English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

6 answers

No, life wouldnt exist without death..... Men made the word death to define and identify the contrast of non-existance and existance.

2007-03-28 09:52:48 · answer #1 · answered by Haz the Preacher 2 · 0 0

Yes-because life continues on after death so the real question is IS THERE REALLY DEATH? Spiritually even after u "pass over" u go into another life and continue on a different plain and dimension . I believe u never really leave here only n physical form(body) but your soul lives on. When u die u r e-volving and going 2 higher stage of life with much more freedom 2 do it since u r not trapped n a body- u can roam the earth easily. Great question-interesting.

2007-03-28 17:01:11 · answer #2 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

They are what they are; Life is what this state is called, and Non-Life ( when the Body here Dies) is deemed to have died, and the Entity in the Body has gone where-ever you believe it to have gone.
Kind of Like the Person who Dreamed that they were a Butterfly that Dreamed it was a Human, and then when they woke up, they were not sure who they were;
Some Believe in various States, so that This life is one State, Death is another State, and then even in what from our perspective is death, there is ( they Believe) Death within that State, and so on.

2007-03-28 16:51:53 · answer #3 · answered by Mictlan_KISS 6 · 0 0

Good question. Without a the contrast of death...the concept of "life" might well lose all meaning.

2007-03-28 16:56:21 · answer #4 · answered by Open Heart Searchery 7 · 0 0

to be honest, i see the point of having a word for something that is opposite of the other. But what would you call the everyday events that happen during the "eternity" of existence?

2007-03-28 17:03:10 · answer #5 · answered by Elgy 2 · 0 0

what else would it be called? right now we live to die and without death we'd live to live.

2007-03-28 16:51:31 · answer #6 · answered by Virgo 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers