I think you've missed the point that it's not saying all groups are going to have the same distribution of ages or types of death. Merely that everyone is going to die eventually; the end of every life story, good or bad, rich or poor, popular or pariah, is death — Mijin
I get what you mean but if that's what's meant by "death is the equalizer" then, why is the world making such a big issue of premature deaths among the underprivileged? — TheMadFool
Because you're equating two different things. The only thing that they have in common is that they are both talking about death, but they are making wholly different points.
The first is a philosophical statement based on the fact that none of us can escape death, and indeed, death is not far away, since we're mayflies compared to the universe. There is no "happily ever after", only "dead ever after", no matter who you are. So equal in that sense.
However, when exactly that happens, and what was the proximate cause, very obviously is not equal between groups, or over time and regions, for a plethora of reasons. Humans can, and should, do a lot to try to address these inequalities and also generally improve the situation for everyone. We've had a lot of success in this: life expectancy worldwide has increased a lot, and in much of the developed world (not US) the life expectancy between rich and poor is negligible. — Mijin
Quantifying or qualifying life makes no difference to death - regardless of how long or well one lives, we ALL die.
It certainly appears to those of us still living that a longer or a higher quality of life is somehow better than a short, painful one. But in death, it makes no difference either way.
You can argue all you want from the perspective of life, but death really does have the same (infinite) quality for everyone who is dead. — Possibility
Surely, death is an equal event for everyone. All of us will die, some prematurely and even the richest die sometimes sooner than the most vulnerable.
Perhaps rather than bringing death into the matter, it would be better to explore equality with reference to life, rather than let death's angry face glaring at us, poke it's nose into the discussion about justice and equality in this life. — Jack Cummins
I can see your link between death and justice, especially the whole idea of capital punishment, although of course capital punishment does not happen in this country.
Apart from capital punishment being viewed as unjust in many ways, such as the possibility that a verdict on someone may have been wrong I wonder if it's also linked to an erosion of belief in life after death. Perhaps there is an underlying idea that a life of remorse in prison is a greater punishment than the oblivion of death. — Jack Cummins
But is it true that this always occurs? Do good people always end up happy? Do bad people always end up unhappy? — petrichor
When we see people suffering, is it always because they did something bad and so deserve it? — petrichor
I can see your link between death and justice, especially the whole idea of capital punishment, although of course capital punishment does not happen in this country.
Apart from capital punishment being viewed as unjust in many ways, such as the possibility that a verdict on someone may have been wrong I wonder if it's also linked to an erosion of belief in life after death. Perhaps there is an underlying idea that a life of remorse in prison is a greater punishment than the oblivion of death. — Jack Cummins
When we see people suffering, is it always because they did something bad and so deserve it?
— petrichor
I don't think so. — Tzeentch
Goodness is one prerequisite for happiness, but it is not the only one. Wisdom is another, for example. — Tzeentch
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.