Abstract

The problem of suicide as an active act of the individual is now becoming particularly acute. There are different opinions on the issue of suicide, particularly on the law and freedom of individual implementation of this act. Different religions have different views on the suicide, especially on the question of its moral justification or condemnation. Abrahamic religions consider this act as an offence against God, as a sinful act, but in some Eastern religions there is no moral condemnation of suicide. The roots of the differences must be sought in the specifics of the religion itself, mainly in soteriology and anthropology. However, suicide as a willful act, an act that has its specificity, may have no religious component, and this in turn indicates that the reason for the implementation of this act can reveal something that has no sacred character, and is purely a routine matter. But if the suicide takes place in everyday life, what initiates this act? The article is aimed at disclosure of the issue.

Full Text
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