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anon wrote:I'd say "the void" is the uncomfortableness of existing - a kind of underlying anxiety of sorts.
James S Saint wrote:anon wrote:I'd say "the void" is the uncomfortableness of existing - a kind of underlying anxiety of sorts.
Anxiety, the seed of all ailments, medically created, mentally abated, and until death do us part.
Sauwelios wrote:The void is filled with the will to fill it.
The Fifth Column wrote:It's strange to come across an old thread forgetting that you've posted in it, then compleltely failing to recognise yourself in the things you've said.
What the hell was I talking about? Eurgh...
FilmSnob wrote:The void isn't life, it's death. We fill the void of death with life.
But it's all a big joke because the void is artificial, after-the-fact.
FilmSnob wrote:Which can be easily achieved by comprehending it as a very part of our constitution, as simply feelings correlating with ideas. The whole "void" thing becomes empty ;P.
FilmSnob wrote:You don't comprehend the intangible, you comprehend that the intangible is intangible, and then are able to move on. The scary "void" loses all emotional relevance once it has been established as irrelevant to anything but relative assertions... "devoid of all reason," say, or "devoid of beauty."
FilmSnob wrote:Here we disagree, probably irreparably I'm afraid.
To me, death is an undiscernible mistery, and it is foolish to speak of what one does not know.
Arcturus Descending wrote:FilmSnob wrote:Here we disagree, probably irreparably I'm afraid.
To me, death is an undiscernible mistery, and it is foolish to speak of what one does not know.
That being the case, there would be mostly silence in the universe, don't you think? Not necessarily a negative thing.
Because something is mysterious doesn't mean we don't want to understand it . . . we want to at least understand more of it.
FilmSnob wrote:Arcturus Descending wrote:FilmSnob wrote:Here we disagree, probably irreparably I'm afraid.
To me, death is an undiscernible mistery, and it is foolish to speak of what one does not know.
That being the case, there would be mostly silence in the universe, don't you think? Not necessarily a negative thing.
Because something is mysterious doesn't mean we don't want to understand it . . . we want to at least understand more of it.
It's not about whether we want to understand it or not. It's that we can't. You are either dead or alive, you cannot be both.
Except in a really good zombie movie I'll make some day, but that's another subject.
FilmSnob wrote:We don't experience death, we experience the pain of no longer having something that died.
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