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    Death deprives us of good things in the future, whereas n... — Carmelics
    Home/Afterlife & Death
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    Supports→It is rational to deplore death more than we deplore our not having always existed.

    Death deprives us of good things in the future, whereas not having always existed does not deprive us of future goods.

    Afterlife & Death
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    Afterlife & Death

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    If we take this bias for granted, it is better for us to have goods in the futur...It is rational to deplore death more than we deplore our not having always exist...We have a far-reaching bias toward preferring that good things be in our future ...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    God exists timelessly 'without' creation rather than before creation, ...77%We have a far-reaching bias toward preferring that good things be in o...76%It is rational to deplore death more than we deplore our not having al...76%God is temporal after creation, even if God was timeless before creati...76%

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    According to Parfit, we have a far-reaching bias extending to goods in general: we prefer that any good things, not just pleasures, be in our future, and that bad things, if they happen at all, be in our past. He argues that if we take this extensive bias for granted, and assume that, because of it, it is better for us to have goods in the future than in the past, we can explain why it is rational to deplore death more than we do our not having always existed: the former, not the latter, deprives us of good things in the future (he need not say that it is because it is in the past that we worr...

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