approximately one out of three suicides...", the

unsigned comment was added by 201.47.34.200 (talk
) 21:47, 17 February 2007 (UTC).

The first two statements don't contradict each other at all, even though the wording is clumsy since it was clearly written by two people coming at the numbers from different perspectives.

If 1/3 leave notes then clearly the majority (or 2/3) do NOT leave notes, right? :) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.144.85.130 (talk) 04:45, 23 October 2007 (UTC)

suicides at universities

I've started working on a subpage called User:Wl219/List of university student suicides in my userspace. I intend to link it eventually to List of suicides when it's more fleshed out, but comments are welcome. Wl219 01:19, 21 February 2007 (UTC)

--Causes of Suicide-- Substance abuse stated so blatently has no place in this list. A person may be under the influence when they kill themself, but its almost always because of a deeper underlying problem.

Suicide Rates

The article makes interesting points about the differing rates of suicide by country around the world, and states that the rate of suicide to homicide is 3:2 in the USA. I want to know more. There should be a map or a table of suicide rates by country and by age and sex if possible. I strongly believe that the suicide rate in the United States is higher than Americans realize and that this is a fact the the country does not own up to or care to look at and admit. Or, a link to a separate article on 'suicide rates' should be supplied. —The preceding

unsigned comment was added by 4.178.36.234 (talk
) 21:25, 14 March 2007 (UTC).

Well, here's a [1] by WHO. As you can see, there are too many countries to fit on the table without disrupting the article structure. MahangaTalk to me 04:21, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
Well, looks like we have a table after all in a separate page. List of countries by suicide rate. Hmmm... I'm thinking of putting a table of the top 10(5?) countries with the highest suicide rate on the main page. MahangaTalk to me 04:26, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
I added the table now. I was thinking of adding the rates for the most populous countries, but decided against it. MahangaTalk to me 15:31, 2 April 2007 (UTC)

Passive Suicide

While this doesn't fit the classical definition, I know people who have committed suicide in this way. Bo-Lingua 03:24, 12 April 2007 (UTC)

Military suicide

I think this small section deserves its own main article - I've created a redirect, but the subject certainly has such scope to qualify for its own article. While I'm here, could I request someone actively contributing here please expand the lead section a little - even one paragraph would be enough. I'm looking to summarize the topic in death but the lead section is only a definition. Richard001 01:37, 13 April 2007 (UTC)

I expanded the lead. Revise as needed. :) MahangaTalk 03:15, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
Thanks Mahanga, I'll add the section now. I've realized there is already an article on military suicide (i.e. suicide attack), I've added the main template to make that clear. Richard001 11:10, 19 April 2007 (UTC)

Islam

It says that Islam has consistently condemned suicide. This is very dubious. There are deliberate suicide attacks, and this is drawn from Islamic rhetoric about martyrdom and accepted as OK by significant numbers of Muslims. In fact the euphemism they are found under in Islamic media is 'martyrdom operation' or variants. I'm going to tag it dubious for now, as there is a problem here. The Behnam 15:59, 16 April 2007 (UTC)

I revised it a little. Change it as you please. Btw,
Religious_views_of_suicide#Islam could use expanding, if you have knowledge on the subject. MahangaTalk
20:28, 16 April 2007 (UTC)

The use of suicide attacks aren't strictly prohibited in Islam as the article says, instead of that Islam highly motivate for suicide attacks on enemy troops in case of threatening Islam or Muslims. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Husam2002jo (talkcontribs) 15:04, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

Suicide methods

...is a long list and doesn't belong on an overview of the subject. The summary, as is, is more than sufficient. SonoftheMorning 10:39, 17 April 2007 (UTC)

I agree. Although the proposed merge has been somewhat overtaken by the AfD proposal for the methods article. The methods content is far too long to merge into here, and deserves a page of its own anyway. Eve 17:26, 23 April 2007 (UTC)

For those seriously considering suicide, it is worth remembering that the best method is probably via inhalation of nitrogen, helium or other noble gas as doing so is painless, effortless and virtually guaranteed to do the job - unlike so many other methods. ie quick and effective with little or no trauma. Tripod000 (talk) 18:26, 13 March 2009 (UTC)

Firearms as a suicide means

Other sources state firmly that Canada has a much lower homocide/suicide rate relating to the dramatically lower number of firearms. Here, Canada has a much higher suicide rate than the USA. How reliable are ANY of the numbers? 207.178.98.79 (talk) 02:44, 30 November 2007 (UTC)

Causes of Suicide Organization

The list of "causes of suicide" is too circumstantial with the specific examples. The article should thematically discuss that section and use the current list as examples. I would suggest Emile Durkheim's classic sociological model of suicide with the primary motives of suicide being Anomic (stress, grief, unemployment), Altruistic (ie sacrifice, cults, terrorism, etc.), and Egosistic (loneliness, absurdism). Overall it would present intentional causes in a more constructed, but not limiting, manner that the current list of examples lack in. Reesebw 05:08, 4 May 2007 (UTC)

I would suggest a more current model based on contemporary studies and widely accepted in the psychological community. SonoftheMorning 21:14, 1 June 2007 (UTC)

The entire list of "causes of suicide" strikes me as an uncited brainstorm. PsYoP78 03:27, 2 November 2007 (UTC)

removed the following section from article, and posted it here for discussion

The following section isn't suicide, nor is it a type of suicide, and no relation to suicide is described (just a non-relation). This has left me wondering why it was included in the article in the first place. I've placed it here for discussion, in case there are important issues I've missed. The Transhumanist    23:19, 10 May 2007 (UTC)


Self-harm

Self-harm is not a suicide attempt. There is a non-causal correlation between self-harm and suicide; both are most commonly a

pain
or a desire for attention, although the motivation will often be complex and confused. Self-injury is the paradoxical practice that relies on inflicting pain and injury to relieve or communicate another pain.

Self-Harm/Self-Injury was not really studied as its own practice until the 1960's. This is because many with self-injuries were recorded as suicide attempts. Although the actions are very different, some still perceive self-injury as a suicide attempt. I'm not sure if self-injury and self-harm carry two meanings. I believe the former refers to the specific practice of self-injury, whereas self-harm may be any intentional act that results in the harming of the self even though harm and pain might not be the primary intent. I think self-injury should still be somehow linked to the suicide page because of the misconception that self-injury is a suicide attempt. —The preceding
unsigned comment was added by Reesebw (talkcontribs
) 23:45, 10 May 2007 (UTC).
Yes I agree with Reesebw, there is still a significant confusion between self-harm and suicide attempts in the minds of Joe Public (and also a few out-of-date health professionals, worryingly). So I think it's probably a good idea to keep something in there making the difference clear and linking to the SH page. We could maybe lose some of the detail about motivations for SH though. Eve 09:00, 11 May 2007 (UTC)


The American Torpedo Plane Attack on IJN Carriers at Midway Likened to Kamikaze Style Attacks?!

This part of the article is ridiculous, but that is POV on my part. Though I do feel this is a stretch. I wanted to remove it outright but...

John 07:56, 15 May 2007 (UTC)

Umm... no. This is a general article about suicide, not really the right place for info on specific cases, unless they're extremely notable. To be honest, the Anna Halman article has had contested notability anyway, which together with its stub status seems to be motivating the merge suggestion. I suggest if notability is contested then send it to AfD; otherwise leave it as a stub, add more info to make notability clearer, or try and find another page to merge it into (something like List_of_suicides maybe?) Eve 12:05, 17 May 2007 (UTC)

It is nosense, of course. No reason for merge. --Cinik 15:25, 17 May 2007 (UTC)

The Suicide article does not seem to list individual people who committed suicide, so merging Anna Halman here would not make sense. If she is added to List of suicides then her article would normally be kept as well, so that's not exactly a merge. Although Anna Halman survived a contested AfD recently, the passions seem to live on. Her case received attention on the BBC, and led to a statement (and maybe a policy change) by the Polish Minister of Education. This seems to establish notability, though the sources could be better. Any further discussion on this matter should (in my opinion) take place at Talk:Anna Halman, where no one has yet said anything about a merge. EdJohnston 13:52, 22 May 2007 (UTC)

Possible merges

I think that

ritual suicide could be merged into this article, seeing as it's currently just a paragraph long. Yay or nay? BigglesTh9
05:26, 23 May 2007 (UTC)

Yes, I'd put it as a new sub-subsection under Reasons for suicide > Other reasons.
Aleta
08:07, 23 May 2007 (UTC)
Looks ok to me, yes. Eve 11:20, 23 May 2007 (UTC)
Merge is done. Also on the chopping block was
Dutiful suicide, which hadn't been edited since 2006. BigglesTh9
08:57, 12 June 2007 (UTC)

Slight review of intro

The article strikes me as presenting (or implying) one viewpoint as "the correct view", which it later amends. It also doesn't show the topic in overview very well at present. As an overview article of the subject, I think this can be done better.

The description of suicide starts with the statement "Considered by modern medicine to be a mental health issue, suicide may also be caused by psychological factors..." Only quite a bit later does it then add (as a somewhat minor note) that in some cultures it is seen as honorable or a means of protest, and it never mentions that the view of suicide as mental issue is far from universal culturally or historically. So it's never presented as the rich subject it is, or placed really in any other than a primarily clinical context. (Even then the medical view is very limited - a note on "cry for help" or repetition as a major feature of suicide attempts is crucial to note even in the intro.)

The overall view of suicide as a disapproved act and mental health issue is the appropriate majority view, but I think the topic as a whole needs the way it's presented (ie its "contexting" of this delicate subject) to be slightly improved. I've had a go, because the current view seems rather "pushing one specific viewpoint" (albeit the predominant western one). I've tried to ensure it doesnt get biased the other way by mistake. My approach has been to look at the intro and restructure it as follows, keeping the length sensible:

  • Definition of suicide.
  • Views have largely been shaped by cultural views (eg religion, honor, meaning of life), and therefore suicide has a diverse significance in different cultures and religions. So present suicide and the range of its meanings and places in different cultures.
  • Then, the predominant view of modern society and of most professionals that suicide is categorized under mental health, and as a response to pain or fear in which the value of life is outweighed by pain, fear or other psychological pressures, etc. (And add in omitted note about suicide as a cry for help.)
  • Finally, the statistics.

Before after

FT2 (Talk | email) 13:58, 29 May 2007 (UTC)

NPOV

or the so-called "right to die" The "so-called" can also be rephrased to "also known as". Right now it's POV by taking a stance against right to die. Even if the majority is against this, there is an article to cover it.

Adding something on Emile Durkheim's studies about suicide would be helpful. I also have plenty of support that identity issues such as homosexuality, being adopted (to some extent), etc are one issue rather than two issues which lead to the disconnection from society. Any objections on the above should be addressed before Sunday, upon which time I'll start the revising process. I just need an editor. --Hitsuji Kinno 21:48, 30 May 2007 (UTC)

WAY too many internal links

The first part before the table of contents, well, just read the headline. Mattbash 00:00, 31 May 2007 (UTC)

Table placement

As I was looking at the page, I noticed that the table titled "Suicides per 100,000 people per year" should be on the right edge of the screen. It looks like it gets caught up by the graph above it. I would move it, but I'm new to this wiki thing and I don't know how.

~Doc Honcho~ 02:20, 9 June 2007 (UTC)

Title of article is loaded and prejudiced.

There are many ways to refer to the act of intentionally terminating one's life. The one employed here is slanted, or as we put it here, "POV." It criminalizes the act. After all, one "commits" suicide the same way one "commits" a crime, and the term is also semantically connected to "homicide" and "infanticide" (please do not mention "insecticide"). The etymological implication of course is that it is a killing, and a culpable one at that.

