Quote:
Originally Posted by Teuthida
Isn't a lot more comforting to know you simply won't exist after you die rather than have some sort of essence of yourself (What parts exactly? What will be your form? What you looked like when you died?) transported to some other realm of who knows what ruled by some higher being? Believing in an afterlife is far scarier of a concept for me than simply being worm food.
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As Calvin (Of the Calvin & Hobbes') said "Dying sounds like an awfully big adventure."
Personally, I don't find much solace in the fact that once I die, time might as well have never existed in the first place.
Occasionally I try to find a way to mesh science and religion together. Science is built on
what if, after all. And there's no bigger "what if" than "What if a God (or what we would perceive to be a God) actually does exist?"
I recently watched Horton Hears a Who (Because I can), and it made me think about this. Follow me, here.
The Who's of whoville cannot see Horton the elephant. They cannot understand the fact that there is more than there world out there. They cannot comprehend what it would look like, or even begin to fathom the size of everything that exists outisde their little spec on that flower, let alone the size of the elephant; gigantic to them, but infinitely tiny within his own Universe. Even if they were to SEE Horton the Elephant, he would be much too large to even be recognized as a thing.
If we were to stare directly into the face of God,
would we even know it? 