Fair enough but I still think think that the “situation of yourself being dead” is still ploy-like in that it imagines non-existence as a state or situation rather than an absence of state or situation. Like mistaking a map for an entirely imaginary territory.
You can think about a world that doesn’t contain any minds, and yours in particular. The property of a world to not contain your mind does not say “nothing exists in this world”, it says “your mind doesn’t exist in this world”. Quite different concepts.
Of course I can think about such a world. Where people get into trouble is where they think of themselves as “being dead” in such a world rather than simply “not being” i.e. having no more existence than anything else that doesn’t exist. It’s a distinction that has huge implications and rarely finds its way into the discussion. No matter how rational people try to be, they often seem to argue about death as if it were a state of being—and something to be afraid of.
Clearly some of my underlying assumptions are flawed. There’s no doubt I could be more rigorous in my use of the terminology. Still, I can’t help but feel that some of the concepts in the sequences obfuscate as much as they clarify on this issue.
Sorry if I have wasted your time. Thanks again for trying.
Fair enough but I still think think that the “situation of yourself being dead” is still ploy-like in that it imagines non-existence as a state or situation rather than an absence of state or situation. Like mistaking a map for an entirely imaginary territory.
You can think about a world that doesn’t contain any minds, and yours in particular. The property of a world to not contain your mind does not say “nothing exists in this world”, it says “your mind doesn’t exist in this world”. Quite different concepts.
Of course I can think about such a world. Where people get into trouble is where they think of themselves as “being dead” in such a world rather than simply “not being” i.e. having no more existence than anything else that doesn’t exist. It’s a distinction that has huge implications and rarely finds its way into the discussion. No matter how rational people try to be, they often seem to argue about death as if it were a state of being—and something to be afraid of.
I give up for now, and suggest reading the sequences, maybe in particular the guide to words and map-territory.
Clearly some of my underlying assumptions are flawed. There’s no doubt I could be more rigorous in my use of the terminology. Still, I can’t help but feel that some of the concepts in the sequences obfuscate as much as they clarify on this issue. Sorry if I have wasted your time. Thanks again for trying.