gamma742 wrote on 11.02.08 at 06:04:33:You lost me on this one..
Quote:It's also the most effective "broadband antidote" for most humans in order to somehow accept mortality, which technically is in extreme contradiction to every lifeform's own genetic survival instinct..
Not that I disagree, I'm not sure I understood..
I believe that mankind is the only lifeform that understands life and death or an awareness of death. For example, I don't think my dog Duchess is aware that she will die some day. I on the other hand, know that some day I will die and cease to exist here on earth. However, I believe life for mankind is eternal and spiritually I live on
I think you're correct to some extend, if you speak about concious knowledge of life's inevitable result in death as an abstract and only talk about us here on earth.
Animals indeed don't (visibly or to our knowledge) philosophize about the end of their lifes. Many often do seem to realize their demise when it has arrived, though. Some even detect the demise of other lifeforms with a "sixth sense" we humans have no details about yet despite all study.
I think "humanity" as we know it (with all beautiful pro's and horrible con's) is a natural evolutionary result of being
apparently at the top of the food chain.
It usually takes an unexpected one-on-one encounter with a superior predator in nature to effect some "reality check", others only need a view of the stars in an area with no light pollution to grasp their insignificance (the best view reportedly remains to astronauts, who have seen our earth from space - to realize how insignificant even our whole planet is in the big picture).
From my experience, humans have the
potential to actually become something many
claim to be (in person or defining their species).
Problem is, that requires understanding (or at least acknowledging) the big picture, even if it on first sight holds nothing heoric (i.e. 'conquerors of the Universe' just because we managed to launch a couple of Satellites into our neighbourhood).