Death is coming

The closer death creeps up upon me the less I am able to understand the reasons for life or living.

Yes I have experienced a close family member dying and unlike television it takes decades to handle such a thing. To think I am going to put my family through such a thing when I finally leave is more horrific to me than the thought of death itself.

My life was and is still a learning experience but when all said and done what am I to do with all this accumulated learning over my lifetime if I just die. There is no logic or reason to this.

Long ago I became aware that the God story that is sold to the majority is just a nice story to give mankind with a message of a basic layout of how nice life could be if everyone followed these ideas. Not many in life do and if one thinks about it the good and evil structures actually depend on each other. The good that can be experienced in life is only understood as good when there is it's opposite to compare it to. This is not rocket science only common sense in reality. I am not saying we need to experience bad but understanding in it is needed to appreciate the great things many of us can have in our lives. From birth to death there are many ways mankind helps his fellow man. How many ways can you help?


Tuesday, June 15, 2010

A Quick Analysis Of Candide By Voltaire

By Aaron Miller

Candide is a picaresque comedy and social satire by the great man of French letters, Voltaire, proceeding with Job-like determination from one misadventure to another over the course of thirty bitingly humorous chapters. The namesake protagonist is really a nave young man whose innocence serves as a foil for the numerous horrific but equally comedic situations that occur.

His trials and tribulations in the world test his inherent optimism, and by the end of the short novel he appears to be much subdued, although it is not absolutely certain that Candide has turned his back on optimism, as is generally claimed by many a literary scholar.

Indeed, Professor Pangloss' belief that "all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds" is not undermined by all the would-be evidence to the contrary that forms the book's plot, for such assertions are inherently outside the realm of evidence, akin to solipsism. Pangloss' philosophy isn't disproved, however arguably put in doubt, since claiming that everything happens for the best is inherently unprovable - as well as unassailable.

To say that all happens for the best is a statement that cannot be proved or disproved. Indeed, it all depends greatly on semantics (though, as semanticists would argue, everything is semantics), or what one means by such terms as "best" and "possible." It all even goes so far as to concern the very idea of free will and what it means to be a self.

At the end of the book, Candide seems tired of debates, and if there is any philosophy that he would espouse it would probably be the kind of "wise know-nothing practicality" of a Solomon, the Solomon of the Book of Ecclesiastes. Though a product of the Enlightenment, Voltaire's work appears to exhibit what would be recognized centuries later as an existential sentiment, even an existential melancholy if not pessimism.

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