May I suggest a more neutral term, often used in antiquity: "voluntary death"? We could have a redirect page, or perhaps a separate article specifically about the crime of "suicide." Haiduc 02:08, 7 July 2007 (UTC)

"Suicide" is the term found in all literature and all colloquial use. Any grave connotations the word carries are mostly tied to the fact that it denotes the act of killing oneself, and not that it is "committed" in much the way one "commits" a foul in a ball game. I suspect you are joking, but in any event, I don't think voluntary death (which is itself entirely ambiguous-- whose death, exactly?) will be replacing suicide here or in popular usage anytime soon. SonoftheMorning 14:40, 14 July 2007 (UTC)
Haiduc isn't alone in this; the term "commit suicide" has fallen out of favor among psychiatric and psychological associations and organizations. "Died by suicide" is one recommended alternative.Carlaclaws 03:03, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
The people in this thread might want to read up on George Carlin's monologue about euphemisms. Saying "voluntary death" might end up as "voluntary absence of life" which might in turn end up as "voluntary respectable choice to free one's life from one's person", which ends up being ridiculous. Also, I have never met an English-speaking person which refers to suicide as "voluntary death". I'm not just talking colloquially here, I'm saying that this phrase is never used by anyone except stuck-up people or as George put it "smug, greedy, well-fed white people [which have] invented a language to conceal their sins." --BiT (talk)

NPOV re: external links

The external links section seems to link to quite a few websites for suicide prevention and support groups, but I don't see a single link to a site for suicide promotion or assistance. Obviously, Wikipedia isn't supposed to be a how-to manual, but if there are external links on how to avoid suicide, I think that it's only the fair and balanced thing to do to post external links on how to go through with suicide (like, say, http://www.satanservice.org/tokus/suicide/guide/). The only way you can justify not doing so is to say that it's a worthier goal to prevent suicides than to promote them, which of course is the definition of a non-NPOV. ElHalo

Links to pages detailing ways of killing yourself are more appropriate at suicide methods. But if there's a non-facetious pro-suicide page out there feel free to add it. SonoftheMorning 14:46, 14 July 2007 (UTC)

Justinian

What did Justiian's law code really say on this yopic? The linked 'reference" is not at all authoritattive, and does not mention Justinian anyway. I ask because the Wiki article on religious attitudes to suicide very nearly contradicts this one, stating that suicide to avoid trial was a crime and sin in 533 (ie presumably under Justinian's code of that year), and this was extended generally in 590.

World map of suicide rates

This figure is essentially useless, since the key doesn't offer much. <13 what? Suicides per capita? Suicides a year? It should probably be removed, or replaced with something useful.

If you had bothered to read the description for the image or clicked on the
suicide rates link in the caption, you'd quickly see that it's the number of suicides per 100,000 people per year. MahangaTalk
20:29, 24 July 2007 (UTC)

Copycat suicides

Not having seen this article for a while, my immediate reaction to the pictures in it was that they had the potential to glorify suicide. One potential outcome of this is copycat suicides. While there is a need to be NPOV about the subject, there is also a social responsibility to not contribute to further suicides. It is significant that neither the article on murder or homicide have pictures of victims despite the ready availability of such material. This brief entry is to encourage a debate about this. --CloudSurfer 22:29, 28 July 2007 (UTC)

If someone can show me a link to a policy or relevant talk discussion suggesting that the pictures were removed from the murder and homicide articles for that reason, I will do the same for all the photographs on this page that depict suicides that could reasonably be imitated (I do not view the likelihood for copycat suicides involving self-immolation or kamikaze attacks significant enough to be worrisome). The artwork, I would think, is intended to romanticize suicide and is therefore NPOV-protected. SonoftheMorning 03:02, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
I am not aware if there were pictures in the past in those two. Due to the lack of replies on this page I have copied this to Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Psychology#Copycat_suicide_risk where there are two replies to date and further comments of mine. It might be best to continue this there. --CloudSurfer 03:43, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
Discussion of this has continued on Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Psychology#Copycat_suicide_risk where at present the vote runs 3:1 in favour of removing the pictures of the German mayor and his wife, and the Japanese soldiers. There is a lengthy discussion of reasoning for this on that page. Any further comments? --CloudSurfer 02:51, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
I oppose removing images based on censorship, even if some believe it helps prevents suicides (?) although I would dispute that desired outcome as well, maybe showing the end results of a suicide may help prevent sucicide Bleh999 12:17, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
Bleh999, have you read the much longer discussion here?--CloudSurfer 02:30, 18 August 2007 (UTC)


Suicide's verb

I have Been Bold and changed "commit" to "complete". I see this was discussed and changed long ago before, but somehow got changed back to "commit." It might be even better to substitute most of these instances with "kill oneself" -- it would be the most neutral -- but maybe someone else.... —Preceding unsigned comment added by Friarslantern (talkcontribs) 23:51, 6 September 2007 (UTC)

