Do you fear death?

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Powereaver

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Apr 25, 2010
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Yes, i used to stress over the fact i may not wake up in the morning in my late teens, early 20's .. but at that stage of my life i had a lot of things going on in my life so i guess that kinda lead to the weird thoughts. These days it doesnt seem to nag at me as often but i still dont want to die i need to achieve a lot more before i can
 

VincentR

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Apr 17, 2011
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First, I get scared about the PROCESS of dying; and even that is not really accurate. I'm not scared of it.. I just don't enjoy unnecessary pain. But I'm not scared of being dead; more frustrated that I can't comprehend the idea of simply not being. I believe in religion, to a large extent; but if that's not real - then how can one simply.. not exist? How can you possibly fathom the idea of.. of not fathoming any ideas? It hurts.

Tl;dr I progress from not enjoying the pain, to frustration at the idea of non-existence, to simple irritation at the prospect.
 

BristolBerserker

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Aug 3, 2011
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No i don't fear death, but i do get freaked out a bit thinking that when i'm gone the universe will keep on going without me.
 

dragonhunter21

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Feb 6, 2011
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Yeah, I suppose I am. Although I do hope that my death is either instantaneous (Not much to worry about then) or not permanent (IE cryonic storage).
 

Politi

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Feb 28, 2010
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BristolBerserker said:
No i don't fear death, but i do get freaked out a bit thinking that when i'm gone the universe will keep on going without me.
No mortal person is important when measured by a universal scale. Sad but true.
 

Nurb

Cynical bastard
Dec 9, 2008
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You're asking the wrong agegroup.

Younger generations aren't that afraid because they see it as a far off thing and usually say stuff like "Yea, it's inevitable, so I'm not afraid".

I was like that... until I was diagnosed with cancer, which put a whole new perspective on things. It's easy not to fear something far away, but it's something else to be looking down the barrel.

I still have issues even though I'm in remission, and the complications may have shortened my life a bit. I don't want to cease to exist. Though if you think about it. Time passes in an instant when you're not conscious, so if we die we might end up in another consciousness in some other time or universe... not so much "reincarnation", but hey, you sprung to life here, what's to stop it from happening again without realizing it?

Strangely the nerd in me has found some comfort in Eric Idle
 

Syzygy23

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Sep 20, 2010
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Yeah, not really. Mainly for two reasons:

A) Why fear the inevitable?
and
B) I'll just have my body preserved until such a time as I can be resurrected as an awesome kickass cyborg. Preferably with at least ONE laser eye and a built in jetpack/lasergun hand. Either's fine if they don't have one or the other at that point.
 

bob-2000

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Jun 28, 2009
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curty129 said:
bob-2000 said:
Life is so beautiful, and death must exist to create life, so how could it not be seen as beautiful too?
"Life" being a vague term, I'll apply it to childbirthing process up until the baby is literally outside of the vaginal canal: screaming, pain, distortion of bodily parts.

We are, however, throwing opinions at each other on what is "beautiful", so we'll never have a productive discussion about this, but the process, I am saying, of creating something beautiful, does not at all have to be beautiful also.
Life referring to the act of existing and perceiving. And yes, childbirth is painful and nasty, but such pain makes the act of life intense and meaningful so yes, it is beautiful.
 

JasonKaotic

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Mar 18, 2009
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I don't really know. I am curious as to what happens after. Like, if you do have any kind of conscience after, not in the form of an afterlife. The idea of your conscience just disappearing is something that I can't get my head around. I'd go into why but it's something I really, really can't explain at all.
Not that I don't mind the idea of dying. Dying would not be cool at all. Death itself is something I'm curious about though.
My lil' theory is that your life is sort of on 'loop'. Like, you live, then your life completely repeats itself, sort of thing. Maybe you're not actually living at this time, but it helps me get my head around the idea of completely ceasing to exist.
This kind of makes sense if the theory of Brane Universes is true. If the universe is on a loop, things could happen exactly the same as it did before, including your life, and you could be living it over and over again, like.
That was somewhat off-topic, but I just thought maybe some people might agree it's possible.
 

squeeble69

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Jun 9, 2009
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No. I'm completely indifferent towards it; I'm bored of living, so how could death be any worse?
 

