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To most people (with a weak soul) is a horrible thing to experience from losing a loved one to losing someone you know like friends but death is a natural cause of life because without death there isn't anything (like someone died fighting for freedom or changing history or a new life reborn). Death is just the the way of life (GET USE TO IT) and to live with.

2007-06-22 06:46:24 · 13 answers · asked by sigifredo m 1 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

13 answers

I don't know if there's a questions in there.

There is a difference of dieing from a car wreck and dieing for freedom. Either way it is a loss of life. The car wreck gains nothing out of it so it is horrible. Dieing for freedom is still losing a life but there is also a gain.

Then there is disease that seems like a release for some when they die.

No matter what, it is still hard to lose a friend. He/she might be going to a better place, but their absence is still missed.

2007-06-22 06:58:40 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Death is inevitable and its the end of life of all living creatures on Earth, purely due to an irreversible collapse of the organic order of the life system mainly the damage to brain and it is natural to happen due to many complex factors associated with ageing.It starts with all disabilities, setting all disorder in organ failure to the ultimate, brain damage and to the death. The flow of blood to the brain if stopped just for a minute the collapse starts and in just three minutes it ends with totally irreversible collapse of its organic order resulting into death a phenomenon that ends all the biologibal activities of the human body making it to decompose and decay. The same thing happens when the life is lost in an accident or by other means. Its not a horrible experience if one dies a natural death, since the multiple organ failure sets a coma to releive the pain of death, which follows slowly. But the heart attack namely the cardiac arrest is painful which may again last only for a minute or two and the inevitable follows. So the life is incomplete and meaningless without death and as we all came from the nature the death completes the cycle of return to the nature as the mortal remains decays into nature!

2007-06-22 14:55:29 · answer #2 · answered by anjana 6 · 0 0

Life is Death?

If anyone had an accurate description of death, I would question their creditability, but it is undeniable fact that death is amazingly intriguing. Facially it is an indescribable experience; all who have knowledge of the feeling of dying are, well dead.

I imagine death in many comportments. I can visualize the slow agony of drowning where water enters your lungs as you gasp for oxygen, your alveoli begging for usable gas and receiving only liquid, extending to unbearable limits the anguish we have all felt in some body of water, the panic that only the notion of not having oxygen available can bring. Also I can imagine the quiet relief of passing in your sleep, perhaps while you are creating a vivid dream, a seamless transition into the afterlife, after a long and successful life.

The answer to the question of the experience of death is out there, but to describe it perhaps needs one who has had, a so called "near death experience"- there was a light and i had a compelling feeling to travel towards the light, i was at peace and now i am not afraid of death.

2007-06-22 15:14:10 · answer #3 · answered by AKA Voxtrace 1 · 0 0

Death is horrible only to the ones left behind. The only exception I can think of is, of course, the way you die. Early, tragically, alone, death is really just a change - the entrance into another world.

My best friend dies last September. she was only 41, and had children. She was also ill with chronic kidney disease and diabetes and heart disease. While I miss her terribly, I would not wish the continuance of her life if it means she lives in pain.

It is life that is not for the faint-hearted.

2007-06-22 14:19:02 · answer #4 · answered by mother ulrich 1 · 0 0

death is almost always profound. It can be shocking and it can be comforting but always profound.
The exceptions being during natural calamities where hundreds and thousands are lost and those witnesses become conditioned. The profundity comes later in what we now call post traumatic syndrome.

Death is necessary to life however it is not something you just deal with or " get use to"
In nursing I always felt It was a gift to be honoured with witnessing both the birth and death of people, Respect for the dead and their loved ones grieving is essential in society.

2007-06-22 14:08:27 · answer #5 · answered by pat 4 · 0 0

Death is a part of life. We're all born, we live, and die at some point. It is nature. I suppose death is a horrible experience when people die by unnatural means. Such as sudden accidents, murders, disasters, etc.
Even though we all know that we all must die someday, it is difficult to deal with the death of loved ones because one has to get used to them being gone. It is hard to accept death's permanentness.

2007-06-22 15:08:07 · answer #6 · answered by karmen82us 2 · 0 0

I can not thing of a single instance when death has evern been a "cause of life". Death ends life, not creates it.

2007-06-22 14:07:00 · answer #7 · answered by Michael C 7 · 0 0

Part of the circle of life

2007-06-22 14:08:38 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It can be both. It is natural, but it is also a terrible thing to experience.

2007-06-22 13:49:57 · answer #9 · answered by sweetpanther08 6 · 0 0

To lose a loved one (especially a child) is devastating no matter how well you word it.

2007-06-22 13:56:49 · answer #10 · answered by Dick Splash 2 · 0 0

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