We can do both of those things in the awareness of mortality. "Humanity" is not something to be particularly proud of, and our minds are, at best, delicately balanced. We buy into absurdly implausible eternal-life-insurance schemes and commit atrocities in the name of whatever god promises our side immortality.It [death] is foundational to the human condition and I would say that without it we would simply lose our humanity, if not our minds first. — Benj96
And yet, the progress we see in tech innovation and medicine certainly seems bound for immortality if that ultimatum is at all possible. — Benj96
What do you think the ideal life span for a human is? — Benj96
If they're in perfect health, they can suicide any time, with no justification. Certainly, I don't feel that anyone except my spouse owes me an explanation, and I don't think the law has any business in such a private matter.How do we justify the right to death if one is perfectly healthy but simply feels it's their time? — Benj96
Should anyone be allowed to be immortal and if so why? — Benj96
What do you think the ideal life span for a human is? How do we justify the right to death if one is perfectly healthy but simply feels it's their time?
Should anyone be allowed to be immortal and if so why? — Benj96
I’m in my 50’s but I can’t imagine wanting more than 80 years, I simply don't find life interesting enough. — Tom Storm
Life is as interesting as you are able to and choose to make it. — Vera Mont
Why should naïve teenagers of 90 be censured, or 60-year-olds with rich and varied experience be snuffed out before they could pass along what they've learned? — Vera Mont
Why should naive teenagers of 90 be censured, or 60-year-olds with rich and varied experience be snuffed out before they could pass along what they've learned? — Vera Mont
I don't associate age with wisdom. — Tom Storm
Presumably, such a person would have life experience useful to people who have less. So I'm asking why such a person should be ready to die at 50? Why would they not want to continue a rich, full life? As forSome people of 50 have lived a life so rich, full — Tom Storm
I should think that 90-year-old would be avid for some experience before it's too late.they can make someone of 90 look like a naïve teenager. — Tom Storm
Presumably, such a person would have life experience useful to people who have less. So I'm asking why such a person should be ready to die at 50? Why would they not want to continue a rich, full life? — Vera Mont
I am obviously bringing my criteria of value to this which is that there seems little point to immortality, or a even a long life, if you spend most of it doing fuck all. — Tom Storm
:up: :up:I understand about personal values. I believe they should be the deciding factor in our own personal lives, and nobody else's. Why I oppose capital punishment, legal constraints on assisted suicide or contested living wills.
Eudaimonia. We should all be as fortunate as you, Tom. :cool:If I were to die tonight, for instance, I'd be reasonably ok with this as I have done a fair bit and don't really have any significant further goals. — Tom Storm
memory recall should be limited to that of a mortal lifespan whereby 7 or 8 decades-old memories are continually "overwritten" by new memories so that an "immortal" remains a psychologically human mortal — 180 Proof
Beats the hell out of doing great, glorious historical things, like carving out an empire or conducting a crusade or discovering a savage continent, ripe for plunder. — Vera Mont
The biggest questions of immortality may involve the nature of ego consciousness and the nature of separate 'minds'. — Jack Cummins
Virtual immortality - as pure energy, reborn in new bodies, in heaven or in the Matrix - seems the only way that's even remotely possible — Vera Mont
legacy wherein they may continue some kind of existence. — Vera Mont
If they're in perfect health, they can suicide any time, with no justification. Certainly, I don't feel that anyone except my spouse owes me an explanation, and I don't think the law has any business in such a private matter. — Vera Mont
memory recall should be limited to that of a mortal lifespan whereby 7 or 8 decades-old memories are continually "overwritten" by new memories — 180 Proof
However long they the participant finds it to be ideal. — Vaskane
I can easily imagine myself being busy for all eternity planting plants and never getting bored or tired of it. Trees, bushes, grasses, flowers. But mostly trees. I'd love that. — baker
Think of all the planets you could terraform! That will be my next bumper-sticker:
The Universe Needs More Trees! — Vera Mont
But I think I life well lived ofc is not as simple as doing as much as you can in the time you have. — Benj96
At the end of the day, age aside, one's own reflections on their life as it draws to a close is the most important measure, as it is the only one that matters for them. Subjective. We merely need to avoid living in a state of regret whatever we do, or don't. — Benj96
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