But if they have some awareness of death, then to me they already know this. What they wouldn't be able to do, is to contemplate the meaning of death as you say. But that's already different from simply being aware of transience.I think the awareness of death and the transience of life is one of the peculiar attributes of humans. — Wayfarer
Sure, well that's plausible. Higher animals - elephants, some birds, dogs, cats, primates - are 'beings', although again, they're not human beings. — Wayfarer
awareness of death and the transience of life — Wayfarer
What they wouldn't be able to do, is to contemplate the meaning of death as you say — Agustino
Perhaps it's a human prejudice to think that we, as linguistic beings, are the only animals capable of abstract thoughts such as 'I will die'. Can we imagine any way in which such a thought could occur to a non-linguistic being? — John
The more awake we are, the greater the nostalgia that sends us in quest of paradise, the sharper the pangs of remorse that reunite us with the vegetable world" — E M Cioran
And there’s certainly aversion to that which leads to death. Oddly, whether great apes are aware that they are mortal can be tested: this by attempts to communicate with them via sign language, etc. — javra
How interesting that your homeboy J. Krishnamurti would say precisely the same thing... destroy much (your conditioning) to recover paradise. Don't you see that you are just being biased?But we left that stage a long time ago: we would have to destroy so much to recover paradise
Common bruv it's just a poem, we wouldn't go through all the hassle of stealing :PPeople steal. — Heister Eggcart
Common bruv it's just a poem, we wouldn't go through all the hassle of stealing — Agustino
Yeah if you actually bothered to read anything more from him apart from Wikipedia you may discover something different — Agustino
And I have noticed that discussions with you reduce to "he's a nihilist/materialist/atheist, dismissed". Really Wayfarer, you call this philosophy? Reading about Cioran on Wikipedia and taking that as sufficient to give you permission to dismiss him so that you can avoid engaging with his thought, merely because he's labelled as a "nihilist" there?I have noticed that discussions with 'Agostino' quickly degenerate into name-calling and ad homs. — Wayfarer
William H. Gass called Cioran's work "a philosophical romance on the modern themes of alienation, absurdity, boredom, futility, decay, the tyranny of history, the vulgarities of change, awareness as agony, reason as disease".
there wasn't even a single ad hominem in my previous post — Agustino
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.