Deletedmemberwap         
         
DingoJones         
         Since life is often hard work, and by its nature inherently meaningless, why fear death? Because ceasing to be cannot be any scarier than the trials and tribulations of living.
(Accepting all viewpoints and counterarguments) — Wandering-Philosopher
Deleteduserrc         
         
Valentinus         
         
christian2017         
         Just for fun, here's a random thought I came up with:
Since life is often hard work, and by its nature inherently meaningless, why fear death? Because ceasing to be cannot be any scarier than the trials and tribulations of living.
(Accepting all viewpoints and counterarguments) — Wandering-Philosopher
Josh Lee         
         
BC         
         Just for fun, here's a random thought I came up with — Wandering-Philosopher
Since life is often hard work, and by its nature inherently meaningless — Wandering-Philosopher
why fear death? Because ceasing to be cannot be any scarier than the trials and tribulations of living. — Wandering-Philosopher
(Accepting all viewpoints and counterarguments) — Wandering-Philosopher
Josh Lee         
         Just for fun, here's a random thought I came up with: — Wandering-Philosopher
Hot Potato         
         
christian2017         
         
Deletedmemberwap         
         The "just for fun" introduction makes me want to hurt you. — Valentinus
Outlander         
         
Benj96         
         Because ceasing to be cannot be any scarier than the trials and tribulations of living. — Wandering-Philosopher
Deletedmemberwap         
         
Deletedmemberwap         
         
Judaka         
         
Outlander         
         
Deletedmemberwap         
         
Wheatley         
         
Deletedmemberwap         
         
3017amen         
         Some people are comforted by a sense of control or knowledge or purpose or identity, the list goes on... which is why death terrifies them because it is a loss of any semblance of control over your existence/awareness, — Benj96
Outlander         
         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.