stephen
I was actually being quite serious! [thumb]
Damn sarcasm detector, must be on the fritz.
Mainstream humanists seem to emphasise making the most of this present life without regard to whether we will have a distant future. The distant future seems to be rather crucial to many immortalists.
The implicit assumption which all of the [Immortalist] participants of this thread have been making is that *the present* is all that exists. This is the intuitive view of time, known as presentism.
The opposing view is that of Four dimensionalism, with a number of variants including eternalism, growing block and the shrinking tree theories. (For an indepth, pro-four dimensionalist, review of the philo of time check out
Four Dimensionalism)
Eternalism is by far the most popular variant of four dimensionalism, and was fairly common in the time of the ancient Greeks. Hence, their fascination with the concepts of *fate* and *destiny*.
Nietzsche, a forerunner to existentialist philosophy, 'rediscovered' the significance of eternalist thought with his concept of the Eternal Recurrence - which makes sense, as he was a classical philologist by training.
What, if some day or night a demon were to steal after you into your loneliest loneliness and say to you: 'This life as you now live it and have lived it, you will have to live once more and innumerable times more' ... Would you not throw yourself down and gnash your teeth and curse the demon who spoke thus? Or have you once experienced a tremendous moment when you would have answered him: 'You are a god and never have I heard anything more divine.'~ The Gay Science
One can find out much more about Nietzsche and his "Amor Fati" simply by wikiing it, but it is also important to note that Nietzsche wasn't making any specific cosmological claims. This is in contrast to the modern debate between presentism and four dimensionalism, where such topics as the Special Theory of Relativity are often found.
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But tell me Cliff, did you just finish reading
Slaughterhouse 5 by any chance? Your universal annihilation is what supposedly happened in Vonnegut's fictional world when the Tralfamadorians made a mistake building one of their new warp drives (or something like that).
The
Tralfamadorians were these weird aliens shaped like toilet plungers that could 'see' the dimesion of time. This was obviously a (somewhat preposterous) play on the concept of eternalism by Vonnegut.
The Tralfamador's reponse to your your universal annihilation scenario, "So it goes."
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Random thoughts...
In some schools of Buddhism there is considerable emphasis placed on "the fleeting moment" and "the mere appearance of reality". This can be seen as a form of presentism.
Party line Immortalism is also a presentist philosophy.
What is at issue? Ontological status of past, present and future objects.
Strange similarities. Both Immortalism and Buddhism are presentist philosophies. Reductionist materialism and Buddhism tend to devalue the notion of self (and are dipolar monisms).
With eternalism, does fatalism become a problem?
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Other notables that come to mind:
Albert Camus,
The Myth of SisyphusJames Joyce,
Finnegans Wake