TechPro wrote:How much time of "the easy life" do you have remaining?
You think living with a pregnant woman is EASY?
roid wrote:When you die - from that point on you miss out on everything. You wouldn't care, but if you could you would.
Yes, you care NOW that you WON'T care THEN. Very good point. Very interesting post!
To put an entirely practical spin on in. My grandmother died of Alzheimer's. After her brain had reached a certain level of collapse, she was no longer unhappy. Actually, she was even happier than she had been before. But she couldn't remember people, she had no idea what had happened yesterday, every experience was just moment by moment.
Before the degeneration reached that point, there was a period when her mind was fading, and she was still aware enough to KNOW it was fading. And it made her miserable. She was not only unhappy that she couldn't remember things that happened before, she was unhappy even about the present, because she knew that in just a few days, or even hours, that experience would probably slip through the holes in her mind and be gone as well. It made her VERY frustrated that no matter what she did, it would all be gone in just a little while, that everything she was, everything she experienced, and all of her own thoughts were so obviously ephemeral. It threatened her personhood to see all of her own continuity failing. It was a TERRIBLE way to die.
So yes, I'm not afraid of the experience of nothingness, but I'll have to agree that I find the thought of not existing forever unpleasant. If that is the case, then we die, our consciousness is blown out like a candle, our brains rot, and eventually the sun expands and everything on this planet is broken down into it's constituent atoms. We made no mark, left no sign, accomplished nothing. Our memories, our tears, our laughter, our loves, our hates, everything that made us us, will not mean anything to anyone. It will all be as if we never were.
Bettina wrote:Couldn't I go out on a limb and say that religious feelings of living eternally is more out of selfishness and greed? Wink Just messing around..
But it is a very valid point. If people are trying to be religious, just because they want to live forever, they are coming at it from the wrong angle. It's like rushing to get married to someone you don't love, just because you want to have sex. Good sex FOLLOWS love, and if you don't love your spouse, all the "good sex" in the world won't make them worth living with. AND, if you truly love your spouse, you'd want to be married to them, even if you could never have sex.
And that's the way Christians are supposed to be (although we certainly do not always achieve it). The wonderful thing about living forever, is that we get to be with God. And even if we couldn't live forever, if this life were it and there was no after life at all, we'd still want to live this life as close to God as we can get.