The role of death in life, 7 by JW Harrington

For the Greek Epicurus and the Roman Lucretius, living with our knowledge of mortality requires that “we become aware of our fear of death, then recognize that it is irrational to be afraid of death.  Dead people are devoid of all sensations, just as we all were before we were conceived.  No one is terrified of the time before they were born, so why fret about death, since it is precisely the same insensate state that prevailed for eons before our time?”

-- Sheldon Solomon et al. (2015).  The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life, p. 216

The role of death in life, 6 by JW Harrington

“Many suicides, rather ironically, result from the horror of mortality itself.  Why bother to go on living when death will get you anyway?  ‘The majority of suicides,’ wrote the great Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno, ‘would not take their lives if they had the assurance that they would never die on this earth.  The self-slayer kills himself because he will not wait for death.’  Dostoyevsky came to a similar conclusion in The Possessed, in which the character Pyotr Stepanovich explained his impending suicide: ‘I wish to deprive myself of life…because I don’t want to have the fear of death.’”

-- Sheldon Solomon et al. (2015).  The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life, pp. 201-2

The role of death in life, 5 by JW Harrington

“People also gain a sense of symbolic immortality from feeling that they are part of a heroic cause or nation that will endure indefinitely….  Moreover, according to the great German sociologist Max Weber, charismatic leaders … often emerge during periods of historical upheaval.  In The Denial of Death, [cultural anthropologist Ernest] Becker provided a potent psychoanalytical account of why people find charismatic leaders so alluring in troubled times and, more important, why and how particular individuals are able to capitalize on this proclivity to rise to power and alter the course of history.

“…when people are plagued with economic woes and civil unrest to the point where the cultural scheme of things no longer seems to provide [a constancy that shelters them from the terror of mortality], they will look elsewhere to fulfill that need.

“Under such conditions, people’s allegiance may shift to an individual who exhibits an ‘unconflicted’ personality – in the sense of appearing supremely bold and self-confident – and offers a grand vision that affords a renewed prospect of being a valuable part of something noble and enduring.”

-- Sheldon Solomon et al. (2015).  The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life, pp. 116-7

The role of death in life, 4 by JW Harrington

“Religious faith does indeed serve to assuage concerns about death.  Strong faith in God is associated with emotional well-being and low death anxiety.  Additionally, after a reminder of their mortality, people report being more religious and having a stronger belief in God.” 

-- Sheldon Solomon et al. (2015).  The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life, pp. 87-8