I do not see that "commit" carries a negative connotation, but perhaps your views differ. Regardless, it is the term used in virtually all academic literature and colloquial usage, and wikipedia is not the forum for changing universally accepted idioms by fiat. SonoftheMorning 04:03, 11 September 2007 (UTC)
"Commit" ~clearly~ carries a negative connotation -- one only "commits" something that they are not supposed to, that is bad to, in current usage (we're talking about the word as a synonym of "perpetrate" -- again, these are only used (unless one's being ironic) with a connotation of doing something that is bad, or that one shouldn't -- it is judgemental. I can't think of any phrases using "commit" or "perpetrate" that don't imply bad, crime, sin, or shame, except when used comically). While it is an idiom in current usage, it's negative connotation is conscious and clear, and therefore not representative of a NPOV.
And no, it is not universally used among experts on suicide -- many of them, perhaps even approaching most -- would prefer to say "kill oneself", "complete suicide", or the neologism, "to suicide". I think you'll find that to be the case if you review sites by professional organizations -- they are tending -- on purpose -- to use the neutral terminology more and more (there are occasional uses of "committed suicide" there, but more often, they say "kill oneself"). The American Association for Suicide Prevention's webpage of recommendations for journalists goes as far as requesting of the press: "In the body of the story, it is preferable to describe the deceased as "having died by suicide," rather than as "a suicide," or having "committed suicide." The latter two expressions reduce the person to the mode of death, or connote criminal or sinful behavior." ([2]).
While I'd agree that "she suicided" or even "they completed suicide" is noticeably awkward, and would tend to sound soapbox in themselves, to use "kill oneself" in this article will ~not~ stand out in this way. People will NOT read this saying "What axe is WP trying to grind here -- they say "kill oneself" in this article instead of "commit suicide!". I feel "kill oneself" is arguably more NPOV than "commit suicide", and am planning to revert back to the "kill oneself" version barring convincing argument to the contrary. Friarslantern 18:38, 11 September 2007 (UTC)
What exactly is the negative connotation in "commit forces to the region" or "commit to a relationship", pray tell? As for expertise, you can see that the apa [3] itself uses "commit" in formal literature. And no, no matter meticulously I review professional sites, I won't find them tend to use a bizarre neologism in lieu of the universally accepted phraseology; there are some 37,500 google hits for "complete suicide", as opposed to ~2,000,000 for "commit suicide". Regardless, any change at all is unnecessary unless you can demonstrate that a majority of scholars feel that the term is too loaded and an alterantive has gained substantial acceptance. Otherwise, I direct you to [4], which trumps marginal and questionable POV quibbles. SonoftheMorning 07:05, 12 September 2007 (UTC)
Committing forces is a different use of the word, meaning, guaranteeing or giving a mission to -- it's not the same usage -- different section in a dictionary. Same with "commit to a relationship". The usage we're talking about is "to commit [an act]". It is a usage commonly understood by any native speaker of English, and, if asked to think about it, any user would recognize that it adds a negative connotation. We don't use it otherwise: we commit an error, we commit a sin, we commit a crime. We DON'T commit a good deed, we DON'T commit a favor, we DON'T commit a success. It has come to implicitly indicate that the act in question is bad, or even shameful. I can't think of any exceptions to this.
Note that in my edits, I left two uses of "committed" because they had nothing to do with the usage "to commit [an act]", which, again, is the only construction that implies a bad act: "Sometimes, a person will make actions resembling suicide attempts while not being fully committed," and "Suicide-like acts should generally be treated as seriously as possible, because if there is an insufficiently strong reaction from loved ones from a suicidal gesture, this may motivate future and ultimately more committed attempts." In these two examples, "committed" is used as an -adjective- to mean "dedicated", or "in earnest".
Expertise: if you look at the sites of professional organizations of psychologists and social workers that focus on suicide, such as the one I cited, or the AAS, I feel you will notice a tendency away from saying "commit" suicide; they are tending towards saying "completed" suicide, or "to suicide", or, most commonly, simply, "to kill oneself" in their writings where the average person would more often say "commit suicide". They are not, nor are psychological professional organizations, thorough about it -- the colloquial usage is a strong habit. I bring up the examples to point out that this is not something I invented, but something others have thought of, and pointed out to be not neutral.
You brought up the argument that I am proposing the use of a neologism. Not the case. I have made it clear that I am switching to arguing for "to kill oneself" rather than my previous use of "complete suicide". "Commit suicide, " being of Latin origin, is more of a neologism than the (Germanic) "kill oneself". For me to replace "commit suicide" with "kill oneself" would not stand out to a reader as a neologism would; nor would it appear to the average reader to be soapbox in any way; "commit suicide" is common parlance, but "kill herself" is not uncommon at all, though it is more straightforwardly factual. I cannot imagine that anyone who wasn't already aware of this controversy or sensitive to this usage would even notice if this WP article used "kill oneself" rather than "commit suicide". This is an issue of style that affects tone in a way that makes it slightly, but clearly, less NPOV. There is no neologism issue here, and so I no trump of my NPOV complaint. Aside from my personal aversion to the phrase "commit suicide", on the face of it, "kill himself/herself" is more straightforward, more factual -- more encyclopedic.
I'm also thinking, now that I'm on this, of changing the opening statement: "Suicide (Latin sui caedere, to kill oneself) is the act of intentionally terminating one's own life" to "Suicide (Latin sui caedere, to kill oneself) is the act of killing oneself." Why beat around the bush? We don't describe murder or homicide with such indirect language. ..... Diving right into another can of worms, worst possibility ;-) Friarslantern 01:24, 13 September 2007 (UTC) 01:22, 13 September 2007 (UTC)
You said: if you look at the sites of professional organizations of psychologists and social workers that focus on suicide, such as the one I cited, or the AAS, I feel you will notice a tendency away from saying "commit" suicide; Well, prove it. Effacing the APA's (not to mention everywhere else's) accepted terminology from Wikipedia because you disagree with the connotations is itself POV. You also made the unsubstantiated claim that "kill oneself" is more encyclopedic. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, for one, does not support you there [5]. Note also that one could readily "commit an act of kindness". 138.192.140.22 04:28, 13 September 2007 (UTC)
>> "...Well, prove it".
Umm.... no. It was a minor part of my argument: I've already quoted the section of the AFSP site that should establish that someone up there has thought about this issue enough to request the media to not use "commit". Beside, I don't get a clear sense that proving this would convince you, 138.192.140.22.
>> Effacing the APA's (not to mention everywhere else's)
>> accepted terminology from Wikipedia...
You make it sound like the APA and everyone else would object. I have already argued this: that I believe not only that they wouldn't object, but that they probably wouldn't even notice. Not only that, but "accepted terminology" implies that they've actually thought about it and made a decision on the use of it: not at all necessarily so. I would complain to them too (and should!).
>> ...because you disagree
>> with the connotations is itself POV.
If the connotations are judgmental, then leaving them would be sustaining this POV. And, if you're going to get picky, the act of USING a NPOV is, itself, taking a stance of sorts -- a POV (that we should be NPOV)! "Commit" is the most common way of referring to this act, AND it is judgmental -- not necessarily (and probably not) on the conscious part of the individual using it, but socially, as a nod to the shame that we used to (and some still do) feel should be attributed to suicide. The other reason that just occurred to me that it might be used would be for euphemistic purposes, by employing an arcane construction to distance the brute facts of the meaning behind it from both the speaker and the audience. But again, this also would carry a POV (that suicide is to be treated as taboo) in itself, as would it be if we started replacing instances of "X died in 1991" with "X passed away". While WP shouldn't go out on linguistic limbs, it should also avoid carrying on judgment (such as taboos). "Kill oneself" does neither.
While it is an idiom, it is one whose different parts are still used apart from each other and have their own denotations and connotations, intentional or otherwise. A written document, particularly a constantly refined one that pointedly strives for neutral point of view, has the ability and, sometimes, the obligation, to stray at times away from what is common usage, for various reasons, and this certainly wouldn't be the first time WP strayed from common usage for some reason important to its policies. Unless, of course, this straying would stand out as unusually novel, or pointed, or jarring. The change I made (which was reverted) did not do that (at least not any more than avoiding referring to "those who commit murder" in an article about murder, in favor of "those who murder" or "those who kill" would, for example).
>> You also made the unsubstantiated claim that "kill oneself"
>> is more encyclopedic.
Not completely unsubstantiated -- I've shown how it is POV, which makes it un-encyclopedic. But, true, additionally, I appeal to common sense in saying that, of the two different ways of saying it, "kill oneself" is more encyclopedic by comparison. It's right there in the definition (line 1): suicide means to kill oneself. And, "to kill oneself", while usually supplanted by "committed suicide", is still quite current, and the only connotation it has -- as, on its face, it is quite straightforward -- is as being blunter than the roundabout or euphemistic "commit suicide". Are you arguing that Wikipedia ~should not be that blunt~? And why?
>> The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, for one, does not support you there
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosphy probably hasn't looked at this issue. They probably are using the more common "commit suicide" rather than the (current, but less common) "kill oneself" for just that reason -- because it's how their authors talk. That doesn't mean they would not change it if it were brought to their attention as something arguably less encyclopedic. Do you know they've dealt with this issue and come to a conclusion? Just because it IS used in other encyclopedias doesnt' make it necessarily more encyclopedic when viewed critically. We have the opportunity to do that here in Wikipedia.
>> Note also that one could readily "commit an act of kindness"
Point well taken. But this is the exception to the rule. Ask someone randomly "What act have you just committed?" and they will generally assume you are accusing them, humorously or not, of having just done something wrong. They will not get that same feeling from being asked what act they have just "performed", however, or what they have just "done". And the dictionaries bear this out: yes, "commit" can mean simply, to "do", but it has a particular connotation synonymous with "to perpetrate", clearly a word with judgmental connotations.
Again, unless someone can convince me otherwise, I am planning to revert "commit" back to "kill oneself" in this article. Friarslantern 16:36, 13 September 2007 (UTC)
Umm.... no. Then your changes do not meet the criteria for verifiability. You, backed by a small minority of advocacy groups, do not get to change universally accepted language by fiat. You feel that the term "commit suicide" is POV; I do not, and neither do the overwhelming majority of scholars on the subject. And the idea that the APA, the Stanford Encyclopedia, Britannica and virtually every other reputable source out there do not at any point critically examine their language is ludicrous. Unless you can prove that there's a legitimate and well-supported reason that "commit suicide" is inherently POV, your changes will be reverted back. 138.192.140.22 02:35, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
Wait a minute. This is not an issue of what facts are included in an article, or what articles are included: THESE are elements subject to verifiability standards! Backed by advocacy groups? Now you're trying to paint this as lobbying effort. Not so. "Neither do the overwhelming majority of scholars on the subject" assumes that the issue has been dealt with by these scholars -- I don't think so. "...the idea that the APA.... and virtually every other reputable source out there do not critically examine their language is ludicrous": Yes, it is. And I would be too IF I WERE MAKING SUCH A BROAD STATEMENT. I am not, and you are attempting to PAINT me that way. My point was that there's a good chance they haven't examined THIS PARTICULAR wording issue - which is a very different assertion. "Unless you can prove there's a legitimate and well-supported reason..."???! I have answered your (user 138.192.140.22!) and Sonofthemorning's (or are you the same people?!) counterarguments thoroughly here. I have kept coming back with clear reasoning, and straightforward language. You have never indicated any actual problem you have with the wording "kill oneself". I think the problem here is that you can't find any problem that you yourself actually have with the wording. You just don't like that I am proposing a change on a Wikipedia page that you wouldn't want to make in the way you yourself speak in everyday life and are offended, inappropriately I'd say, that I would make this change -- in speech and in writing. Well, I'm not asking you to change the way you yourself talk. But if that's your only reason, I will not let it stop me from making this change, for the sake of making this page a modicum more neutral, at no expense of readability and without adding a single neologism or modifying it in any way that almost any reader would notice for even a moment. Friarslantern 18:09, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
You are unable to offer a real and objective reason that your changes would make the page more neutral. You feel that "commit suicide" carries a negative connotation, although this is not linguistically provable and most major organizations have no trouble with the wording. I respect that, but your personal feelings on the matter are entirely immaterial. Universally accepted terminology on Wikipedia is not subject to change simply because one or a handful of users feels that it is POV; this would lead to an endless and unmanageable euphemism treadmill in every article whenever some crank decides that basic idioms are in some trivial way invidious. If you wish to add a section on "naming conventions" or some such that would be acceptable, but changing standard language requires some significant degree of scholarly support, which you do not have. 138.192.140.22 05:48, 16 September 2007 (UTC)
"Commit" ~does~ carry a negative connotation - see a dictionary. If you want me to quote dictionaries, I'd be happy to.
You say you're worried about a euphemism treadmill? Well, that's what I'm combatting here. It is you who defend the euphemism, and I who defend the plain speech (jeesh, my phrasing even has half as many syllables!). A quick check yielded this: on WP, "pass away" re-directs to "Death". An example of WP preferring the non-euphemism. I suspect I could find a general tendency in WP to do this. "Kill oneself" is not euphemistic, nor does it stand out in an ideological/soapbox way, nor is it needlessly profane (but these weren't your arguments anyway). People use it commonly because they want to use a euphemism. An encyclopedia's language should represent more than that. And, changing standard language does NOT necessarily require "some significant degree of scholarly support", as you claim: this is a red herring. I think it's clear that, even if the APA -- whose lack of an opinion on this you have cited as significant -- said "No one should say "commit suicide" anymore!!!", you would not then concede anything to me here. What we're talking about is is a style issue, and my arguments are "common sense", and have ~not~ been countered with scholarly arguments from you or from SonoftheMorning (really the same person, it appears, for some odd reason chosing to remain anonymous!!), but rather with other "common-sense" arguments.
Your arguments, frankly, masquerade as reason for the wording in this article not to change, IMHO, but are really arguments defending the use of the term in conversational speech; you are standing on the soapbox of conservativism for the sake of conservativism; your arguments are not literary, they are socio-cultural. And, you continue to dodge my question: what problem do you have with the meaning or even the sound of the phrase "kill oneself" to be used in this article. I supsect that, had you come to this article while it had this phrasing (kill oneself), you would not so much have noticed that it didn't use the word "commit". I have parleyed in good faith here for quite some time, and am changing the wording back now. Friarslantern 18:28, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
you would not then concede anything to me here This is an example of a
circumstantial ad hominem attack; it is fallacious, irrelevant, uncivil, and in this case, completely incorrect. The fact that you feel the need to speculate blindly on my ostensible motives for wishing to preserve basic idioms when there's no legitimate reason not to suggests only a lack of merit in your substantive arguments. Regarding your actual points, "commit suicide" is not a euphemism-- it is frank, straightforward and ubiquitous. "Commit" does not necessarily carry a negative connotation, as you can plainly see here [6]. You claim that you have no obligation to find any scholarly support for altering standard language on the site, but it is evident that permitting people to go around changing universally accepted terms willy-nilly is repugnant to the basic mission of Wikipedia. 138.192.140.22
02:03, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
>>you would not then concede anything to me here
>>This is an example of a
circumstantial ad hominem
attack;
I disagree. I am defending my edits. I am giving point after point, half of which you're chosing not to address. I gave you a quote supportive of my position from the AFSP, and you wouldn't address it or, seemingly, let it sink in and affect your debate. It doesn't feel like a huge jump to say that, if I could find a statement from the APA condemning "commit suicide", as you implicitly have challenged me to do, you still wouldn't let it affect your debate. I feel your main position is a defense of the status quo, for the sake of the status quo -- which is fine -- you could argue, for example, that encyclopedias should preserve the status quo, for reason X.
The statement you quoted spoke to my frustration that you bring up arguments, I answer them, and -- with the exception that you've suggested I write a section on naming conventions, which was something of a concession, I'll grant -- you don't acknowlege the logic of my answers to your arguments: I am defending the action of my going ahead with my proposed edits (ie, to have thoroughly hashed it out in the Talk page) in addition to defending my philosophical justification for the change. If I had claimed that "You wouldn't concede anything to me even if the APA suggested it and therefore you're wrong that the WP article on Suicide should use 'commit suicide' instead of 'kill oneself'", THEN I would have committed a
circumstantial ad hominem
attack, and it would be "fallacious, irrelevant, uncivil, and in this case, completely incorrect." But this was not my claim. If you want to complain that I am speaking of your possible motives, fine, but it doesn't help the process that you insert false logic when you could simply re-state your ultimate argument, which is, I feel, maintenance of the status-quo in the wording of this encyclopedia, and emphasize, simply, how strongly you feel about this.
That you say there's "no legitimate reason not to" preserve basic idioms, is a good example of my complaint that I give you reasons, and you do not seem to hear my answers. I have explained why I feel "commit" is not NPOV, and said go to a dictionary, and you come back with a webpage ([7]) in which, you claim, I can "plainly see" does not necessarily support my claim that the term carries a negative connotation. And yet, the definition (in the first bulletted section, which is the relevant section in this case) states "perform an act, usually with a negative connotation". What are you saying, it's only "usually", not "always"??? This is what I mean by not responding to my arguments. I don't dispute that it's ubiquitous. I don't dispute that people don't mean to convey a negative connotation in a conscious, concerted manner when they use the term. As I have argued, this is an issue of subtext. A way of saying something CAN systematically have effects on others, such as judgmentalism, without that being the conscious intent, and still be used so as to maintain the status quo of the idiom, or, for some, to be euphemistic or to convey disapproval.
But, as I have argued already, written reference materials have the opportunity to word things more thoughtfully and simply. And when that wording can BOTH a)be more neutral; and b)do so in a way that doesn't disrupt an academic, literary style with neologisms or other strange wording, then I think it should be changed. I give you actual reasons for my changing it; you, on the other hand, have changed it back without a single reason on the merits for not liking my version, but instead arguing, essentially, that you're pre-emptively defending against "cranks" who would change things "willy-nilly". You're using status quo as reason to block my changes and not to respond to my question, What problem do you have with the sound, style, or effect of the wording "kill oneself" in this article?. I know that my insistence on this new wording here is a little unusual, but it is genuine; your aversion to responding to my basic question, though, seems to assume bad faith in me. Is not that something "repugnant to the basic mission of Wikipedia"??? Friarslantern 19:46, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
you still wouldn't let it affect your debate. This is speculative, false, irrelevant and fallacious. Kindly refrain from attacking me personally. If you're frustrated about your inability to put together a convincing case for making unnecessary and subjective changes to basic language, I suggess you buy a stress ball or a boxing bag instead. Speculating on my perceived motivations is uncivil and can only detract from whatever merit your arguments may have.
and you come back with a webpage ([7]) Wordnet is the Princeton lexical database, i.e. a comprehensive and sophisticated cross-referenced dictionary. It's also the first result when you google "define 'x'". Do some cursory research before disparaging other people's sources next time.
I have explained why I feel "commit" is not NPOV, Precisely. Why you feel. Not how you can prove that it is POV, not how you can rationally and objectively demonstrate that it is POV. A feeling is not sufficient reason to obliterate all uses of a common idiom from Wikipedia. This is clearly unacceptable practice. 138.192.140.22 23:37, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
you still wouldn't let it affect your debate. This is speculative,
false, irrelevant and fallacious.  Kindly refrain from attacking me personally.

This is a charge, but not an attack by any stretch of the imagination. Speculative? Perhaps. False, irrevlevant, fallacious? I suppose its possible, though it wouldn't be conscious on my part. But in order for me consider this, then tell me where you acknowledged or demonstrated above that the citation in question had an impression on you.

If you're frustrated about your inability to put together  
a convincing case for making unnecessary and subjective  
changes to basic language, I suggess you buy a stress ball  
or a boxing bag instead.  Speculating on my perceived motivations 
is uncivil and can only detract from whatever merit your 
arguments may have. 

No, I am frustrated by the arguments that you are using: that they are generally non-responsive to mine. This is a forum to discuss changes to articles, why they should or shouldn't be changed, and we're supposed to hash controversial changes out here it before making changes; if you will not logically engage some of my most cogent points, as I have quite straightforwardly requested, then you have the effect of walking away from the debate. I believe I have put together a convincing case, and it seems to me that you will not yield me a response on some of my most important points. Nevertheless, I will try to be more gentle from here on out.

and you come back with a webpage ([7])  Wordnet is the  
Princeton lexical database, i.e. a comprehensive and sophisticated  
cross-referenced dictionary.  It's also the first result when you  
google "define 'x'".  Do some cursory research before disparaging  
other people's sources next time. &para

If you would read the section I wrote, I didn't disparage your source at all -- in fact, I will now be looking to use it in the future. I simply pointed out that it didn't appear that your source supported your argument -- but rather that it supported my argument. You could disagree, & clarify how it supports your side. But otherwise, on the face of it, it goes to my position about connotation.

