We normally judge whether a particular life experience is good or bad by measuring it against some personal standard for life experiences (e.g. it's good if it gives us pleasure, bad if it causes us pain). We can then evaluate our lives as a whole by asking whether the totality of our experiences adds up to more good than bad, or vice versa. At no point is there a need to make a comparison with non-existence. So it seems to me that you are simply disregarding the obvious and workable way of evaluating life in favour of something unobvious and unworkable - and what good reason could there be for you to do this?I'm just having a hard time seeing how anything in life can be judged as good or bad if there is nothing to correlate it with (in nonexistence). — simmerdown
You seem to be oscillating between two positions:↪Herg Well, let's say that overall, our lives provide us with more good than bad. Does that make continuing to live more desirable than dying? I can't say it does, because we won't remain to experience this lack of a deprivation. Conversely, if our lives provide us with nothing but suffering, does that make dying more desirable than living? Again, I can't say it does, because we won't remain to experience releif, or lack of suffering. There is no oblivion to experience at the end of it all. — simmerdown
nonexistence doesn't give us anything we can use to compare it to life. Without a comparison, how can we say that life is any different than death? — simmerdown
These two quotes seem to capture the core of your problem. (You'll no doubt correct me if I'm wrong.)I'm just having a hard time seeing how anything in life can be judged as good or bad if there is nothing to correlate it with (in nonexistence). It's like trying to understand the color White without having seen the colour black, if that makes any sense. — simmerdown
As such, how can we say that life is any different than death? — simmerdown
I'm just having a hard time seeing how anything in life can be judged as good or bad if there is nothing to correlate it with (in nonexistence). — simmerdown
Well, let's say that overall, our lives provide us with more good than bad. Does that make continuing to live more desirable than dying? — simmerdown
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