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War wrote:I have always believed the meaning of life was life itself. Whether or not to believe in a higher being is something that every person goes through, its not like anyone here is the first people to think about it. So in my own conclusion, I have come up with that when we die we become are own god and get to build are own world. Is that idea wrong? Well does it matter if its wrong?
Greatchickenman wrote:War wrote:I have always believed the meaning of life was life itself. Whether or not to believe in a higher being is something that every person goes through, its not like anyone here is the first people to think about it. So in my own conclusion, I have come up with that when we die we become are own god and get to build are own world. Is that idea wrong? Well does it matter if its wrong?
Yes, it is wrong. I used to think along similar lines and I was pretty happy with it for about 10 years. Then one night I took to thinking and I realized it's just another coping strategy and you're wrong..."dead" wrong...
Impossible wrote:Isn't YOUR MOTHER a comment?
War wrote:I have always believed the meaning of life was life itself. Whether or not to believe in a higher being is something that every person goes through, its not like anyone here is the first people to think about it. So in my own conclusion, I have come up with that when we die we become are own god and get to build are own world. Is that idea wrong? Well does it matter if its wrong?
Gil212 wrote:ps. I'm a girl btw
^_^
Fitz Tayo wrote:But still, it's only words damn it.
Glenn47 wrote:There aren't many "scientific" approaches to the afterlife. The only I can think of is that fact that when a person dies there's a very tiny amount of matter that they cannot account for during post-mortem (sp?) analysis. Something is missing after death, every time. And there's a theory that the matter that's missing may be the "soul" that left the body.
EmperorJeramyu wrote:Glenn47 wrote:There aren't many "scientific" approaches to the afterlife. The only I can think of is that fact that when a person dies there's a very tiny amount of matter that they cannot account for during post-mortem (sp?) analysis. Something is missing after death, every time. And there's a theory that the matter that's missing may be the "soul" that left the body.
I saw an article that said that too. Too bad it was in the Weekly World News.
Fitz Tayo wrote:This went from "Super-hawt fuckbuddy" talk to "deep, life philosophy on death" talk. Who else didn't see that coming?
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