I have explained why I feel "commit" is not NPOV,  Precisely.   
Why you feel.  Not how you can prove that it is POV, not how you  
can rationally and objectively demonstrate that it is POV.  A feeling  
is not sufficient reason to obliterate all uses of a common idiom from  
Wikipedia.  This is clearly unacceptable practice.  
138.192.140.22 23:37, 20 September 2007 (UTC) 

The sad thing here is, my whole point is quite arguable, but you refuse to engage me on something where you actually have the advantage, instead, you fall back on a needless appeal to popularity. Granted, if enough people think that a)"commit suicide" is not loaded with any particular bias (which I'll concede, that the vast majority wouldn't say it is biased, at least when asked point blank); AND either b)"kill oneself" sticks out as awkward or too novel, or c)that the absence of use of "commit suicide" in itself feels awkward upon reading it, then my mind would be changed. But while I concede a), I don't concede b) or c), and therefore -- because "commit" has a negative connotation (which I pretty much have proven), and, I propose, "commit suicide" has a biased subtext and/or is euphemistic (my weakest point, but, ironically, one which you stop short of fully addressing) -- I am still left with the conviction that changing "commit suicide" to "kill oneself" is worth any minor awkward stylistic qualities (which qualities I can't imagine -- can you?) it might engender in order to make the article's language less judgmental, and more neutral. Friarslantern 17:18, 21 September 2007 (UTC)

You haven't shown that "commit suicide" is biased language, and because it is the most commonly used term, it's the appropriate one for this article. Not every suicide involves actually killing yourself - euthanasia and "suicide by cop" spring to mind immediately, but there are others. It doesn't add to the article to remove "commit suicide". Orpheus 21:07, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
I have shown it's biased. What is your argument that it isn't? And yes, every suicide involves killing yourself, even if one indirectly employs others to do it. I have never heard of the distinction you're talking about. It doesn't strengthen the article to replace "kill oneself" and replace it with "commit suicide". Friarslantern 21:20, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
No, you haven't - your argument isn't convincing, which the user editing from an IP address above has shown very clearly. "commit suicide" is overwhelmingly the popular usage in every English speaking country, and as a result Wikipedia should follow along behind that. Orpheus 21:42, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Which part of my argument isn't convincing? You say "commit.." is overwhelmingly popular - I conceded that above. But, like I said above, no one would notice a difference if the article said "kill oneself". And, as I feel I have shown convincingly -- and I am not the only one, there is a professional organization that requests the same thing of journalists in order not to show bias -- "commit" (and dictionaries, including the one quoted by the above anonymous user himself) carries a sting. You say WP should follow along behind the popular usage? Is there a policy or guideline you can direct me to in that regard -- and are you sure this would trump any possible bias claims? WP, it seems to me, often choses to use non-common usages. Look up any number of medical ills the way ~you~ would say them, and you'll be re-directed usually to a more technical name, often that you haven't heard of, as an article title (want to know about high cholesterol? You'll be taken to Hypercholesterolemia). So common usage is not an absolute here, if the change is for some greater purpose (in the medical examples, the purpose of standardization and organization; in my case, to eliminate a subtext of shame). So far no one is saying " 'kill oneself' sounds too stark and direct -- people don't like to hear about death that way -- that's why we say 'passed away'... the sound of it is distractingly vulgar and would therefore take away from the user-friendliness of the article" or giving a similar reasoning that deals with the "kill oneself" wording per se. I do not bring this up as a theoretical: I can assure you, that there are many people, suicide survivors, who subsequently have become painfully aware of the subtext of shame in "commit" (=perpetrate), and bristle at it, and don't use it... Friarslantern 23:38, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Look up any number of medical ills the way ~you~ would say them, and you'll be re-directed usually to a more technical name, often that you haven't heard of, as an article title (want to know about high cholesterol? Again, inadvertent nail on the head. Medical articles are organized according to the official terminology of the profession. Likewise, here we defer to the American Psychological Association [8], the American Psychiatric Association [9] etc. etc., along with any number of encyclopedias also written by trained professionals. "Commit suicide" is the standard and objective terminology amongst all major organization dedicated to psychology and subsidiary disciplines, yet you would have us disregard these institutions and trample over an expression that's universal and virtually unchallenged in both common speech and expert jargon because of your subjective, idiosyncratic perception of bias. So I ask, which is the better model for determining terminology on Wikipedia, credentialed authorities concerned with studying the phenomenon in question, or the lay opinion of an internet user? 138.192.140.22 04:53, 22 September 2007 (UTC)
If you look at the medical articles you mention, you'll see that the technical term is used as the article title but the popular term is used throughout the article. In this case, as the IP user points out, the technical term *is* the popular term so there's no reason not to use it.
I asked around my local office (people who grew up in Australia and New Zealand), and they were of the opinion that "kill yourself" is more offensive than "commit suicide". This seems to be a cultural thing. "Asking your mates" isn't a
WP:CENSOR
to guide us towards the technical and popular usage, specifically "Commit suicide".
Orpheus 07:36, 22 September 2007 (UTC)

In Religion

I'm pretty sure I remember reading a Bible passage saying that the body is a temple and desecreation of the temple is a sin, so I believe there is a specific passage thats says no to suicide. Have to dig up my Bible and check on that specifically, but 1 minute of Google searching brought up 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have recieved from God? You are not your own, you were brought with a price. Therefore honor God with your body." This also seems to make obesity a sin and state that we are all slaves to the church... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.17.155.35 (talk) 03:01, 7 September 2007 (UTC)

Of course, but in a secular context, sin is irrelevant, and the criminal aspect of suicide, when present, is symbolic. Friarslantern 15:24, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
This is one interpretation of the passage, but not one commonly cited as prohibiting suicide, as opposed to, say, Augustine's argument from the sixth commandment or Aquinas' Aristotelian argument from natural order. It's also problematic when juxtaposed with some Christian notions of asceticism. But if you can find a good reference, by all means, add it. SonoftheMorning 04:08, 11 September 2007 (UTC)

Something needed here about the shameful aspect

We need something in the Cultural section on how the shameful aspect of suicide (as evidenced, for example, in the continuing use of "commit" as the verb) is still prevalent in most cultures. It's also a factor that could be mentioned in the Impact of Suicide section - that the isolation survivors feel is not only due to their own grief, questioning and guilt feelings, but also to an automatic aversion that many people feel -- possibly due to the culturally shameful aspect of the act, possibly due to questions about the role that the survivors could have had in preventing or causing the suicide -- towards suicide, which manifests itself frequently as a reflexive withdrawl of contact or support towards people normally considered friends, people, who -- it's my sense -- would receive ample, more immediate support had their family member/loved one been murdered. In other words, there is a primitive taboo about it that survives in modern, industrialized culture -- about even discussing it. I'm nearly positive there's serious research out there to this effect, would need references.... (In general, this article could use more references.....). Friarslantern 16:02, 7 September 2007 (UTC)

On the subject

I kind of feel like killing myself today. Probably due to the fact that I edited Wikipedia - the methampetamine article, taking out stupid shit like "injection may be the safest way to use this drug" - when I used to do meth, and my bosses decided to riff and laugh on it one day after everything fell apart (or at least that's what I heard secondhand through the grapevine), and laughed at me when I couldn't and still can't make a living. It's not a good idea, but those are my feelings, and since Wiki helped me take away my job I figure it can take my confession.  ;) What an idiot I was to be honest about my identity on Wiki... Don't ever do it, guys!!! Discuss! 76.170.206.69 12:48, 21 September 2007 (UTC)

Are you serious about feeling suicidal? I'd hate you doing that!!! Friarslantern 17:20, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
I don't think it's fair to lay this sort of thing on regular people just trying to edit and encyclopedia; that is to say if you are really going to take your life. I'm sure most people on Wikipedia would be more than happy to talk you out of it or just have a little chat so that you'd feel better but this way it's pretty much a situation where you can make people feel bad by writing this sort of thing while they can't do anything about it. --BiT (talk) 02:29, 11 December 2008 (UTC)

I am confused. How did wiki take your job? Were you fired for editing a meth article or (more likely) for being a meth addict? You sound incredibly paranoid, which is a symptom of amphetamine abuse. Please seek help, if you're still alive.

Intro POV

Hi all, I was reading over the intro when I came across the line "Most Western and Asian religions—the Abrahamic religions, Buddhism, Hinduism—consider suicide a dishonorable act; in the West it was regarded as a serious crime and offense against God due to religious belief in the sanctity of life." This is problematic - as written it conflates present religious attitudes with past cultural views all while collapsing all of Western thinking on the subject into one negative assessment. Western culture may have viewed suicide as a serious crime, but no longer, you don't go to jail or get probation for attempting suicide. As for all of w. culture viewing it as an offense against God, I think that's way too general and assumes a religious viewpoint for all western people, many of whom identify as agnostic or atheistic. Also the phrase "serious crime" probably shouldn't be used in conjunction with civil institutions (like all of western culture) when the frame of reference is spiritual and not secular. I suggest changing the wording to remove the ref. to western culture or rewrite it as two or more seperate sentences. Phyesalis 19:43, 31 October 2007 (UTC)

Accidental Suicide vs Intentional

There is some ambiguity in this article: in it's defining line, the article states "Suicide (Latin sui caedere, to kill oneself) is the act of intentionally terminating ones own life." However, throughout the article there is reference to "accidental" suicide. How can intentionally terminating ones own life become accidental. I'm thinking either the definition needs to change, terminology needs to change surrounding "accidental", or something needs to be added to make it clearer how intentional acts can be "accidental". PsYoP78 03:31, 2 November 2007 (UTC)

goodbye world —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.112.194.72 (talk) 08:19, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

Minor Note on Photograph Caption

The caption for the photograph "Two Japanese Imperial Marines who committed suicide" says they "committed hari-kari by shooting themselves." This is incorrect as hara-kiri is the English word for "seppuku" meaning ritual suicide by disembowelment, not shooting. I suggest this caption be amended to simply "committed suicide by shooting themselves". --81.1.82.39 (talk) 22:48, 9 December 2007 (UTC)

Merge
Murder-suicide into Suicide#Murder-suicide

The standalone article has developed independent of the section in the parent article - though hasn't moved beyond a stub. Having two separate articles on the same topic creates a

sub-topic is usually discussed within the parent topic as much as possible until it needs breaking out due to amount of information. If the amount of information is three paragraphs or less (a stub length) then it is unlikely to need breaking out. SilkTork *SilkyTalk
12:42, 12 December 2007 (UTC)

I don't think it should be merged. Murder-suicide has its own category - so it probably requires an article.--h i s s p a c e r e s e a r c h 22:52, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
Murder-suicide also seems to be a fairly well recognized concept within law enforcement and among health professionals. I've been expanding the article with a few lines and a reference. I'll be removing the tag. ΑΩ (talk
) 20:18, 9 December 2008 (UTC)


Quick grammar note

In the murder-suicide section, Chris Beniot's act was called "famous". I believe this word should be replaced with "infamous" or "notorious." —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.60.254.45 (talk) 16:55, 29 December 2007 (UTC)

Slanted towards the USA?

I'm not here to start a flamewar. This is rather something I've noticed; why are the first (three I think) images on the page all of or pertaining to the USA? It seems odd that an article discussing this sort of "international act" should start with more than a couple of pictures of statistics from only one country (and the first two only regarding white males and females), why isn't the image of the suicide rate of the world or something more international used? Also, I was quickly passing through this article so this might be splitting hairs but I noticed two consecutive images with the caption "...suicide, rather then surrendering to U.S. somethings". I don't know why but there's something I don't like about that, but I'm having a hard time formulating it- maybe that it gives me the impression that the soldiers were so frightened of the US soldiers that they would rather die than fight them- this may as well be a silly point but I can't help getting that impression. I'm not trying to be anti-American (even though I'm pointing these things out :P), nor am I Japanese or German so I'd like to think I'm relatively unbiased. I just thought I should point the impressions I got from it. :) --BiT (talk) 02:24, 11 December 2008 (UTC)

Suicide/Archive 4 in animals

Mention if suicide has been observed in animals other than humans, and why, e.g., being last in the

pecking order? Jidanni (talk
) 21:44, 11 December 2008 (UTC)

Yes, some animals do commit suicide. Well,

lemmings do, though they may not know they are doing it, they may think the ocean has an opposite shore they are trying to reach. The snare (talk
) 05:14, 9 January 2009 (UTC)

Just out of curiosity, has there ever been any case of animal suicide? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.14.10.36 (talk) 05:37, 26 December 2008 (UTC)

http://www.cite-sciences.fr/francais/ala_cite/science_actualites/sitesactu/dossier.php?langue=an&id_dossier=501&id_article=8763&tc=QACTU :

To date, no one has been able to demonstrate definitively that suicide exists in animals. Lemmings, scorpions, whales, dogs, termites and other animals do not intentionally kill themselves. And although it is true that some parasites make their host kill itself1, the use of the world suicide in animals remains metaphorical. On a different scale, scientists have observed that some cells self-destruct, particularly during embryonic development. But it is their environment that causes them to die2.

