r the most to become sad when their beloved persons die.
i said that because agnostics r not sure about anything ,they r not sure about God so it is accepted for them that they may go to hell after death.regarding atheists,they r sure that there is no any form of life after death so they should be the most to become sad after losing their relatives or beloved persons.
2007-09-25
01:24:36
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10 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
from the first 5 answerers only "glitterkittyy" has understood me.regarding "rightly" and "correctly" ,i'm not fluent in english so i'm sorry if i said uncorrect grammar.i'm not christian.i know that all of people become sad when their beloved persons die but i said that i "think" that atheists are the most .
i know also that all people are scared of death but i isaid "i think" that agnostics are the most because if they do not believe in hell ,they (agnostics)can not prove that it does not exist
2007-09-25
01:44:17 ·
update #1
i also want to say that i'm not asking that to prove that religion is a must or so,i'm asking because in my community i have no atheists or agnostics to discuss that with or to know their feelings.
2007-09-25
01:47:26 ·
update #2
I think you make a valid point about atheists. Perhaps atheists would feel more finality when a loved one passes away because we know we will never see that person again. I can see your logic in that line of thinking.
2007-09-25 01:32:26
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answer #1
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answered by glitterkittyy 7
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I can't speak for the other agnostic posters, but personally I'm not scared of death.
If religion is wrong and there's nothing after death it's not like it will matter to me - I would no longer exist.
I don't believe Christianity (or any other religion I've looked into) has it right, so if there is a god of some kind, I don't know what the afterlife is. I would hope it's something good, but if it's not I can't do anything about it.
As for atheists, I don't really see why they would be sad about anything. If they believe nothing happens after death, nothing in their life matters in the great scheme of things. It seems like emotions should be worthless for them - what would be important is leaving a mark on the world so once you ARE gone, you're not forgotten. Not that it would matter to you, since you don't exist o_O
But I'm not atheist so that's just my feelings on it.
2007-09-25 01:31:43
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answer #2
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answered by CSE 7
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I find it humorous that you believe all christian will make it the heaven in the first place.
See their loved ones again?
I thought that upon arrival in the heaven your mind was cleared so you heart would be free to bask in the love of the God, not to go looking around for wife who died 5 years ago having never told you she slept with your brother many times and never bother to ask for the forgiveness pass into the heaven.
yeah I know its a run-on much like this theme question - you can never understand until you open your mind, you just might find the God
2007-09-25 01:53:17
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It's "are." It only takes two more keystrokes.
If your thesis is true, doesn't that mean that Christians should never cry at funerals?
As an agnostic, I can tell you that I have no belief in the Christian hell, or in the Christian god. My agnosticism concerns ultimate origins, like where the singularity that caused the Big Bang came from. I don't assume that an anthropomorphic personal god had anything to do with that.
2007-09-25 01:29:59
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answer #4
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answered by Cap'n Zeemboo 3
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i am born christian but do not practice religion.
i believe in GOD and jesus christ too, but still i do not practice by going to a church, and still i know that GOD is there for me even when i`ll die. i`m not scare at all of dieing. i`m ready to go anytime and that goes for my family and everyone i love. cause, this is the way this planet recycle itself. we live we die, and that will never change.
a question for the people that can`t accept death as it is.
read this.
if a loved one is sick or get into an accident and become disable. most of you will keep your loved one like this, handycap simply because you can`t let them go.
but!! what happen thaugh when a horse broke it`s leg during the race? people will say: poor horse, it cannot fullfill it`s purpose no more. we cannot let it suffer, let`s put it down.
with the animal we understand but not with the human, why???
2007-09-25 02:07:26
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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No, you're not thinking "rightly" first of all.
As for the ones who get the saddest, when somebody dies is up to each individual.
I cannot say whether jewish, or muslim or chistian or non-believers get the saddest.
They do not react as a group, do they?
How do people deal with loss and death? It's all different for everybody.
How do YOU react?
Fear of death is instinctive.
I feel sad when someone I care for dies, don't you?
I'm sure you do regardless of your beliefs.
2007-09-25 05:32:19
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answer #6
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answered by Melkiha 5
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I'm sad when a loved one passes, but compared to the Christians in my family, I'd say that I treat it as less of a tragedy.
For me death is just part of life, not an overly pleasant one but still just a part of life.
2007-09-25 01:38:39
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answer #7
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answered by Pirate AM™ 7
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One thing of which I am certain of is I would never hire such a clumsy typist who cannot coherently express their desire to put words into the mouths of people they do not know in the least.
2007-09-25 01:27:57
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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You clearly are not thinking "rightly". But you're also not correctly thinking.
2007-09-25 01:29:46
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I tried to answer, but your childlike grammar is just too bad.
Atheist.
2007-09-25 02:28:34
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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