He explains: there are people in Paris, his choice of city, who don't know you exist; in other words, you don't exist as far as Parisians are concerned. That, according to Sam Harrris, is to give you a glimpse of what nonexistence is! — TheMadFool
Unconsciousness — 180 Proof
Forgetting — 180 Proof
Thinking 'the contingency of thinking' (Brassier). — 180 Proof
One can also try conceive the times and world before one's birth — Corvus
See my reply to 180 Proof above. However, as I recall now, forgetting = not recording. I hope you catch my drift. — TheMadFool
Imagining own death seem just imagining only which has no real significance again in one's real life apart from having some nightmares? — Corvus
Whenever ( :chin: ) I encounter these words [infinity, nothing] and others of its ilk (so-called unknownables) my mind actually draws a blank. Thanks for the update (I see myslef as a computer, in need of broadband and the latest "updates". I hope you don't hold that against me. It's not a choice.)
Anyway, an analogy seems to be the first port of call :point: Tesseract. Just like 4D objects (inconceivable so they say) cast 3D shadows, these shadows being more mind-friendly, unknowables too should/could have shadows that our minds can, in a sense, grasp. — TheMadFool
The quote is from another thread but is relevant to the discussion.
The mind (imagination) is capable of only grasping at the shadow of death/nonexistence, a few of them appear in 180 Proof's post and one in the OP. — TheMadFool
Can we, has anyone, conceived of nonexistence/death? — TheMadFool
I recall an interview in which Sam Harris (atheist, author, neuroscientist) claims that to believe nonexistence (I mean death) is unthinkable is, as he put it, "...for a lack of trying..." He explains: there are people in Paris, his choice of city, who don't know you exist; in other words, you don't exist as far as Parisians are concerned. That, according to Sam Harrris, is to give you a glimpse of what nonexistence is! — TheMadFool
dreamless sleep — Jack Cummins
Deep sleep — Nils Loc
There are people in Paris observing the Eiffel tower, who are not observing the computer monitor you are observing; in other words, your computer monitor doesn't exist as far as Parisians are concerned.
And so presumably according to Sam Harris, he has given you a glimpse as to what the non-existence of your monitor is. — sime
We can't concieve of mind death. — TheMadFool
it hasn't any meaning — unenlightened
Whenever ( :chin: ) I encounter these words [infinity, nothing] and others of its ilk (so-called unknownables) my mind actually draws a blank. Thanks for the update (I see myslef as a computer, in need of broadband and the latest "updates". I hope you don't hold that against me. It's not a choice.)
Anyway, an analogy seems to be the first port of call :point: Tesseract. Just like 4D objects (inconceivable so they say) cast 3D shadows, these shadows being more mind-friendly, unknowables too should/could have shadows that our minds can, in a sense, grasp. — TheMadFool
There is nothing one has failed to do except to notice the knot in the language. — unenlightened
Don't you mean we can't experience mind death — Nils Loc
Yep but that was my point. Since the mind can't experience death, it can't conceive of death. — TheMadFool
Since the mind can't experience death, it can't conceive of death. — TheMadFool
This is a bit silly. I cannot experience tomorrow, I cannot experience what is over the horizon, I cannot experience what is in the next room. Most of what we talk about is what we cannot or do not experience. "Conceiving is what we do instead of experiencing. — unenlightened
How does a person experience dementia? presumably he finds himself learning about things that he has good reason to believe he has previously forgotten. But how does he classify an experience as being of something forgotten? Whatever the experiential criteria, perhaps an avid learner should consider dementia to be the ultimate learning experience. — sime
Death, on thep other hand, can't be conceived because there's no experience (past/present) we can draw from to make that possible. — TheMadFool
What a sheltered life you lead! Have you never killed, or come across a corpse, or watched a dying? And to pre-empt the most obvious response, one gets the idea of oneself from seeing other people; if there were no others, one would not be able to imagine otherness, and one would be the world. The ideas of life and death both arise from experience of (m)others. — unenlightened
To All
We can conceive of body death. Just imagine yourself as a decaying corpse in a coffin 6 feet underground with a headstone jutting out of the earth. We can also try Sam Harris' what's wrong with this picture? (the nonexistent/dead you is missing) technique.
We can't concieve of mind death. What is it that we can think of as absent from a given mental image of the world? what is it that can be lying in a grave? What is it that mind can say with an acceptable level of confidence is missing/ended/extinguished upon death. The body? No! Then what? — TheMadFool
So also, your mind cannot conceive of dreamless sleep. :P (Our use of language is annoying.) — Nils Loc
I've frequently pointed out that I see no good reason to think the "time after" life ceases will be different than the "time before" life began. I was nothing and will be nothing, same state. — Manuel
What did your face look like before your parents were born? — Wikipedia
near death experiences — Jack Cummins
Parisians not knowing the dying — Corvus
watched a dying — unenlightened
I felt a unsettling coldness in my heart but this isn't important. — TheMadFool
"what did your face look like before your parents were born?" — TheMadFool
The reason we find nothing problematic - I think - is because we are knowledgeable creatures as a matter of our constitution. We can categorize, make sense of, measure, compare, contemplate, appreciate, contextualize, discern, wonder about, etc. We just can't help it.
So imagining a "state" in which we can do none of these things at all goes against our nature (while being awake, at least), hence the agony. — Manuel
But there is a silver lining. While we are afraid of death, I think that if we try to apply fear, worry, anxiety, pain and all the bad things in life to the "state before" birth, none apply. Not even boredom. How bored were you before you were born? Huh? — Manuel
oxygen deprivation — Jack Cummins
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