Yeah, but what did reason ever have to do with fear?
no point in fearing the inevitable... won't care once it's happened anyways![]()
My greatest fear is the unknown, so of course I fear death. Death is the ultimate unknown.
the man has said that he'd have less of a problem with it if he could schedule it and read reviews on yelp beforehand![]()
I could not agree more.
Learning is usually about exploring the unknown. Maybe I'm just misinterpreting or over-generalizing your statement but fearing the unknown can be greatly self limiting in many areas of life. Learning not to fear the unknown is one of the best gifts you can give yourself. The unknown often hides pleasant things.My greatest fear is the unknown, so of course I fear death. Death is the ultimate unknown.
I don't fear death but I resent its function as the end of my possibilities and potential. Immortality would be ideal.
Immortality would render our lives meaningless.
Death reveals the "terrible temporality" of our existence. And it is this temporality-this, radical finitude, which gives our life meaning. That is to say, it is that our lives are radically finite which makes being possible at all.
Sounds cool. Still want immortality.
If you want time to have no end (therefore, no meaning), and you want your being-here-in-the-world to have no significance whatsoever, then go for it.![]()
You'd be a rock, not a human being, because human beings have a beginning an end.
Only human beings can lead a meaningful existence.
From whose perspective are we prescribing this meaning?
Intuition's.
Whose intuition?