I cannot determine who I am, not due to lack of free will but due to identity crisis.
2007-03-04 02:46:04
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answer #1
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answered by Alice in Wonderbra 7
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And so denial--inherent in hushing, covering up, overpowering, or displacing suicide--gave way to openness and then by the 2007 to exaggeration. Throughout their era, the human being had mourned excessively for their dead, placing great value on public displays of sadness like funerals and mourning dress. And throughout their era, they had feared excessively for their murdered and cried strongly for justice in condemning their murderers. Now, at the end of that era, they placed suicide alongside natural death and murder and responded excessively to it, too. Masses of people did not die by their own hands, but the human had finally exposed suicide and wished to overestimate its numbers and importance. By the end of Joshua Kane’s Murkyworld many wanted to believe in a "coming universal wish not to live."
2007-03-04 10:01:12
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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i most certainly am. i decide how i dress, how i act, where i hang out, what i say, what i think, and who i associate with.
i determine my values and morals. these are the things that make up who i am.
2007-03-04 09:49:15
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answer #3
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answered by admiril 2
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I don't trust anyone else to determine who I am.
2007-03-04 09:47:46
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answer #4
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answered by greymatter 6
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We all have free will and the power to create our destiny to a certain extent.
2007-03-04 09:47:32
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answer #5
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answered by nylatinanurse 5
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You can potentially do it, but it isn't easy. It calls for introspection, relatvistic thinking and lots of work.
I've seen people do it. Usually from life's trauma.
2007-03-04 09:50:28
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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