Examlex
Thomas Nagel: Death
Suppose that death is the permanent end of human existence. If so, is death bad for the person who dies? Some argue that such a claim is senseless, on the grounds that nothing can be bad for a person who no longer exists. Nagel rejects these arguments, and defends the view that death is bad for us. In Nagel's view, death is not bad because of any of the positive features of death, but because it deprives us of the goods that life contains. Nagel defends his view from three objections.
The first objection is based on the assumption that nothing can be good or bad for someone unless it is experienced as pleasant or unpleasant. Because the dead do not experience anything, it seems that death cannot be bad for us. Nagel responds by denying the assumption behind the objection. We can be harmed by people betraying us behind our backs and without our knowledge, and we can even be harmed by people neglecting our wishes after our deaths.
The second objection is that death cannot be bad for a person, because after death there is simply no subject for which anything can be good or bad. In response, Nagel claims that it would be bad for a person to be reduced to the cognitive level of an infant, even if he remained perfectly content. The badness of such a fate is not undermined by the contention that the original person no longer exists, for the badness is grounded in the contrast between what actually transpired and possible alternatives. Such a fate is bad because it deprives a person of potential goods. Nagel claims that death is similar in this respect.
The third, and final, objection is this: because we were not harmed by our prenatal nonexistence, we cannot be harmed by posthumous nonexistence. Nagel responds that although our nonexistence before our birth did not deprive us of anything, death deprives us of time that we would otherwise be alive. Ultimately, then, Nagel concludes that these three objections fail to undermine the thought that death is bad for us.
-According to Nagel, being born is _________ and not being born is __________.
Intellectual Assets
Intangible resources of a company, including patents, trademarks, business models, and the expertise of employees, that contribute to its competitive advantage.
Knowledge
Information, understanding, or skill that one gains through education or experience.
Informal Systems
Unofficial ways of operating within an organization that arise from personal interactions, cultures, and norms outside formal structures.
Informational Power
Power derived from possessing knowledge or information that is needed or wanted by others.
Q8: What determines the outcome of capital sentencing
Q9: Only visual sociologists have an obligation to
Q11: Thomson concludes that the trolley problem is
Q13: The passage of Kentucky's Racial Justice Act
Q13: According to Thomson, abortion is unjust in
Q14: Singer claims that his principle is unprecedented
Q16: Justice Stevens voiced that _served no "therapeutic
Q19: In Roper v. Simmons, the offender was
Q21: The conceptual domain in the DSM-5 includes
Q54: statements issued by the Internal Auditing Standards