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Stoics

    { 1 } - argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver
    { 2 } - intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan
    { 3 } - have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards
    { 4 } - taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden
    { 5 } - argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

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1 is wrong. Please try again.

Stoics

    { 1 } - argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver
    { 2 } - intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan
    { 3 } - have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards
    { 4 } - taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden
    { 5 } - argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

Kant <=> argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver

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2 is wrong. Please try again.

Stoics

    { 1 } - argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver
    { 2 } - intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan
    { 3 } - have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards
    { 4 } - taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden
    { 5 } - argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

Catholic Church <=> intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan

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3 is wrong. Please try again.

Stoics

    { 1 } - argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver
    { 2 } - intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan
    { 3 } - have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards
    { 4 } - taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden
    { 5 } - argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam <=> have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards

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4 is wrong. Please try again.

Stoics

    { 1 } - argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver
    { 2 } - intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan
    { 3 } - have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards
    { 4 } - taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden
    { 5 } - argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

Dualists <=> taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden

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5 is correct!

Stoics

    { 1 } - argued that suicide is the greatest of crimes because it is a person's rejection of morality itself, since a person must be his own moral lawgiver
    { 2 } - intentionally causing one's own death, or suicide, is equally as wrong as murder; such an action on the part of a person is to be considered as a rejection of God's sovereignty and loving plan
    { 3 } - have always opposed suicide because they regard life as God's gift, which his children are to use as faithful stewards
    { 4 } - taught that the soul, which is the real person, is burdened by the body in this life or in many reincarnations; thus suicide might be justified as a laying down of this burden
    { 5 } - argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

Stoics <=> argued that it was permissible to kill oneserlf if suffering or torture might force one to lose self-control or act ignobly, or where a choice had to be made to perish in a shameful way or "die with dignity"

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