If that's what you think the author intended to communicate you will have to do a better job of explaining why. Most people are going to assume that the later occupants suffer the same effects as the first when thrown into the Lake of Fire.
Torment day and night forever and ever.
This is the second death. However the false prophet and the beast were thrown in alive, so for them it was both the first and the second in that sense.
10The devil who deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet are,
a and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.
b
11Then I saw a great white throne and one seated on it. Earth and heaven fled from his presence, and no place was found for them.
a 12I also saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne, and books were opened.
a Another book was opened, which is the book of life,
b and the dead were judged according to their works
c by what was written in the books.
13Then the sea gave up the dead that were in it, and death and Hades
a gave up the dead that were in them; each one was judged according to their works.
14Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire.
a This is the second death, the lake of fire.
A 15And anyone whose name was not found written in the book of life was thrown into the lake of fire.
It is not logical to assume that the other occupants do not experience the same effects of the Lake of Fire as the first occupants.
It is not
desperate to assume that they do, it is the most natural reading of the text. What is
desperate is an attempt to say they dont and appeal to the phrase "second death" as your only support for saying they don't.
You are insisting on a definition of second death to mean no knowledge or ability to feel pain or torment.
You would not say that the false prophet and the beast who suffer torment day and night forever and ever "
Live" forever would you? They were thrown in alive so it would be more like first and second death at the same time for them.
The others were raised from the dead first then thrown in the Lake of Fire which is why it is called the second death. They suffer torment day and night forever and ever like the first occupants and no one in their right minds would assume otherwise.
You are the one who is desperately trying to force a definition of second death to include non existence. But since it does not say that you would be adding to what the author was communicating.
The author would need to specifically say "These others that were thrown into the Lake of Fire do not suffer the same effects as the first occupants." Or he would know that the reader would never come up with that idea naturally. Every reader assumes that the later occupants suffer the same effects as that described when the first occupants were thrown and and the Lake of Fire was introduced to the reader.
It's unnatural to think that they don't suffer the same effects. It's not logical. This would require a statement saying that they do not. Calling it the second death does not say they don't suffer the same effects. But rather the normal reader would think that suffering torment day and night forever and ever in the Lake of Fire is called the second death.
Do some research on this passage and I think you will discover that the "torment day and night forever and ever" is intended by the author to describe what happens to EVERYONE who is thrown into the Lake of Fire. It is not possible to apply it only to the first occupants and not the others. Any attempt to do so is a sure sign of
desperation and distortion of scripture to support a false doctrine.