1. To ensure its own survival, the nematomorph, a parasite of the cricket and locust, changes the insect's behaviour, causing it to jump into water and die. Source: Nature, 6 April 2006. 2. This phenomenon of self-destruction, also known as apoptosis or programmed cell death, is for example responsible for the formation of the fingers. Without it our hands would be shaped like mittens.

Jidanni (talk) 12:53, 6 February 2009 (UTC)

Jonestown

Eyewitness evidence from Jonestown's defectors/survivors suggests that many victims were coerced at gunpoint to "commit suicide" or murdered by other means if they did not comply with Jim Jones's orders. The majority of the commune's victims may have been murdered rather than willing participants of a suicide plot. The term "peer pressure" is insufficient to cover the causes of the tragedy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 63.226.104.225 (talk) 22:13, 2 January 2009 (UTC)

Suicide in animals

We should have a section for that too,it's been proven that other animals commit suicde 98.14.15.12 (talk) 19:04, 10 February 2009 (UTC)

PLEASE add this external link!!

{{

This topic indicates no more external links. If that's true, please remove one of the existing ones and add this to replace it. NO external link is more important!

I actually added this link july 16, 2008, but it's not here now. I could not find it anywhere in the logs. As I said then and repeat now, I was myself suicidal and could find no link for help HERE in this entry in Wikipedia ...the most logical place for people in trouble to look and exactly where I came. Had I not stumbled upon the site I'm trying to add, i would not be here now trying to add it. It is respectful, supportive, unbiased, and honest. PLEASE!

Mokeyboy (talk) 10:56, 9 March 2009 (UTC) Mokeyboy

There's already is another US-specific anti-suicide link in the external links section. No need to make it two, and stuffing that section with "Please don't kill yourself" links. This article is about the suicide phenomena, and not a hotline for people on the edge. And, to be very frank... During the year when I was close to suicide, if I had read something as rantingly ignorant of what it feels like to be suicidal as the link you want to add, it would have increased the likelihood of me killing myself. Dendlai (talk) 16:30, 9 March 2009 (UTC)

Sati in Hinduism

First of all suicide is bad!! The practice of Sati is not sanctioned by any authoritative text in Hinduism. It started as a voluntary excessive and peer pressure gradually led to more following during the middle ages. But thankfully apart from a few stray cases, this is unheard of, and outlawed in India today. I should hope somebody changes the "Sati is" on the Suicide page to "Sati was". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.8.230.53 (talk) 22:04, 14 March 2009 (UTC)

Suicidal Linguistics

See my (Stuart Sovatsky) Words From the Soul: Time, East/West Spirituality and Psychotherapeutic Narrative. (Albany: SUNY Press, 1998)Chapter 2 "Revenge Against Impermanence, Temporal-Spiritual Psychopathology" for a discussion of the grammatics (specifically, the predominant use of the past-tense in narrating one's life-story, as often happens in the course of various forms of psychotherapy, and also the contraction "it's" [all over] that conflates traumatic events of the past into a single, tiny word, "it," coupled to the tiny present-tense of to be, "is" lost in the single "s") of the English language that underlie suicidal language that guides suicidal actions. The chapter also covers themes of existential and Buddhist impermanence of life that suicide hopes to permanently "end." It discusses temporal indeterminacy as a therapeutic basis for hope and relief from the suicidal narrative. The chapter is based on the earlier article in The Review of Existential Psychiatry and Psychology, "Clinical Contemplations on Impermanence: Temporal and Linguistic Factors in Client Hopelessness." 21-23, 1993, 153-79. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Stuartcsova (talkcontribs) 00:32, 15 March 2009 (UTC)

NERO SUICIDE

The reference for Nero's suicide is correct (29) BUT he did not commit suicide because of the fire of Rome. I would erase the last part of that sentence; leaving Nero's death as an example of Roman views on disgrace. I'm NOT doing it as this is a semi-protected page and I'm too lazy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Slaclos (talkcontribs) 21:53, 24 March 2009 (UTC)

Correction

{{

editsemiprotected
}} I have no account, but someone who has might like to correct the following error: In footnote 28 and under "further reading" the title of the book by Geo Stone is quoted as "Suicide and failed suicide". The real title is "Suicide and attempted suicide". 84.61.8.40 (talk) 17:52, 15 April 2009 (UTC)

 Done Marek.69 talk 22:02, 15 April 2009 (UTC)

Partly.
In footnote 28 and under "further reading" the title of the book by Geo Stone is quoted as "Suicide and failed suicide". The real title is "Suicide and attempted suicide".
Thank you. 84.61.8.40 (talk) 16:44, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
I've updated the other reference now. Marek.69 talk 18:50, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

Suicide as Escape section

The "Suicide as Esacpe" section needs to be proofread. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 138.192.147.206 (talk) 21:17, 10 October 2009 (UTC)

Beachy Head reference.

Can't edit article at present, ref for Beachy Head is: [10] 78.146.120.132 (talk) 20:25, 20 April 2009 (UTC)

{{editsemiprotected}} Please add above link as a reference where 'citation needed is, at end of 'Suicide Locations' paragraph. Reference text: Beachy Head - Suicide Spot, BBC Inside Out. 89.240.13.162 (talk) 18:09, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

Done
talk
) 21:01, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

Section on overcoming the survival instinct?

Seems to me like the article doesn't discuss what mental events transpire while overcoming the survival instinct as a person decides to take their life. As in, how a person rationalizes suicide to the point of trumping this instinct. Does this belong here? --86.197.188.189 (talk) 20:28, 11 May 2009 (UTC)

Impact of suicide

"It is estimated that each suicide in the United States leaves an average of six people intimately affected by the death, either as a spouse, parent, significant other, sibling, or child of the deceased person. These people are referred to as survivors."

If this last statement made sense, then I would be a breast cancer survivor.Godofredo29 (talk) 15:46, 23 May 2009 (UTC)

It is estimated that 80% of all in home suicide scenes are cleaned up by a close friend, significant other, or a family member. Those that clean up a suicide scene of a close friend, significant other, or a family member are 75% more likely to commit suicide later on in life.

75% more likely than who? than the population at large or other close people who didn't clean up a scene? 75% sounds like a lot but does depression run in families?
'signifigant other' , how about 'lover' or 'partner'
'referred to as survivors.' - by who? suicide support community? population at large?142.177.65.176 (talk) 00:38, 29 October 2009 (UTC)

I have removed the text about 'cleaning up' and the 75% statistic as the referenced did not give credible data for the citing of these statistics. Feel free to put them back in if a more sound source can be found. For your second point about the term 'survivor', this is a very common term used by the mental health service user community - the survivor movement is very well known. See for example these wikipedia pages: World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry, Psychiatric survivors movement. Jenafalt (talk) 11:18, 29 October 2009 (UTC)

Thanks for checking that ref and eliminating the
:unsupported claims. N2e (talk
) 12:51, 29 October 2009 (UTC)

Tags

Removed Globalize and Refimprove as their placement was judgmental given that there are 50 in-line references, a clear indication of both some cross-country comparisons and appropos this being the English wiki some concentration on the US. The other language wikis have developed articles and the degree of both these attributes is appropriate for the current article length. If they are justified then expand and others probably are as well. Lycurgus (talk) 04:17, 13 May 2009 (UTC)

Extra Space Between Hatnotes And Lead

Please leave only one line of white space.68.148.149.184 (talk) 09:23, 16 May 2009 (UTC)

 Done 68.x, if you create an account, you could edit semi-protected pages like this yourself. :) LadyofShalott 18:23, 16 May 2009 (UTC)

Good example

The korean former president, Ro moo hyen —Preceding unsigned comment added by Moneyjack123 (talkcontribs) 02:09, 2 June 2009 (UTC)

Suicide and Evolution

-Recently,my book 'Suicide and Evolution: A Philosophical Analysis of the Definition of Suicide and an Examination of the Relationship Between Suicide and Evolution' was published by Muller Verlag-

ISBN 978-3-639-13444-5. I suggest that the general ideas from this book should be added to the Wikipedia article on Suicide under the section Philosophical Perspectives. I would be happy to provide a summary, in order to increase the common perception of the relationship between suicide and evolution. In my book, I first provide a historical-philosophical account of suicide including Plato, Immanuel Kant, and David Hume. Then I detail the relevant theoretical shifts within evolutionary theory that provide an enhanced understanding of the phenomenon of suicide. Finally, I provide an action theoretic analysis of the definition and extension of suicide. I am new to Wikipedia and apparently cannot change the content of the article, though I assure you that I am well qualified to write on this topic. Metabenji (talk
) 19:36, 3 June 2009 (UTC)

Welcome to Wikipedia! This is not my field of expertise, but as a general advice; perhaps you could write a first revision of your summary in this section and if consensus is to post it, then someone will add it to the actual article. Obviously, correcting errors and adding additional information in this manner would be crude and cumbersome, but for the first revision and as a temporary solution it should be feasible -- until you are able to make changes with your own account. Posix memalign (talk) 11:41, 21 August 2009 (UTC)

International Association for Suicide Prevention

Hello, you may want to include the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) (www.iasp.info) in your external links. Many thanks Iasp suicide (talk) 18:01, 18 June 2009 (UTC)

The Religion

Under the religion, it states one of the ten commandments as being "thou shall not kill" This is incorrect for the bible states "thou shall not murder" there is a huge difference between the two--70.128.42.216 (talk) 02:34, 12 July 2009 (UTC)

That depends on which translation you use... Dendlai (talk) 04:51, 12 July 2009 (UTC)

Universalising article

I am going to start work on universalising the article by taking out the data and diagrams that solely focus on suicide in the USA and adding back in more universal statements. Perhaps the references to suicide in the USA could then be moved into their own page? Jenafalt (talk) 20:49, 16 July 2009 (UTC)

I have significantly cut down the epidemiology of suicide section. I cut out parts that were contradictory, lacked references, were not universal (for example the age pattern of suicide rate differs significantly between countries - the American example given was not standard across even 'developed' countries). I removed the section on season and suicide for lack of references and because it was not universal about misconceptions rather than what actually occured. Jenafalt (talk) 21:02, 16 July 2009 (UTC)

Suicide prevention

I'm looking for opinions on whether or not there should be a short paragraph within the page which is concerned with suicide prevention. I think its missing one. What do you think? Jenafalt (talk) 21:22, 16 July 2009 (UTC)

develop it into its own article - there's a huge amouunt of infotrmation there. eesopceially when you include suicde prevention acorss diffrentr countries. NotAnIP83:149:66:11 (talk) 10:14, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

Animal Suicide

Is there any information on whether suicide has been observed in animals? A very interesting topic, but there is nothing about it in the article. Suit Endeavour (talk) 01:49, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

Suicide and anti-depressants

Do anti-depressants cause suicide and should more information be provided on this topic in the article? Neurofish (talk) 19:38, 27 August 2009 (UTC)Neurostar


Scandinavian Countries

It's often claimed that suicide rates in the Scandinavian countries are extremely high, but that doesn't seem to be the case according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate . Perhaps this should be mentioned? 88.88.186.149 (talk) 17:09, 7 September 2009 (UTC)

Cause is debt bondage

May I add a link to Debt bondage which causes lots of suicide, even in children whose parents can't get out of debt, & being upset about being unable to dress like their friends, do what friends do, etc? Stars4change (talk) 02:57, 8 September 2009 (UTC)

There's nothing said about connecting suicide to debt. Does this mean it's never been studied or considered a cause? Stars4change (talk) 01:53, 5 October 2009 (UTC)
Please feel free to work on it. There is lots.
talk · contribs · email
) 03:29, 26 November 2009 (UTC)

Support?

Given that people who are ideating about suicide might search it on the internet and end up here is it appropriate to give a support link here? What do others think? Jenafalt (talk) 19:11, 23 September 2009 (UTC)

I found this one,Befrienders World Wide which is a world wide website for helplines. What do you think?--Literaturegeek | T@1k? 02:39, 24 September 2009 (UTC)

I've now added the link to Befrienders in the external links section. Jenafalt (talk) 12:10, 21 November 2009 (UTC)

Removing inflammatory comments

In the article, under the "France" heading, someone stated--"During the Napoleonic era, suicide was seen as an acceptable way to release oneself from a dishonorable circumstance (such as bankruptcy). and i don't like the French".

