Gilgamesh fails of course and that was the core message of this work — TheMadFool
Gilgamesh joins the immortal pantheon after he dies....kind of fits with something I've recently been toying with, are we spiritual beings "in-training"? Perhaps what is traditionally called the soul has its material birth.... — Pantagruel
He was a trainwreck, this guy - his family had abandoned him, his friends deserted him, a mountain of debt to pay off, unrequited love, and now the proverbial cherry on top, the icing on the cake, was a diagnosis of terminal cancer. I went to see him, he wasn't sad and that made me ask myself, "did I go to see him or did he come to see me?" — Some Guy
Leave me guessing, huh? — TheMadFool
I can only surmise that, qua conscious beings, we are composed of experiences and beliefs. So perhaps experiencing the magnificent uncertainty of death is the key to spiritual evolution. Much of my own personal growth has been linked in one way or another to an immersive awareness of the profound finality of death. To quote one of my favourite movies (that I just watched again on the weekend as it happens): Death is the road to awe. — Pantagruel
Torture is the way to awesome — Some guy
Torture is the way to awesome
— Some guy — TheMadFool
I don't want to live on in my work. I want to live on in my apartment. — Woody Allen
This is a tricky paradox - why do all living minds tend to fear death while empirically it's a necessity? — D2OTSSUMMERBUG
No, I haven't translated Tao Te Ching. But if I feel couraged again to share some of the related works I tend to find more interest in starting with I Ching. — D2OTSSUMMERBUG
Ray Kurzweil was the protagonist — D2OTSSUMMERBUG
our fear for death is inevitable and acceptance is lying to ourselves. — D2OTSSUMMERBUG
In case you haven't found it, here's a website with many translations of the Tao Te Ching along with some other documents:
https://terebess.hu/english/tao/_index.html — T Clark
I've gotten started on the I Ching a couple of times, but never got very far. The Tao Te Ching, on the other hand, grabbed me and shook me when I first read it. I find the poetic format much more compelling than the stories in the Zhuangzi. I think that's because I tend to be very intellectual, verbal. I'm an engineer and the Tao has always felt like engineering mysticism to me. — T Clark
Yes, well. I think this says a lot more about Kurzweil than it does about me or you or anyone else. Last time I looked, he was trying to keep himself alive until he can upload his mind into a computer and live forever. — T Clark
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