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    Therefore defenders must commit to the claim that God's b... — Carmelics
    Home/Afterlife & Death
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    Supports→Defenders of the gift analogy must argue that life given by a loving God is necessarily a benefit to the recipient, to sustain the analogy as a prohibition against suicide.

    Therefore defenders must commit to the claim that God's benevolence guarantees life is a benefit.

    Afterlife & Death
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    Afterlife & Death

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    Defenders of the gift analogy must argue that life given by a loving God is nece...Life given by a loving and benevolent God would, by virtue of God's nature, be a...The gift analogy only prohibits suicide if life is genuinely a benefit.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    God is said to bestow life upon humans as a gift.75%Our condemnation of death is based on the assumption that more life wo...74%Life given by a loving and benevolent God would, by virtue of God's na...74%One's well-being does not completely depend on the goods of this life.73%

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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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