The latter sentence should be removed. I'm new to editing Wiki articles and I'm not sure if this is the appropriate way to address this, so please forgive my ignorance. Adri71 (talk) 21:30, 11 October 2009 (UTC)

This is the wrong article, it was this article Cultural views of suicide where that text was. It was vandalism which I have reverted.See this link. You can check the edit history and click on the recent edits to undo or revert vandalism or else fix it by manually editing the article.--Literaturegeek | T@1k? 21:41, 11 October 2009 (UTC)

Watch tower citation

An editor keeps adding back citations of the watch tower organisation for medical statistics. This is not an appropriate reference per

WP:MEDRS. I am not going to revert again as I have aleady reverted this editor twice. I would recommend discussion here if the deletion of the citations are still challenged.--Literaturegeek | T@1k?
21:04, 3 November 2009 (UTC)

Completely agree with you LG that watchtower is not a good enough reference. This information is supported by Meel B (2006). "Epidemiology of suicide by hanging in Transkei, South Africa". Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 27 (1): 75–8. ) 02:43, 4 November 2009 (UTC)
Here is another cached ref http://74.125.155.132/scholar?q=cache:FdYxbbS-rdAJ:scholar.google.com/+suicide+rates+have+increased++worldwide&hl=en
talk · contribs · email
) 02:46, 4 November 2009 (UTC)
Okay found something I am happy with the WHO which it seems is were this originally comes from http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/suicideprevent/en/ And it seems that half the web is plagiarizing them. ) 02:48, 4 November 2009 (UTC)
Who ref looks good.--Literaturegeek | T@1k? 21:55, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Map

Is this map based on a data set or just a derivative of the WHO map found here? http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/suicideprevent/en/ Either way it should probably be referenced.

talk · contribs · email
) 02:56, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Found a data set here for 2008 http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide_rates/en/index.html Our map does not give the year.
talk · contribs · email
) 02:58, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Like to add interactive world map Current Worldwide Suicide Rate as a external link. What you guys think about that. Thiagarajan Varadharaju (talk) 17:56, 18 February 2010 (UTC)

Ordered

Ordered per

talk · contribs · email
) 20:31, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Good job.--Literaturegeek | T@1k? 22:08, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Image size

IMO images are best if set a default. A couple are currently set at 250. All should be aware that they can set preferences for default pictures from 180 to what ever they wish. Any other thoughts? Removing Antarctica would improve the image.

talk · contribs · email
) 22:22, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Since unregistered readers - and that's the vast majority of wikipedia's users - don't have the option of setting preferences, we need to ensure that we don't make the images so small that the very point of them becomes lost, and that is to present information that is better presented visually. I am grateful that James has found a reasonable balance between catering for low resolution displays and the problems of older readers, such as myself, whose visual acuity is not what it was. For those interested in image sizes, there's a discussion on what range of image sizes should be in preferences, and what the default should be, at WT:Image use policy#Proposal to increase the default thumbnail dimensions. --RexxS (talk) 22:59, 4 November 2009 (UTC)
Addendum, rather than rehash previous discussions, the one at MOS Talk is worth study. --RexxS (talk) 23:08, 4 November 2009 (UTC)
Thanks RexxS.
talk · contribs · email
) 23:33, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Updated maps

Nice work on the gender specific maps, James. Would you consider that placing them with the subsection "Gender and suicide" would be as appropriate? At present, any browser wider than about 1340px will have the maps floating against the image above it, rather than the right margin. Moving them down a section avoids that problem on all browsers up to and including 1920px wide. --RexxS (talk) 03:48, 6 November 2009 (UTC)

talk · contribs · email
) 03:59, 6 November 2009 (UTC)

Reffering to the Jim Jones Guyana Massacre, i think it would be great to mention that people were pressured into it did not knowingly drink the poison or have a choice in the matter. The reason for this request is that my aunt died in this massacre and i would like it very much if would do her and me this honor. Respectly, Lenni Johnston. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.100.45.227 (talk) 06:08, 8 November 2009 (UTC)

Welcome to Wikipedia which as you know is a work in progress. Find a reliable reference and feel free to add this in the appropriate section.
talk · contribs · email
) 13:53, 8 November 2009 (UTC)

Method

Here is an interesting paper: Ajdacic-Gross V, Weiss MG, Ring M; et al. (2008). "Methods of suicide: international suicide patterns derived from the WHO mortality database". Bull. World Health Organ. 86 (9): 726–32.

talk · contribs · email
) 18:07, 25 November 2009 (UTC)

Suicide and the media

) 22:47, 25 November 2009 (UTC)

Parasuicide

properly sourced) article on the subject? (I'm not watching this page.) WhatamIdoing (talk
) 07:37, 2 December 2009 (UTC)

I have recreated
parasuicide and added some additional good quality sources.--Literaturegeek | T@1k?
19:59, 2 December 2009 (UTC)

Slight abuse of statistics...

There's a bit of abuse of statistics here. The article states that 40% of world's suicides are accounted for by Japan, India and China combined. This suggests that that's a high proportion whereas in reality as almost 39% of the world's population lives there, it's hardly a significant statistic.

ItsIllak (talk) 23:14, 23 January 2010 (UTC)

Can we also say something about the ridiculous introduction? One of the most puzzling, intensely personal experiences in the world and you aim to attribute it to a cluster of mental illnesses and warning signs that precede the act. It is entirely disingenuous and characteristic of mock-objective pseudoscience.

Suicide vs Self-harm

Acts motivated by self-harm are not considered suicidal attempts, as the text points out. But the following sentence, that the is no causal relationship between the two, is unwarranted and controversial. At least one theorist, Thomas Joiner, in "Why people die by suicide",posits that acts of self-harm can precipitate suicide attemps. The author speculates that the experience of pain during self-harm can provide to the sufferer a mental image of what is expected during self-affliction of pain, thereby alleviating some inhibition towards a suicidal attempt. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 142.85.5.20 (talk) 10:25, 30 January 2010 (UTC)

Suicide vis-a-vis afterlife beliefs

One aspect of the "escape" motivation for suicide that I have not seen addressed: Have there ever been studies to determine what percentage of suicides and suicide attempts are undertaken by individuals who believe that death will usher in some sort of better, higher, or even merely benign afterlife (e.g., heaven, reincarnation, etc.) versus those who hold no such beliefs and desire annihilation or non-existence in preference to suffering? If such studies have been done, a brief summation of the findings would be a useful addition to this article. StanislavJ (talk) 12:44, 13 February 2010 (UTC)

Up to 25%

Up to... should not be used in delivering statistical information unless you deliberately seek to mislead the reader —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.108.164.214 (talk) 22:45, 19 February 2010 (UTC)

10th-leading cause of death worldwide?

That is is what the article says in the second paragraph, however I can't seem to find solid, recent statistics verifying that suicide is the tenth leading cause of death worldwide. It seems to be generally shown between the 9th and the 14th, but I don't know which is the most accurate and recent. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Micropsia (talkcontribs) 21:42, 26 February 2010 (UTC)

Suicide Pacts

A section on Suicide Pacts would be a good addition. S-Britland (talk) 18:50, 5 April 2009 (UTC)

 Done --Koolabsol (talk) 15:12, 16 March 2010 (UTC)

Suicide in animals?

This article only discusses humans. Is there any incidence of suicidal behavior in animals? As in, animals that consciously choose to end their lives, not animals who are prone to killing themselves by accident. --86.197.188.189 (talk) 20:32, 11 May 2009 (UTC)

And no animals don't purposefully end their lives, as opposed to accepting or risking death. Lycurgus (talk) 04:18, 13 May 2009 (UTC)
There have been cases. An octopus that stabbed itself with its beak after being abandoned by its trainers (Reference ~ The Noonday Demon by Andrew Solomon) and dogs that have drowned themselves when they were rejected by their pack or family (Reference ~ The Savage God by A. Alvarez)Neues (talk) 09:24, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
What about
lemmings? There's no proof, per se, but they don't exactly avoid it. ReignMan (talk
) 08:56, 11 February 2010 (UTC)

The social insects- ants and termites especially- provide remarkable instances of self sacrifice for the sake of the group. Clearly, these insects lack the intentionality that human being have and thus it is difficult to assert that they are instances of suicide. However, from an evolutionary perspective the instinctual self sacrifice of the soldier ant provides a stronger case for the adaptive nature of the act precisely because humans can have goals other than evolutionary. I take up these issues in 'Suicide and Evolution: A Philosophical Analysis of the Definition of Suicide and an Examination of the Relationship Between Suicide and Evolution'

) 19:39, 3 June 2009 (UTC)

The only issue there is that (as far as I know) social insects have no morale. There's a theory that the social insect is a superorganism much like the human. We are made up of many individual cells, all of them alive. Like our individual cells, the insects gladly die in order to serve the superorganism. Perhaps that's the case? ReignMan (talk) 05:11, 10 March 2010 (UTC) ReignMan (talk) 05:10, 10 March 2010 (UTC)

"Commit suicide"

Clearly this phrase is the norm, but doesn't it imply that suicide is a crime? Could this be addressed in the article? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.167.71.103 (talk) 04:51, 31 March 2010 (UTC)

Might not the perceived meaninglessness of life also be cited as a reason for suicide?

talk
) 09:56, 5 April 2010 (UTC)

Probably not directly. Unless we have a reliable source describing a philosophical reason for suicide, rather than despair and depression which are already covered. An existential crisis is not per se a proximate cause of suicide. I'll add that if most people were honest about their day jobs, they'd probably identify with Sisyphus too.Mattnad (talk) 20:14, 5 April 2010 (UTC)

Suicide And A Tendency To Creative Writing

There should be something about the tendency, particularly among journalists, to view suicides as an opportunity to practice one's creative writing. For example, journalists often completely ignore the sources of authoritative information on suicide, such as the CDC's fact sheets (www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/suicide/index.html), in favor of something out of their own imagination.Godofredo29 (talk) 16:25, 23 May 2009 (UTC)

Would you care to pull at least one example out of an orafice of your choosing? I'm not saying you're not right, I'm just saying I have no idea where you are going with this or what you are trying to say. What exactly are people imagining and how does this contradict the "facts"? I'm truly interested. 213.167.158.254 (talk) 12:59, 21 April 2010 (UTC)

1 million a year

So one in 4000 people kill themselves? And 1 in 400 try? Daniel Christensen (talk) 00:50, 10 April 2010 (UTC)

One in 6800 people kill themselves yes...
talk · contribs · email
) 12:28, 13 April 2010 (UTC)

Prevention

This article could us a section on prevention. Have created one just by taking some info from

) 12:29, 13 April 2010 (UTC)

i dont agree with suicide and i feel that people should tell some one how they feel before killing them selfs —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.206.224.210 (talk) 10:08, 22 April 2010 (UTC)

Citation

In the "Substance Abuse Section" it is claimed that "Up to 25% of drug addicts and alcoholics commit suicide". This seems to be an outrageously high number; I have known many alcoholics and drug addicts and not a single one has committed suicide. Such a dramatic claim should be supported by a proper citation; however, there is no citation to substantiate the claim that one in four addicts will kill themselves. I tried to remove the line, but I don't think I am able to edit this page, so if anyone can edit this page please remove the line or provide a proper citation. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.111.128.166 (talk) 21:36, 26 June 2010 (UTC)

Pending changes

This article is one of a number selected for the early stage of the trial of the

Wikipedia:Pending Changes system on the English language Wikipedia. All the articles listed at Wikipedia:Pending changes/Queue
are being considered for level 1 pending changes protection.

The following request appears on that page:

Comments on the suitability of theis page for "Pending changes" would be appreciated.

Please update the Queue page as appropriate.

Note that I am not involved in this project any much more than any other editor, just posting these notes since it is quite a big change, potentially

Regards, Rich Farmbrough, 00:12, 17 June 2010 (UTC).

AfD

This AfD may interest some of you.--Epeefleche (talk) 14:29, 26 June 2010 (UTC)

Human suicide only?

