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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    A genuine gift must be rejectable by the recipient. — Carmelics
    Home/Afterlife & Death
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

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    Challenges→A gift that cannot be rejected is not truly a gift, undermining the gift analogy as a prohibition against suicide.

    A genuine gift must be rejectable by the recipient.

    Afterlife & Death
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    Afterlife & Death

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    A gift that cannot be rejected is not truly a gift, undermining the gift analogy...The gift analogy implies life cannot be rejected or disposed of without wrongdoi...Therefore life under the gift analogy does not qualify as a genuine gift.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    A gift that cannot be rejected is not truly a gift, undermining the gi...81%The gift analogy implies life cannot be rejected or disposed of withou...75%Therefore life under the gift analogy does not qualify as a genuine gi...75%A gift, genuinely given, becomes the property of its recipient.75%

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    Another common analogy asserts that God bestows life upon us as a gift, and it would be a mark of ingratitude or neglect to reject that gift by taking our lives. The obvious weakness with this “gift analogy” is that a gift, genuinely given, does not come with conditions such as that suggested by the analogy, i.e., once given, a gift becomes the property of its recipient and its giver no longer has any claim on what the recipient does with this gift. It may perhaps be imprudent to waste an especi

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