As to what is, yes. As to your beliefs or after-the-fact theories, you can have of those what you wish.So? You say it as if that's wrong. — TheMadFool
Well, I find there that you know nothing about death. Not a criticism, for I suppose no one does. The problem comes when you are confused both about what you know and what you think you know.Those are waypoints we've already crossed. I'm disinclined to return to ground already covered. Sorry. — TheMadFool
If by "creatures" you mean only human beings, then I am confused. But I am then in good company, because even God, with his creatures great and small, would be confused.I'm employing conventional terms, part of the vernacular. I don't understand your objections. — TheMadFool
A "prophet" heralds the coming of his god(dess) and does not "keep her at bay". Sleep, not "pain", is a glimpse, a reheasal or reminder, a nightly practiced welcoming of Death; "pain" merely signals proximity to one's demise which almost always one involuntarily retreats from – in other words, "pain" is the demon tormenting one to temptations of painlessness like a prophet of the devil Life (à la gnosis).Pain isthe true prophet, not sleep like 180 Proof thinks, of death! Pain exists to keep death at bay ... — TheMadFool
People seem to prefer giving up if the alternative is that they have to do work; at least until the problem is looming over them and it’s too late to do anything but regret not taking action sooner. — Pfhorrest
n the Phaedo, Socrates says:
the one aim of those who practice philosophy in the proper manner is to practice for dying and death — Merkwurdichliebe
On reflection, of course, if there is no life after death we have nothing to fear. And, if there is, we have everything to gain. Unless we have engaged in actions that lead us to believe that we may be subject to judgement and punishment in the other world. In which case it would boil down to a secret fear of punishment. — Apollodorus
It strikes me watching as I sometimes do old films that everyone in the film and all listed in the credits are dead. And we can watch films from before 1910 of city life, the bustle of downtown or the train station with an arriving train. And all the vanities, hopes, joys of all pictured, dead. Draw what lessons you will. — tim wood
What I am trying to say is that we may not know really whether we fear death until it looms before us in an immediate way. — Jack Cummins
I don't know your age. I am of an age when death is on my horizon, though not yet close. I have decided/matured to not want anything new, but to wear out what I have, even as I continue to take care of and maintain those things. I find the wear on things somehow, someway reassuring. As if when my boots go, then I ought to be ready. And the familiarity of those things keeps me grounded. Or so I'm thinking at the moment. If one of my lottery tickets pays off, I may try a different strategy.I will vacillate between accepting — darthbarracuda
You don't fear death? Why? — TheMadFool
My official stand, should anyone be interested, is option two. Another transition. — Book273
No, I find there is simply a preponderance of evidence to support option two. — Book273
A "prophet" heralds the coming of his god(dess) and does not "keep her at bay". Sleep, not "pain", is a glimpse, a reheasal or reminder, a nightly practiced welcoming of Death; "pain" merely signals proximity to one's demise which almost always one involuntarily retreats from – in other words, "pain" is the demon tormenting one to temptations of painlessness like a prophet of the devil Life (à la gnosis). — 180 Proof
Are you eager to die? — TheMadFool
Not in the traditional sense of eager. More like anticipating with curiosity. I have a number of good reasons to continue living so while those remain, why rush the ending? I am rather happy with life and see a great deal of wonder in it. Unlike most suicides that end their life as a means to end physical or emotional pain, I really have none of that to speak of. Suicides are often afraid of death, but are more afraid of continuing on as they are currently living.
Now remove my current reasons to continue living and increase my boredom....suicide becomes a more likely option as things that keep me inclined to remain here decrease. — Book273
1. If you're not afraid to die then it doesn't matter whether you live or die. — TheMadFool
There is a flaw in your assumption — Book273
Persist in error as you wish. The intuition of the ancient Greeks who paired Thanatos & Hypnos as siblings speaks to me and informs my translating them as 'god-prophet' relationship in parody of the Islamic Shahada. "Pain", my friend, corresponds to life and painlessness – approximated in sleep, or coma – corresponds to death. This is the human condition, our facticity; deny it as much as you like. Remember, "pain" comes with happenstance but, ceteris paribus, sleep like death is inherently – physiologically – inevitable. :death: :flower:Ergo, I stand committed to the fact that Algea (pain) is Thanatos' prophet and not Hypnos (sleep)! — TheMadFool
Everyone who does not commit suicide will die in a sudden traumatic accident. — darthbarracuda
I have decided/matured to not want anything new, but to wear out what I have, even as I continue to take care of and maintain those things. I find the wear on things somehow, someway reassuring. As if when my boots go, then I ought to be ready. And the familiarity of those things keeps me grounded. — tim wood
Persist in error as you which. The intuition of the ancient Greeks who paired Thanatos & Hypnos as siblings speaks to me and informs my translating them as 'god-prophet' relationship in parody of the Islamic Shahada. "Pain", my friend, corresponds life and painlessness – approximated in sleep, or coma – corresponds to death. This is the human condition, our facticity; deny it as much as you like. Remember, "pain" comes with happenstance but, ceteris paribus, sleep like death is inherently – physiologically – inevitable. :death: — 180 Proof
Birth leads to death, Fool. :roll: But okay, agree to disagree. Pax. — 180 Proof
:wink:One pays a teacher badly if one always remains nothing but a pupil. And why do you not want to pluck at my wreath? You revere me; but what if your reverence tumbles one day? Beware lest a statue slay you. — Thus Spoke Zarathustra
It looks like any man has things he is willing to die for, quickly and gladly. Except that a chance to die pleasantly, the chance he's looking for, doesn't always materialize. So he goes off somewhere to die as best he can . . . He sticks around on earth and everybody takes him for a jerk and a coward, but the truth is that he simply lacks conviction. He only seems to be a coward.
Robinson was not prepared to die under the conditions offered. Under different conditions he might have been delighted.
All in all, death is something like a marriage.
This particular death didn't appeal to him, that was the long and the short of it. — Céline
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