We agree on some things, anyway. That, as I said, was one of the motives impelling me to seriously consider the meaning of all this life and death, and as I said, for me it starts with the incredible common sense and logic that Lewis offered in "Mere Christianity" - although I had been opened to Lewis in the first place by reading "The Screwtape Letters". It was the fictional depiction of someone who WAS me - even though Lewis could not have known anything about me - that he described things in my own heart I had never told anyone (he certainly knew some things about what was in my mind and heart) that made me take him seriously and pay attention - when previously, I had been completely uninterested in the topic of meaning and my own death.Fist and Faith wrote:I agree. Few people seem to want to die. If they did, they'd have killed themselves, eh? Even most of those who attempt suicide, and even most of those who succeed, gave signs - and even flat-out told people - that they were going to try.rusmeister wrote:Whether you say "fear" or "don't want to" (and in what you quoted I said "don't want to") - I mean the same thing by it. I don't mean that everyone is quaking in their boots - I mean that they would prefer to live in good health and with whatever personal crises they have solved.
So when you say "welcome it", I get that you mean that they may prefer it to their current state. What I mean is that they would even more prefer not to be ill or sad or frightened and be alive.
At this point in my life I would rather be alive than dead. At all points in my life, in fact, if sometimes for no other reason than the fact that life will end in, at most, several decades, while death will be forever. But there's a lot of great things in this life, and I'll keep it going for a while if I can.
The thing I do fear is dying. The process scares me. It's often kinda painful, which, combined with the fact that its end is the end...
What you describe as "mental makeup" (and throwing in "emotional" as if it were something irrational) I describe as "logical". I do see "If death, then end. If end then undoing. If undoing then meaningless. If meaningless, then no reason to do." That isn't an individual "mental makeup" - that's a straight logical chain. I think anyone who doesn't see that is missing something in logic. Not that I think there's any value in arguing that with you.Fist and Faith wrote:Again, you're trying to speak of that which you do not know. The acceptance of meaninglessness (Which is very differenct from the belief in it without the acceptance of it. And that fear is not evidence that it is not the case.) is such an impossible thing for your mental/emotional makeup that you believe it is impossible for anyone else's. And, so, you simply repeat that anybody who claims to possess it is self-deluded, or hasn't thought it through, or whatever. And repeating that is the same as someone else endlessly telling you that you only believe in God because meaninglessness terrifies you, and that the other reasons you insist are actually the case are self-delusions. The outright refusal to accept that either your or my attitude is real, even if one cannot feel it him/herself, is... *sigh*rusmeister wrote:Knowing that people don't want to die - that they want to live in health and relative comfort, and that when they do die, they want their life and death to have some kind of meaning - that they want to die for something, that no one is willing to die for nothing, no one desires a senseless death, I say that we can know these things - about everyone.
But I'm not sure on some specifics in what you just said. What kind of meaning do you want your death to have?
Transcendent meaning can only be had in God. It is God - our Creator - who "remembers us" (and in the resurrection will "re-member" us; that is restore our members and put us back together, so to speak. So "Remember me, O Lord, in Thy Kingdom" takes on a new meaning. (It sure as heckfire doesn't mean "Reminisce about me...") So I want my life and death to be God-pleasing - to glorify God. (I'm scared of wanting that sometimes, and what it could mean - I'm quite weak and fear testing.)
Well, my experiences in car accidents and some incredible air turbulence have brought me as close as I ever want to get. I know that most people absolutely do not know what duchess claims to know - if there were some authority that confirmed her idea I could examine it and take it more seriously. But to simply say "I know" is a dogmatic belief. If it is an individual dogma, with reference to neither the experience of others nor authority, then I'd say I have a greater basis on both counts to know that death is our enemy to supplement my own experience, thoughts and feelings.Fist and Faith wrote:What experiences have given you greater ability to know that death is something to fear? You seem to be saying that death itself is the only experience that gives one the ability to know whether or not death is something to fear, but I don't imagine that's what you mean.rusmeister wrote:Even near-death experiences are not death itself. I'm rather skeptical of your ability to know, although you are free, of course, to believe what you want.duchess of malfi wrote: Not my beliefs. My personal experience of coming near to death following years of being sick.
I know death leads to peace.
It is a rest after years of pain and exhaustion.
Nothing to fear.
I would prefer not to die until my children finish school (that is the main thing that has kept me going) - but if and when I go, I know it will be putting down a heavy burden and passing into...something wonderful.
Nothing to fear.