It seems to me that death eradicates point and meaning because only the living can have desires.
Death disconnects the individual from her wishes and goals. — Andrew4Handel
You cannot connect back with the world after you are dead( it seems) to see what happened to the world in your absence. — Andrew4Handel
Birth and death are temporal boundaries to my being the way my skin is the spacial boundary of my being.
I am small and the universe is large; I am brief and the universe is long-enduring. That there are times and places I wot not of, does not render my life pointless. I have made a point, I don't have to make all points. — unenlightened
However death erases (completely) the self - the very thing that desires meaning. So, death makes life meaningless. — TheMadFool
It seems to me that death eradicates point and meaning because only the living can have desires.
Death disconnects the individual from her wishes and goals. You cannot connect back with the world after you are dead( it seems) to see what happened to the world in your absence.
For example almost everyone that died before the two World wars and holocaust had no idea that this is what the future held. You can die optimistic seeing the world on the cusp of a positive revolution but you cannot know how this progressed and whether or not there was a reverse in fortune.
I think one main problem with our friends and family dying is that we might never see them again. It is not enough that we have memories of them. — Andrew4Handel
It is still a beautiful thing if I do not see it or if no one sees it, — unenlightened
I am small and the universe is large; I am brief and the universe is long-enduring. That there are times and places I wot not of, does not render my life pointless. I have made a point, I don't have to make all points. — unenlightened
That it isn't eternity that makes life meaningful is proven by the fact that people commit suicide. — TheMadFool
Was it worthwhile seeing the film now — Andrew4Handel
It was worthwhile seeing the film then. — unenlightened
Things are usually valued over time. — Andrew4Handel
You come out with these things as though they are evidently true. It's not true. things are valued at the time; memories are valued at a later time. — unenlightened
It seems obvious to me that things take place within the concepts of past present and future. — Andrew4Handel
It seems far from obvious to me that things take place within any concepts at all. It seems to me that things take place in the world. — unenlightened
(Physical) death only eradicates meaning if there's no soul, God, Absolute or some other physically transcendent source of meaning.It seems to me that death eradicates point and meaning because only the living can have desires. — Andrew4Handel
I wonder why Camus thought life was meaningless? Did he give death as a reason? Or is life meaningless even for an immortal? — TheMadFool
The problem I see is in the lack of continuity. We can imagine life continuing without us but we won't know that. So we may be having false aspirations. — Andrew4Handel
It makes no sense to me. A daffodil is a beautiful thing, though the flower only lasts a few days. It is still a beautiful thing if I do not see it or if no one sees it, and it will still be a beautiful thing when I am dead as it was before I was alive. Death makes life limited, not meaningless. If you argued that a life with no joy or beauty is meaningless, I might believe you, but infinite duration bears no relation to meaning. — unenlightened
Some people who commit suicide believe in the afterlife and say they want to die to be reunited with a dead relative or friend. I think suicide is usually done to end suffering not necessarily with the desire to extinguish the self. — Andrew4Handel
My point has nothing to do with immortality. I'm merely insisting that the significance of life and death has nothing to do with their apparent contrast. That is, life is its own 'thing' happening and being what it is, while death is its own other 'thing' happening and being what it is. And that, neither death nor life is more or less significant because we value the other more or less. — BrianW
I don't think you can make a clean cut between life and death like that. Death is defined as the cessation of life. The two are co-defined as it were. — TheMadFool
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