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    The debt-of-gratitude argument holds that humans owe God ... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The debt-of-gratitude variation of the gift analogy also fails to prohibit suicide, because disposing of one's life is not inconsistent with expressing gratitude for having lived.

    The debt-of-gratitude argument holds that humans owe God gratitude for life and thus must not kill themselves.

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    Disposing of one's life does not preclude having expressed or felt gratitude for...The debt-of-gratitude variation of the gift analogy also fails to prohibit suici...Therefore suicide does not necessarily constitute ingratitude toward God.

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    The debt-of-gratitude variation of the gift analogy also fails to proh...87%Disposing of one's life does not preclude having expressed or felt gra...82%Defenders of the gift analogy must argue that life given by a loving G...78%The gift analogy fails to justify the claim that God's giving of life ...78%

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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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