In a digital age, we are obsessed with installation. We install updates, software, and security patches to keep our machines running smoothly. But what does it mean to install a philosophy of death into one's operating system? The Hemlock Society, named after the poison that ended Socrates' life, offers not a virus of despair but a utility for clarity. Its index is not a list of methods, but a directory of questions: When does suffering outweigh existence? Who holds the authority over a beating heart? What is the difference between letting die and causing death?
"Damn it," Min-jun muttered.
In a digital age, we are obsessed with installation. We install updates, software, and security patches to keep our machines running smoothly. But what does it mean to install a philosophy of death into one's operating system? The Hemlock Society, named after the poison that ended Socrates' life, offers not a virus of despair but a utility for clarity. Its index is not a list of methods, but a directory of questions: When does suffering outweigh existence? Who holds the authority over a beating heart? What is the difference between letting die and causing death?
"Damn it," Min-jun muttered.