suicide, the act of intentionally taking one’s own life. Because this definition does not specify the outcome of such acts, it is customary to distinguish between fatal suicide and attempted, or nonfatal, suicide.
If you are experiencing a crisis or would like to speak with someone about harmful thoughts, call or text the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988 or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting HOME to 741741.
Throughout history, suicide has been both condemned and condoned by various societies. It is generally condemned by Islam, Judaism, and Christianity, and suicide attempts are punishable by law in many countries. The Brahmans of India, however, tolerate suicide; and suttee, the theoretically voluntary suicide of an Indian widow, now outlawed, was highly praised at one time. In ancient Greece, convicted criminals were permitted to take their own lives, but the Roman attitude toward suicide hardened toward the end of the empire as a result of the high incidence among enslaved people, who thus deprived their enslavers of valuable property. Jews committed suicide rather than submit to ancient Roman conquerors or Crusading knights who intended to force their conversion. Buddhist monks and nuns have committed sacrificial suicide by self-immolation as a form of social protest. The Japanese custom of seppuku (also called hara-kiri), or self-disembowelment, was long practiced as a ceremonial rite among samurai. Japan’s use of kamikaze suicide bombers during World War II was a precursor to the suicide bombing that emerged in the late 20th century as a form of terrorism, particularly among Islamic extremists (see September 11 attacks). Members of some new religious movements, notably the Peoples Temple (Jonestown, Guyana, 1978) and Heaven’s Gate (San Diego, California, U.S., 1997), committed mass suicide.
Since the Middle Ages, Western society has used first canon law and later criminal law to combat suicide. Changes in the legal status of suicide, however, have had little influence on the suicide rate. Beginning after the French Revolution of 1789, criminal penalties for attempting suicide were abolished in European countries; England was the last to follow suit, in 1961. But many of those countries and numerous U.S. states also adopted laws against helping someone to commit suicide. Physician-assisted suicide for the terminally ill has been legalized in the U.S. states of Oregon (1997), Washington (2008), and Montana (2009), and euthanasia is openly practiced in such countries as Colombia and the Netherlands. This movement has renewed discussions concerning the morality of suicide and the role of physicians who treat terminally ill patients.
The permissiveness of and the alienation experienced in modern society may be partly responsible for an increase in suicidal acts. There is now a greater readiness to understand rather than to condemn suicide, but a tendency to conceal suicidal acts still persists.
A fatal suicide tends to cause grief and guilt for those who may feel that they could have prevented it by caring and loving more than they did. If the act is nonfatal, it can serve as an appeal for help and may give rise to efforts at reparation. Conscious or unconscious expectation of these responses is one of the factors underlying many suicidal acts.
A number of theories have been developed to explain the causes of suicide. Psychological theories emphasize personality and emotional factors, while sociological theories, such as those posited by French sociologist Émile Durkheim, stress the influence of social and cultural pressures on the individual. Social factors, such as widowhood, childlessness, residence in big cities, a high standard of living, mental disorders, and physical illness, have been found to be positively correlated with suicide rates.
No single approach can be expected to succeed in substantially reducing the incidence of suicide, but early recognition and treatment of mental disorders is an important deterrent. Special centers and organizations for the prevention of suicide can be found in many countries. Most of them are not under medical direction, though all have medical consultants. Around-the-clock telephone hotlines provide counseling for lonely and desperate individuals in need of support. There is evidence that this kind of service may help to avert suicidal acts.