Some animals commit suicide too; shouldn't we mention that?

talk/stalk
06:33, 9 July 2010 (UTC)

A The article is on human suicide. There are many instances of self destruction in the animal kingdom. Whales and dolphins occasionally take part in mass beachings, when they are put back into deep water they turn around and beach themselves again and die. Is it suicide in the human sense? Did they all lose their jobs at the same time? Black widow spiders kill the male after mating, so do praying mantis' etc. Somehow putting in that salmonella commit suicide is comical in a dark sort of way. 7mike5000 (talk) 07:56, 9 July 2010 (UTC)
What is "the human sense" of suicide? If it is being human, then that's circular reasoning. If this article is about human suicide, then why does it include "living beings" in its opening sentence? Evidently other editors would support a broader definition, so it is conjectural. These articles question the notion that animals can not commit suicide. [11][12][13] What sources can you provide that state that suicide is exclusively a human phenomenon? ArtistScientist (talk) 09:12, 9 July 2010 (UTC)
It says "living being" because I changed it yesterday. :) But aside from that, perhaps it will help suicidal humans, and anyone else interested in human suicide, put things in perspective if they understand the role of suicide in the animal world? We can eventually split off human suicide to
talk/stalk
15:49, 9 July 2010 (UTC)
Agree, except for the ) 16:04, 9 July 2010 (UTC)
Rationale? (I ask as I work on 16:10, 9 July 2010 (UTC)
I was hoping for an article on suicide in animals (humans included). Also you mistakenly included salmonella in your article, a bacteria. ) 02:25, 10 July 2010 (UTC)
Regarding animal suicide: most of the examples appear to fall into the area of self-sacrifice, which is explicitly excluded in the definition of suicide in this article. Perhaps they'd be more appropriate there? Dcoetzee 17:59, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
The problem is, if self-sacrifice and suicide are deemed to be mutually exclusive, where do you draw the line and say that killing oneself is self-sacrifice rather than suicide? Suppose someone kills himself in order to draw attention to a political cause. Does that count as self-sacrifice or suicide? I would argue that it would be both, and most sources that I'm finding on
talk/stalk
18:33, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
Leave the section where it is it's perfect. After someone with suicidal ideations depresses the crap out of themselves reading about suicide, they can read "Some species of termites have soldiers that explode, covering their enemies with sticky goo"

It would be a good epitaph


Here Lies John Doe

He went home to be with the Lord

After exploding and covering his enemies

With sticky goo

Not much different than 19:07, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
Just an interesting tidbit for anyone interested in animal suicide.Wikiposter0123 (talk) 23:33, 21 July 2010 (UTC)
Maybe life just got too "ruff" for them.
talk/stalk
00:27, 22 July 2010 (UTC)

Suicide-Too much information?

Moved from Wikipedia:Village_pump_(miscellaneous)#Suicide-Too_much_information.3F

Hi, I am concerned by the level of detail contained in the entry for 'suicide'. I am aware that there are strict guidelines journalists have to adhere to when reporting any information about suicide. I wondered why these do not apply to Wikipedia. I have lost people close to me to suicide and am worried that Wikipedia's entry reads very much like an irresponsible 'how to' guide in places. This could prove fatal to a vulnerable, distressed person trawling the internet for sources of support and help. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.4.77.107 (talk) 12:22, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

The page does not read like a how-to guide. It does contain discussion of the various methods, historical and modern, by which suicide has commonly been performed, but this is an obvious and essential part of an encyclopedic article on suicide. If you have a concern with a specific part of the article, the best place to bring it up would be the article talk page, in this case Talk:Suicide. --erachima talk 17:16, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
I understand your concerns here, but discussing suicide without discussing methods of suicide would be omitting critical information that is important for the many people who are not suicidal to understand the topic and its importance. I think the article is fine as it stands, particularly in light of the inconclusive scientific studies regarding whether exposure to information about suicide motivates suicide (mentioned in this article). Dcoetzee 17:56, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

I would object to that whole principle of

ignorance is strength, that holds that we can prevent suicide by getting rid of information about it. True, we would perhaps reduce the number of people who commit suicide after reading our suicide-related articles, but correlation is not causation. It is quite possible that a lot of suicidal people struggle to understand their feelings, and in their search for meaning, browse through our articles after doing a Google search. Much of the suicide-related information on the Internet is biased one way or the other, or laden with emotional propaganda, and thus not ideal for people who try to approach such decisions from a logical, unbiased point of view. Wikipedia can hopefully provide a source of balanced, factual information that will be useful to researchers attempting to understand suicide epidemics
, suicidal people themselves, surviving family members of suicides, etc.

Even the

19:04, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

To me, it is also a question of democracy and egalitarianism (as in all people should be treated as equals and have the same rights). With maybe a few exceptions, I think it is fundamentally wrong if some people would have information that they think other people should not have access to, even if this would be "for their own good". For me, this is basically the idea with Wikipedia: information available to all. Also information on suicide. Lova Falk talk 16:28, 17 July 2010 (UTC)
I wonder how other encyclopædias treat suicide? Perhaps we can emulate how they approach it. 69.251.180.224 (talk) 22:49, 22 July 2010 (UTC)
They usually devote a couple pages to it, and examine it from an epidemiological/sociological perspective.
talk/stalk
22:53, 22 July 2010 (UTC)
Glamorizing suicide increases the rate of suicide. This is something some media has done in the past. There is no evidence that discussing the risk / treatment / etc. for suicide has this effect. I do not think this wiki page glamorizes suicide and therefor feel these concerns are misplaced.) 23:45, 22 July 2010 (UTC)

psychological causes reverted edits

I have reverted these changes until they can be added again with a better range of sources. There is a great deal of debate about the psychological causes of suicide and this needs to be reflected in a discussion which gives information from a wider range of sources. These sources are all articles by the same person (and give links to a personal webpage at manchester university). Since the user who added these pages also added similar text to other pages on the same day and citing the same sources then it looks also as if this might be some sort of academic self-promotion. Jenafalt (talk) 20:35, 7 August 2010 (UTC)

Doubtful this is academic self-promation. When I read up on an author I go and look to see what info from that author I can add to Wikipedia. Probably a similar occurrence here.Wikiposter0123 (talk) 21:00, 7 August 2010 (UTC)
Quite Janafalt -
assume good faith
!

Sorry I must have been in a grumpy mood when I made that comment. I was just alerted to the fact that this person had added work from the same sources to multiple pages after not having edited Wikipedia since last year. It rang some alarm bells. I'll try to not be so suspicious in the future! To clarify - I think it would be fine to re-add this information to the page, but it needs to be much more balanced as the text and related sources that were added only relate to one small aspect of this very complex and contentious issue. Jenafalt (talk) 12:26, 9 August 2010 (UTC)

Kk np, although thanks for the idea of using Wikipedia for self-promotion. I'll be sure to do that with my own works in the future. :PWikiposter0123 (talk) 18:51, 24 August 2010 (UTC)

Minor Edit in Introduction

The first sentence read "Suicide is the act of a human being intentionally causing his own death." I changed it from "his" to "his or her", because suicide can be attributed to both men and women. If anyone wishes to change it back or change it to something else, they are welcome to do so, but I do not think it should only be attributed to men. LaughinSkull (talk) 10:24, 24 August 2010 (UTC)

I've moved your post to the bottom since older posts go at the top and newer ones begin at the bottom. I've changed "his or her" to "their", thanks for bringing this to our attention.Wikiposter0123 (talk) 18:55, 24 August 2010 (UTC)

Picture

Debated image. Person depicted(Thomas Chatterton) became a symbol of the "tragic genius" after his suicide and depictions of him in art(multiple poems and paintings) is usually heavily romanticized.
Suggested alternative. Depiction of a generic suicide by Manet. Won't conjure up the same connotations as using Thomas Chatterton.


I'd like to suggest that the picture of Thomas Chatterton be removed, or at least displayed less prominently in the article. The article is not about suicide in the romantic movement, romantic literature, or other such subjects - it's about suicide in general. A picture of a Romantic poet is hardly appropropriate to an article about a mental health care issue of this kind. It also runs the risk of glamorizing suicide, making it look exciting, sexy, romantic or whatever. Surely it's obvious that we shouldn't be doing that?

talk
) 23:54, 27 May 2010 (UTC)

It is the best image there is currently on the page thus returned it. I do not know have an image of a dead person glamorizes suicide.
talk · contribs · email
) 18:16, 26 July 2010 (UTC)
That dead person, Thomas Chatterton became a symbol for the tragic, brilliant artistic genius who perished under a non-understanding world, and that image does highly romanticize it(as was the artist's intent).
Another image you could use would be Manet's Le Suicide. Using the image of Chatterton is POV because it might seem like we are suggesting those who commit suicide are usually geniuses who are misunderstood by the world(instead of depressed, upper middle class white males).Wikiposter0123 (talk) 20:24, 18 August 2010 (UTC)
It's supposed to be an academic article on suicide. Including any depiction of a person who is supposed to be dead, via suicide or any other means serves no valid purpose. People who are having suicidal ideations have a tendency to look up "suicide" on the internet, an example is the author Iris Chang. The article gets on average 5k hits a day.[14]. It's not a far stretch of the imagination to say a large majority of those 5k visitors may be contemplating suicide. If any article requires tact and common sense this one does.
When a person is suicidal there is a tendency to try and find external sources to give validity to a course of action, whether or not they should die. An image depicting a dead person may seem innocuous to many, but to a person who is suicidal it can become an object of fixation....A negative one. 7mike5000 (talk) 19:01, 19 August 2010 (UTC)
Especially when the image features a tragic artist lying in his bleak, dark room, with the light of the sunrise filtering through the window and landing upon his body, but not lighting up other parts of the room.Wikiposter0123 (talk) 20:13, 19 August 2010 (UTC)
A drawing of a dead person is not the form of content that promotes suicide if you read the literature. This appears to be an effort to suppress content. With respect to glamorizing suicide anyone heard of Romeo and Juliet?
talk · contribs · email
) 16:50, 25 August 2010 (UTC)

Sexual Orientation

I think there's a bit of a problem with the wording under this heading. It says:

"It appears that about one in three teen aged suicides is by a gay or lesbian. Since homosexuals represent only about 5% of the population, gays and lesbians are greatly over-represented."

I'm not sure if it is gramatically incorrect to use "gay" as a noun, but it is certainly offensive. As well as this, the author has not specified that the statistics are from the US. Perhaps this sentance should instead read thus:

"It appears that, of the teenagers who commit suicide in the US, about one in three are known to be gay. As only approximately 5% of the population is openly gay, this statistic suggests that teenagers who are gay are far more likely to commit suicide than those who not."

However, since the pervious sentence was copied directly from a website which does not seem particularly reliabe, and is very vague about facts, I think it would be better to use the more convincing evidence from and existing Wikiedpia article entitled "Suicide among LGBT youth":

A 1989 U.S. government study found that LGBT (Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender) youth are two to three times more likely to attempt suicide than other young people.[1] This finding was supported by a 2001 study that found LGBT adolescents 2.3-2.5 times more likely to commit suicide than their heterosexual peers.[2]

And I copied their references: 1 ^ Feinleib, Marcia R., Ed. Report of the Secretary's Task Force on Youth Suicide. Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration (DHHS/PHS), Rockville, MD. 1989 2 ^ Russell ST, Joyner K (August 2001). "Adolescent sexual orientation and suicide risk: evidence from a national study". Am J Public Health 91 (8): 1276–81.

.

I would suggest also linking this page, but since the Suicide article is not specific to America as this LGBT article seems (for some reason) to be only about the US, this does not seem like such a good idea. Certainly I think that this section should include statistics about other countries, which I will spend some time finding later.

Emould (talk) 02:56, 4 November 2010 (UTC)

Removed unreffed section found below

==Representations of suicide in popular culture==

Film

Television

This policy does not say "Any picture is better than no picture." Since Edouard Manet, The Suicide is related to the topic but not the article, and does not add to the readers' understanding in any meaningful way, I have deleted it. If someone can defend its inclusion on policy grounds, please do so. --Anthonyhcole (talk
) 11:39, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
I think the Manet image is relevant: it depicts a person who committed suicide. As for "providing information" it shows an artist's rendition of what a suicide victim may look like afterwards, and shows that shooting with a handgun is sometimes done. I'm not saying it is a great image for this article, but it is relevant. Also, deleting in the middle of an RfC is not appropriate, especially when there is a poll above ("Should some image be used or not?") is strongly in favor of keeping some image. --Noleander (talk) 13:56, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
It is relevant to the topic, and I've come round to it being relevant to the article. I was thinking it needs to reference something specific in the article, but now think it meets that criterion, as it is emblematic of the article's entire contents. Can you persuade me on the third point. I'm not convinced it tells the reader anything a 4-year-old television-watcher doesn't already know about suicide. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 14:15, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
I'm sorry, what is the "third point"? --Noleander (talk) 14:18, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Sorry, I was being opaque. 1. Relevant to the topic 2. relevant to the article and 3. Images are primarily meant to inform readers by providing visual information and should increase readers' understanding of the subject matter. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 14:26, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
You are correct: the Manet image is weak on point #3. I can imagine other images that would be far more informative. One could argue that it has some informational value ("suicides sometimes happen alone; in bedrooms; with a handgun") as well as meta-information ("Notable impressionistic painters considered suicide a valid subject"; "there are famous paintings of suicide"). I guess my interpretation of the policies is that images are super important for articles (see FA and GA requirements), and that trumps the fact that an image may be not-very-informative. I guess I endorse that policy you quoted above: "Effort should therefore be made to improve quality and choice of images or captions ... rather than deleting them." --Noleander (talk) 14:44, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Images are often beneficial to an article and encouraged if appropriate ones can be found. But there are no requirements or encouragements anywhere on WP for an article to have a lead image. That the info box template has a image parameter doesn't mean we have to use it. We need to have a stronger reason for picking an image for the lead than that it turned up in a Google image search and we had some white space at the top-right of the article. Colin°Talk 18:29, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Well, we're certainly making a serious effort. :) But that policy you just cited does not say "a picture that does not conform to policy is preferable to no picture." And I'm pretty sure GA and FA guidelines don't trump
WP:IUP policies. I'm not familiar with the GA and FA guidelines but if there is indeed a conflict, the policies and guidelines will need to be reconciled. And any 4- (maybe 6-) year-old television-watcher knows that suicides sometimes happen alone; in bedrooms; with a handgun. And the picture does not say notable impressionistic painters considered suicide a valid subject. --Anthonyhcole (talk
) 14:54, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

