Rationality always works within a delimited field. Death is outside that. Its beyond rationality/irrationality. — csalisbury
Would that make us irrational then, to fear death? If nothing can be done about it's inevitability then isn't the proper attitude to calmy accept it? — Posty McPostface
We don't generally talk about death with other people. The topic, in general, is often seen as a negative or faux pas. — Posty McPostface
Have you heard of "Death Cafe"? — Bitter Crank
We die in stages, in degrees, continually. Senses dull, faculties slow, and fail. All along the journey, it requires a near super human effort to maintain health, contentment, presence... gravity twisting and distorting you, muscles tiring from overuse, and others atrophying from underuse. Every stress taking its toll. — All sight
It's after finitude, for sure. — Marchesk
So, why is it taboo to talk about death? — Posty McPostface
When you think about it, there's not much to talk about, is there? — Ciceronianus the White
It's only taboo to those who've not come to acceptable terms with it. Many are taught to fear it. That teaching can run deep. Others are taught that it can be an honorable thing, in specific instances, including suicide in ancient Japanese cultures. This is honorable as a result of not allowing oneself to be captured or killed by the enemy. Hence, the kamikaze pilots and the samurai falling onto his own sword. — creativesoul
I don't feel as though we are taught to fear it. Think about elephants or chimpanzees that mourn the dead. They don't show fear towards the dead, just a sense of loss. — Posty McPostface
Certainly animals mourn. I do not see the relevance to death being a taboo subject to some people. — creativesoul
"death" isn't a thing, it's an abstraction — All sight
Indeed, yet we are here talking about it. — Posty McPostface
We can talk about planning for death, how to face death, how death is caused in various cases, how we react or should react to death, whether there's an afterlife, whether the soul survives death, whether there are ghosts, but death itself? — Ciceronianus the White
I suspect that we fear death more in the West because we are so wealthy and so removed from God, from the truth of ourselves, from community and from nature. Our wealth allows us to live very independent lives, we have our own cars houses, private worlds and lives on the internet etc. The more materially independent we are the more we are removed from nature and from the realities of nature. Death is final word from nature, and when we are removed from a dialogue with nature death is more distant and more alien to us. — Marcus de Brun
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