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Article
Death as Metaphor
Death and Anti-Death: Two Hundred Years After Kant, Fifty Years After Turing
  • Lawrence Kimmel, Trinity University
Document Type
Contribution to Book
Publication Date
1-1-2004
Abstract

What remains to be said about the question and problem of death that has not been repeated a thousand times in the history of human thought and culture? Philosophers in the Western tradition have seemingly argued every nuance of the name, nature, causes, and consequences of death since Plato first took up the death of Socrates as the funding occasion of his philosophical life and thinking. Epicurean and Stoic philosophers subsequently framed the basic arguments that are still with us, directed to three basic questions concerning death: What is it? Is it good or bad? Should we fear it?

Editor
Charles Tandy
Publisher
Ria University Press
ISBN
9780974347226
Citation Information
Kimmel, L. (2004). Death as metaphor. In C. Tandy (Ed.), Death and anti-death: Two hundred years after Kant, fifty years after Turing (pp. 1-29). Ria University Press.