(undent) I don't think the Manet is a terrible image to use for the article, but we could do better. I'm a little concerned that "educational value" might be construed to mean "blood and guts and gore" which really aren't all that educational. Dead people are messy, not exactly a useful or necessarily on-topic lesson (i.e. the article isn't about anatomy or corpses). What can we provide visually that's actually educational? I've proposed either something from history (e.g. Socrates) or something from literature (e.g. R&J), which both have specific educational value. SDY (talk) 14:42, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

But how would an image of Romeo and Juliet add to understanding? Or a picture of Socrates? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 14:54, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
History and culture are both important elements of a comprehensive article. We should be covering more than the clinical aspects, especially for something that's such a common event in drama and tragedy both real and imagined. SDY (talk) 15:08, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Excellent point. That reminds me of a recent battle in the Astrology article over some material, and another editor pointed out that 99% of the article focused on the scientific veracity of astrology, but the article had virtually no mention of the huge influence of astrology on society/culture (e.g. daily newspaper astrology columns). I think the gist of the comment was: "Maybe you guys should stop battling over this scientific dispute, and start trying to fill in the missing material". --Noleander (talk) 15:20, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Agreed. I would like to see thoughtful erudite coverage of suicide in history and culture. But this had better not turn into a bunch of dudes who've never shown any interest in suicide before, slapping some shit together after a frenetic afternoon of googling, just so you can make some point. Provided you can reassure others that the authority/ies you base the section/s on is/are respected and uncontroversial, you should have no problem. That will justify a picture or two, for sure, as far as Wikipedia policy goes. Remember, images should be inside the major section to which they relate. Manet would still be inappropriate for the infobox here.
As far as looking yourself in the mirror goes, I recommend including no images at all, until we have a better understanding of their potential impact on the vulnerable. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 15:49, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

" But this had better not turn into a bunch of dudes who've never shown any interest in suicide before, slapping some shit together after a frenetic afternoon of googling, just so you can make some point. "

— Anthonyhcole
Your thinly-veiled ad hominem attack is unhelpful. Axl ¤ [Talk] 16:43, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
I see nothing remotely inappropriate in what I said. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 16:56, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
If you do not "like" this image suggest a better one.
talk · contribs · email
) 17:13, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
I like the image. It doesn't conform to
WP:IMAGE. Images are primarily meant to inform readers and should increase readers' understanding of the subject matter. This image does not. --Anthonyhcole (talk
) 17:25, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

Yes and this image informs, it is only your opinion that it does not. Consensus is that we should have an image. We have agreed not to use one that romanticizes the subject matter.

) 17:47, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

What does it tell the reader? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 17:51, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

"I see nothing remotely inappropriate in what I said."

Duly noted. Axl ¤ [Talk] 17:57, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Illustrates a common method of suicide.
talk · contribs · email
) 17:58, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
What does it tell the reader he or she doesn't already know? That is, what does it inform him or her of? How does it increase his or her understanding? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 18:02, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Anthonyhcole, I have come the conclusion that you are here to promote your own fixed agenda, regardless of the consensus reached by the editors as a group. This is evidenced by the contempt that you display to opinions that vary from your own (the quote above and your response) and by your questions to Doc James when his statement is the very answer to the questions the you followed it with. Axl ¤ [Talk] 18:14, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
What does Manet's The Suicide tell the reader he or she doesn't already know, as prescribed by
WP:IUP? It appears to inform the reader of nothing and so does not comply with policy. Local consensus does not trump policy. Contempt? Not at all. I respect you all and have made that very clear in all my dealings with you here. --Anthonyhcole (talk
) 18:20, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

It does inform the reader of a number of things as mentioned (guns are a common medthod of suicide, the most common in the USA if I remember correct) there is a long history to suicide. This image does comply with policy.

) 18:44, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

I agree that it meets the expectations of those two policies. I think we can find a better image, but that's more of an editorial question. SDY (talk) 18:49, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
Everybody knows guns are a method of suicide. This image does not inform, or increase the understanding of the reader. Saying it does doesn't make it so. Tell me one thing it tells the reader that he or she doesn't already know, if you can. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 19:01, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
We will have to agree to disagree. I guess you could start another RfC to see what community consensus is.
talk · contribs · email
) 19:21, 29 September 2011 (UTC)
So you can't name one thing this image informs the reader of that he or she didn't already know? Can anybody? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 19:29, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

I have stated a couple of things. You could try to get consensus. Current consensus is that we should have an image. This one here does illustrate suicide. Therefore it does give information.

talk · contribs · email
) 20:43, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

7 : 10 does not represent a consensus position. But I'm discussing whether the Manet image conforms to policy. To do that it should improve the readers' understanding, it should inform the reader. Just tell me one thing it tells the reader that he or she doesn't already know. Everybody knows what a man lying in a bed with a gunshot looks like. What use is this picture? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 02:55, 30 September 2011 (UTC)
I've had advice from several editors now along the lines of "Yes, images that don't increase the readers' understanding are contrary to
request for comment open for a few more weeks to see if such evidence can be found. --Anthonyhcole (talk
) 05:53, 30 September 2011 (UTC)
Just like how everyone know what a ) 10:31, 30 September 2011 (UTC)
Yes, I've been thinking about chair for a bit, and have concluded an emblematic image for a topic isn't necessarily a bad thing. I still feel creepy about having depictions of suicide here but have no problem with you holding another view. I've emailed Prof. Keith Hawton's Oxford Centre for Suicide Reasearch asking for any input they may like to offer on the questions under discussion here but also on the article itself. Hopefully they'll take a look. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 14:47, 30 September 2011 (UTC):
Are the Tables, suicidal tables possibly suffering from major depression, bipolar disorder etc? Just curious. 7mike5000 (talk) 13:05, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
I deleted the image of Manet's le Suicide because:
  • It's in the same vein as the Death of Chatterton.
  • Consensus is for an image not that specific image
  • Nobody was awarded the exclusive rights to choose the image.
  • Considering it is a point of contention if an appropriate image can be found then others should be allowed to weigh in
  • Would you expect to see an image like that hanging on the wall of a mental health clinic? Of course not, you would think the people working their are twisted. Relevance here? The type of people trying to receive help at a mental health clinic i.e. clinically depressed, bipolar, suicidal etc. are the same type of people who seek information on the internet and the first spot in the search engine is Wikipedia. So why be twisted here? For decoration purposes? If it means so much for some people to decorate this page then find an appropriate image and put it up for discussion and can the acrimony and b.s. already. 7mike5000 (talk) 14:16, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
Feel free to propose a better one.
talk · contribs · email
) 16:32, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
I believe that the "tables" analogy was a specific reply to Anthonyhcole's statement "Everybody knows what a man lying in a bed with a gunshot looks like. What use is this picture?" Replace "man lying in bed with a gunshot" with "table". Axl ¤ [Talk] 16:41, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
To
User:Jmh649
: Just curious how is it that you seem to believe that you somehow have more authority than other users? Is your game plan just to wear people out so they say eff it and you get your way? Comments like this:
  • "If a better image can be found I would be happy to consider it". How is it that you have to be made "happy"?
  • "First of all people who are depressed and suicidal will not be reading Wikipedia." No offense this shows a marked lack of knowledge of the subject matter.
    Oh, the humanity
    , “Can't we just all get along?”
  • Googling suicide: Surfing for suicide information on the Internet.[45]
  • Suicide and the internet[46] This is from the British Medical Journal 7mike5000 (talk) 13:46, 2 October 2011 (UTC)
Wikipedia is an encyclopedia first and foremost. The argument of supposed "harm" is the same as the one raised for the
talk · contribs · email
) 13:57, 2 October 2011 (UTC)

The previous image is better as it shows suicide not someone who is sad such as the current image.

) 14:00, 2 October 2011 (UTC)

Socrates is a great subject for a picture but this one here does not display well at its current size.) 20:22, 2 October 2011 (UTC)
We have a detail from the same picture as the image in Template:suicide. I don't think we should re-use it.GideonF (talk) 08:34, 4 October 2011 (UTC)
I think you should stop already GideonF. I'm concerned that nobody is going to let you join in any reindeer games and then you may feel sad and alienated, which may cause depression which could lead to thoughts of suicide. 7mike5000 (talk) 11:59, 4 October 2011 (UTC)
Mike, I'm not sure why you've decided to make a mockery of this process instead of taking part constructively or what it is you think it's going to achieve, but if you want to do something that actually increases the odds of the article ending up the way you want it to end up then let me give you some advice: your side of the argument was better served when you were letting Anthony represent it.GideonF (talk) 12:42, 4 October 2011 (UTC)

(undent) Dragging this conversation back from the brink... As long as the image doesn't actually appear twice in the same article I don't think re-using it is a problem. There might actually be some logic to having the lead article have the same image as the template. Given that only someone looking very closely at the images would even see that the goblet is from the same painting, I don't think this is a big deal. SDY (talk) 16:07, 4 October 2011 (UTC)

Thanks for the advice Gideon. Can I give you some? Enough is enough already. It's not a matter of "increases the odds of the article ending up the way you want it to". That's the way you see it; it's not "my way" it's a matter of doing what is right. What is right in this case is making the article into a reputable encycylopedia article and you don't achieve that by posting images of what, taken out of context appear to be dead cartoon characters, that's besides the termites blowing themselves up, pea aphids, sticky goo, referring to people as organisms and the advertising section for how to kill yourself books.
Your arguments don't hold water, you have referenced lions, cigarettes, and war yet the article is about suicide. The novella that's been written on this page is because two people are hell bent of posting a cartoon of a dead body, not my "anti-suicide pov pushing". I'm the one that posted the chart on circumstances and methods as well as an example of a suicide prevention poster because they are directly relevant to and supported by the text.
Since this little debate began on September 4 at least 3,000 people have killed themselves in the United States alone, so I take the topic pretty seriously. As far as being an
POV. You do that by writing an encyclopedia article and providing information that is "relevant" and not worrying about decorating. Here is an example from the article on von Willebrand's disease, I added the information on coagulation laboratories and lab errors[48]. What POV am I pushing there? How about this one on pitutary incidentalomas[49] No POV just the facts. So get off it with that. Now someone finds an image that is not contentious yet you have to complain about that too. The time wasted on this Alice in Wonderland black is white debate could have been spent doing something productive for everyone involved. Go do something productive and spare the Dear Abby routine. 7mike5000 (talk
) 12:52, 5 October 2011 (UTC)
Well, any time you feel like taking part instyead of sneering from the sidelines, that's fine.GideonF (talk) 14:43, 6 October 2011 (UTC)
  1. ^ Comparison of groups within the U.S. | ReligiousTolerance.Org
  2. ^ Teasdale TW, Engberg AW, “Suicide after traumatic brain injury: a population study.” J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry (2001; 71: 436-440)
  3. ^ Silver JM, Kramer R, Greenwald S, Weissman M, “The Association between head injuries and psychiatric disorders: findings from the New Haven NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study,” Brain Inj (2001: 15: 935-945)
  4. ^ Simpson G, Tate R. “Suicidality after traumatic brain injury: demographic, injury and clinical correlates.” Psychological Medicine (2002; 32: 687-98)
  5. ^ Popovic V, Aimaretti G, Casanueva FF, Ghigo E. “Hypopituitarism following traumatic brain injury.” Growth Hormone and IGF Research (2005; 15: 3: 177-184)
  6. ^ Schneider HJ, Kreitschmann-Andermahr I, Ghigo E, Stalla GK, Agha A. “Hypothalamopituitary dysfunction following traumatic brain injury and aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. A systematic review.” JAMA (2007; 26:1429-38)
  7. PMID 19376453. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help
    )
  8. ^ "www.uvm.edu" (PDF).