Tag: Denial of Death

Philosophy

Some Remarks on the Notion of โ€œCartesian Dualismโ€ in Continental Philosophy

In the beginning of the 20th century, Western philosophy split into two main schools, analytic and continental philosophy, that โ€“ barring exceptions โ€“ neither read nor understand each other. My own work and influences are mostly within, or closely affiliated with, the analytic school, but occasionally I read some continental philosophy (as well as some non-Western philosophy). One peculiar term I encountered several times in such reading across scholastic boundaries is โ€œCartesian dualismโ€, most recently in Saito Koheiโ€™s Marx in the Anthropocene. To be more precise, it is not the term itself that struck me as peculiar โ€“ youโ€™ll find...
Philosophy

Technological Immortality

Seven years ago I published a paper arguing against afterlife beliefs and various other kinds of โ€œdeath denialโ€ titled โ€œThe Incoherence of Denying My Deathโ€. The denial of death in this sense is not a denial of physical or biological death so much as it is a denial of annihilation. In that paper I distinguished two ways of denying death, which are distinguished essentially by which word in the short proposition โ€œI dieโ€ they deny. Strategy 1 denies the dying part โ€“ that is, it argues that I somehow (can) survive my physical/โ€‹biological/โ€‹bodily death. Strategy 2 denies the โ€œIโ€ in...