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    When we say that something is dead, we mean to emphasize ... — Carmelics
    Home/Afterlife & Death
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    Supports→Being dead consists in unviability (the loss of the capacity to deploy vital activities).

    When we say that something is dead, we mean to emphasize that the capacity to deploy vital activities has been lost.

    Afterlife & Death
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    Afterlife & Death

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    Being dead consists in unviability (the loss of the capacity to deploy vital act...The loss of life account is thoroughly established in ordinary usage.When we deny that frozen embryos are dead, we mean to emphasize that they have n...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Being dead consists in unviability (the loss of the capacity to deploy...86%To die is to lose the capacity to engage in vital activities.79%Something can be revived only if it is alive—only if it has the capaci...77%When death is present, we no longer exist.75%

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    However, the loss of life account is thoroughly established in ordinary usage, and is easily reconciled with the possibility of suspended vitality. In denying that frozen embryos are dead, it is clear that we mean to emphasize that they have not lost the capacity to deploy their vital activities. When we say that something is dead, we mean to emphasize that this capacity has been lost. Having used ‘dead’ to signal this loss, why would we want to use the word ‘alive’ to signal the fact that something is making active use of its vital activities? Our best option is to use a pair of contrasting t...

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