INTRODUCTION
Man is a being faced with numerous difficulties, problems, foes and so on. Perhaps the worst and the most dreaded of these foes is death. It has been tagged an arch-enemy of man, the destroyer of man, non-respecter of person, and has a host of other negative connotative words and names. Around the world and in many religions and cultures, people have sought to explain and demystify death, but with minute success. At the bottom of all our phobias and neurosis lies a fear of death. This is so, probably because of the uncertainty surrounding death. Such things as: whether the experience will be painful or dehumanizing in some way? Whether there will be extension of life after death; whether death is the end. Even not being able to see the beloved once again in this earthly existence is enough puzzlement. All these are problematic realities which face and confront one as one encounters death or the death of a beloved one.
These were the dilemma in which
…show more content…
Among materialists, there is till considerable disagreement about the status of mental properties, which are conceived as properties of bodies or brains. Materialists who are ‘Property dualists believe that mental properties are an additional kind of property or attribute, not reducible to physical properties.’
Property dualists have the problem of explaining how such properties can fit into the world envisaged by modern physical science, according to which there are physical explanations for all things. Materialists who are “Property monists believe that there is ultimately only one type of property, although they disagree on whether or not mental properties exist in material form.”
Some property monist, known as reductive materialists, holds that “Mental properties exist simply as a subset of relatively complex and non-basic physical properties of the
Death, one of the greatest fears of any living creature. Nothing is more frightening than not knowing what will happen, how it will happen, or where the deceased go. All greet death with fear, some may not show it but it is the way humans are. The next hardest thing could quite possibly be dealing with the death of a someone close to you. Some move on and continue their lives without them, Others have a time of mourning and sorrow but eventually move on, and some never move on.
Most of the individuals, to be specific, numbers 1,3 and 4 answered that they we are most afraid of death. They said we are afraid of death of a loved one,when and how we ourselves are going to die, and even thinking about death is problem. On the other hand, Individuals numbers 2 and 5 both said that we are most afraid of the unknown and not being control. This answer is similar to the first response because we as humans are cannot contain death, we cannot control it and we also do not know when or how we are going to die.
It roots to our idea of the philosophy of life, in terms of reflection on our existence as humans and not only the contingence but the limitations thereof. Death encompasses the individual’s fundamental existence on the one hand and reshapes our concepts of its nature complementing one another in order to enlighten the idea of it. The manifestation of an individual to herself/himself is made probable by nothingness. The notion of spirituality and death in existentialism.
Death is not so light a concept as to glance off of those it does not take. Oftentimes, when death claims someone close to you, it seems easy to fall into a lethargic pit of despair, contenting oneself only to dwell on the morose incontrollable nature of the universe. I know I felt this way, especially with the guilt laid upon me with the death of my brother. I do not claim to know anyone else’s grief, or to know the best way for anyone to deal with the loss of such a beloved girl. I do know, however, that “when you lose something you love, faith takes over” (Tan 2166).
Kiran Nayyar Ms. Chan Advanced English 9 15 March 2022 The Desolation of Death Death is a universal experience that everyone deals with once in their lifetime. It is often accompanied by fear, which prompts people to talk about it in hushed whispers, behind closed doors, where they feel safe from its grasp. Yone Noguchi was one of the few who dared to share his thoughts on this subject.
As a result of the growing comfort of the topic of death over the ages, not many factors have changed in the normality of a society as a whole. As breed once frightened by the matter of an eternal disintegration, we have progressed yet remained a constant from routine involving death down to colors of a mourning party and after rituals beyond the grave and on earth. To see this variability in behavioral instincts shows how close yet so far away the Elizabethan era seems to one who would review a constant. In conclusion, the topic of rituals revolving around death is highly important because it displays how little and how much humanity has changed its behavioral traits towards death since the beginning of an eternity of inevitable
“Quite an experience to live in fear” (Scott). Humans view death as final and therefore fear it. Death brings the unknown and humans deal with this fear by either suppressing it or seeking comfort in religion. To die is to become insignificant. Humans have a deep desire to cheat death.
However, because we don’t know what death is, it isn’t strange that we fear it. People like to have control over things. And when we can’t control something, we fear it. Throughout the years, we took more and more control over nature, for example, building a dam to protect ourselves from the water, but we still cannot control earthquakes, and therefore we fear them.
The term ‘dualism’ has a variety of uses if we see the previous literature. In common sense, the notion is that, for any particular area of interest, there are two commonly different classes of things. In theory, for example a ‘dualist’ is one who believes that Good and Evil-or God and the Devil-are independent and more or less equal forces in the world. Dualism compare with monism, which is the theory that there is only one significant type, category of thing and rather less commonly, with pluralism, which is commonly referred to as many categories. In the philosophy of mind, dualism is the theory that the mind and body are, in some sense, totally different types of thing.
From the beginning, children are taught to fear the concept of death. Most people spend their lives fearing death, but it’s not death that they are afraid of. It is part of nature to die, and our minds know that, what scares most people is the thought of death before they have had time to accomplish what they want in life. In “When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be,” John Keats put into words how people feel about dying before they have been successful in whatever mission they have set forth for themselves. His poem touches the reality of people’s feelings though imagery and figurative language.
When we think of death everyone has a separate, unique reaction. Though some are more respectful than other this does not stop the fact that there is always a label placed on someone's life. This simple human characteristic has been done for the length of our existence proving itself avid in even earlier literature such as, The Tragedy of Julius Caesar. Most notable as Mark Antony uses the line “ The evil that men do is remembered after their deaths, but the good is often buried with them.” However, this has repeatedly proven itself to be untrue due to the fact that, in death no one is remembered for all of their actions, but only those popularized by the mass.
But what I do know is that a lot of people are afraid, and they are afraid that when they die, they're going to be locked in a dark room forever and that's it. Life has ended, you're nothing more than dust and rot in the ground.
I see the merit to not fearing death because it promotes a life of discovery and initiative. It gives people the necessary freedom to pursue the pleasures in life without the guilt that might be attached to it. There is no fear of the afterlife, no eternal damnation or god that will impose divine judgement on their own behalf. It allows people to become happier and focus on what really matter, however there is a limit to how far this can be taken. Without the proper moderation or complete lack of having the fear of death can bring about immense physical pain and the stunted development of mental acuity.
In the following parts of my essay, I will mainly talk about the topics of “death” and “knowledge”
This fear was exhaustively discussed in the article The Wisdom of Fearing Only Fear. The author Phyllis Morris explained the role of fear in the fictional story of Harry Potter series. He emphasizes that fear of the unknown encompasses our fear of death. He said that not knowing what was in store for us after dying made people anxious of death. There 's uncertainty on whether there is really life after death.