Nicarus

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Feb 15, 2010
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Sure. I worry about it all the time. I fear I might die before I get to do something extraordinary. That isn't the only reason though. I wonder what'll happen when I close my eyes for the last time. Will I just pop up in another consciousness with no memory of my past life? Will I look at everything in 3rd Person like in some FPS games watching someone else? Or will I start completely over from the beginning and relive my life (again, no memories of past life)?

All I can say is that death sucks. No matter how ya look at it. Unless there was a New Game+ feature.
 
Sep 14, 2009
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molesgallus said:
gmaverick019 said:
CrawlingPastaHellion said:
The fact that I love to sleep pretty much makes any fear of death from my part very redundant. Death is just an eternal sleep after all, an eternal sleep without dreams.

I do not desire death however, since it's inevitable, why rush it? We shall all die one day, unless some genious comes up with a way to fix that genetic inconvenice of ours.
genetic inconvenience?

try universal inconvenience, everything dies at some point, if someone were to somehow manipulate science into "fixing" that, they would be a god among women/men.

Well, there will be a lot more God's around a century, maybe a few decades, from now. Since a cure for ageing is an extremely possible scientific advancement that will be made. It's just a matter of time. There are animals that don't age. Ageing is an evolved trait, like everything else. Evolution/god could have dialled almost any age into our genes, if it was necessary. Turns out 60 is about optimum for human genetic survival. 21 days for a fly. 200+ years for some tortoise. Infinity, for some worms, and all bacteria.
i seriously doubt it will happen in a few decades, we kind of have to solve alot of other problems first (aids/hiv,etc...), otherwise being old forever would just suck balls

plus i don't want to be an old wrinkly fart who can barely move around for 100+ years, fuck that, i'd rather die at 60 then live to be 140-150 being some waste of fucking space/money/time.
 

Undead Dragon King

Evil Spacefaring Mantis
Apr 25, 2008
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Threads like this- that is one reason why I'm really glad that I'm religious. I do not fear death at all. It's merely a transitory moment to an even more wonderful life after this one- if you did well in this life, that is. That's the goal of religion.

I'm a fan of Paschal's Wager: (under the assumption that my religion is the correct one)

God exists + you living a faithful, good life= the eternal reward of your soul in heaven after death.
God exists + you living an unfaithful life= the eternal torment of your soul in hell after death.
God does not exist + you living a faithful, good life= Oblivion, a cessation of your identity after death.
God does not exist + you living an unfaithful life= Oblivion, a cessation of your identity after death.

Ergo, a faithful, good life either earns you heaven or oblivion, and an unfaithful one either earns you hell or oblivion.

One can consider living a good, faithful life to be paying for an insurance policy for the soul. To pre-empt the criticism of "What if your religion's wrong? You're going to hell anyway!": my own personal beliefs about the truth of my religion aside, you can't tell which religion is true either. I at least have a chance of being right by following this formula. And if I'm wrong, well I guess I'll see you in hell.

For those who are hoping that science can save them from death with either anti-aging pills or brains suspended in fluid w/ robot bodies:

http://www.cracked.com/article_18708_5-reasons-immortality-would-be-worse-than-death.html

Just ignore the points about you being invincible or the only one who is immortal.
 

Alanj95

Regular Member
Aug 20, 2010
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I do not fear death or what happens afterwards.
What I fear is a painful death.
 

MoeTheMonk

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Apr 26, 2010
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curty129 said:
MoeTheMonk said:
I feel pretty secure knowing that when I die, I'll be going to Heaven.
I'm merely wondering why you believe that more so than other beliefs about what occurs after death. Do you have personal experience that indicates, to you at least, that there is an afterlife?
Well, just as it will probably always be impossible to truly know whether God is real or not, or there is an afterlife or not, it really is impossible for me to know with 100% certainty whether my version of the afterlife is true, or if there is an afterlife at all. But suffice to say that the things that I have learned, observed, and experienced have been enough to convince me of my beliefs.