I conclude, then, that the harmfulness of death is mainly post mortem. — Bartricks
In the sense that death deprives the person of their future. It's a harm one can predict with some measure of certainty at any point of one's life. — baker
I believe that the majority of the harms that death visits on a person are post-mortem — Bartricks
↪jgill
So the hermit's death is a great harm to the hermit. It won't harm anyone else. It will harm him.
And it will harm him, will it not, even if he has no plans that killing him with thwart.
And it will harm him even if he isn't particularly enjoying his life.
So, it will harm him even if it deprives him of nothing.
Thus, the harm of death cannot reside primarily in what it deprives a person of. For it harms those it deprives of nothing worth having. — Bartricks
You seem to be saying that a person is alive to these sensations after they die. — jgill
I shall also define death in a neutral way as the point at which a person is no longer here, in this realm. The question of whether death ends our existence or whether it takes us elsewhere is a matter for reasoned debate to settle, not a definition. — Bartricks
What I am saying is it does no harm to him after he ceases to exist. — jgill
Actual things. Crikey. Look, the idea of there being a terrible place is really not hard to grasp.
If death takes you to it, then that would make sense of what our reason tells us about death's harmfulness to us. If, by contrast, you suppose death ceases our existence then you have to account for its harmfulness by citing ante-mortem harms. — Bartricks
This is the view by the majority in the West and the minority in the East. There is so much said on the subject, that we cannot just ignore or reject the case that our non-physical part continuing to exist as such after the death of our body. That would be lack of wisdom. On the contrary, admitting that "I don't know" is a sign of wisdom.After death that person is no more and will endure no more harm. — jgill
I dunno where the other monkeys are? — Agent Smith
THe question is 'how' it harms us, not 'whether' it does. — Bartricks
You'll find the current location of the main monkey in Book 6. Facilis descensus. — Cuthbert
I've never heard of this book! — Agent Smith
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