I can hardly think of a place where rational thinking is held in higher regard than in this forum. And yet, even in the midst of it there appear to be signs of something that may resemble superstition. I've went through some mortality related topics, usually focusing on the fear of death which ultimately focuses on the fear of or incomprehensibility of non-existence.
So what does superstition have to do with it? Well, it's simple. If you say that death = termination of existence than you are making an assumption that might be just as big as the assumption that death = afterlife, made by most religions. I suppose that this assumption is taken as valid because the body decomposes after death and becomes practically indistinguishable from earth. However, that's really like second hand evidence for non-existence of something that itself is quite abstract - life and the essence of life which really is in the mind - thoughts.
So can we really know for sure that the decomposition of the body means the decomposition of life or is there, even if remote, a possibility that what's actually going in is merely a conversion? Whatever it is, I'm not trying to say that there IS a conversion or that there IS some sort of a life after death. I'm just saying that I don't think we can be so absolutely sure that there ISN'T. Remember that everything in reality is in fact energy (as aptly shown by the famous Einstein's equation E=MC2), something which can never be destroyed and merely goes in and out of form, a constant state of conversion. If everything is energy then nothing fundamentally ever "dies" or ceases to exist. It merely converts into something else. So who is to say with absolute certainty that all the human being turns into is the visible pile of dirt? Who is to say that the energy in our minds, at least, doesn't convert into something else?
In any case what we can be sure about is that we don't quite know and wont know until we actually experience it. Thus the fear of death really comes down to the ultimate form of fear of unknown. Death is the ultimate unknown.
When I read typical statements like "death is inevitable" or "we are limited" it frankly sounds somewhat at odds with much of else that is being said in this community. It almost seems like saying "government is inevitable" or "humans are inherently evil" or things like that, and just accepting that as if there's nothing more to it, as if it's nothing to be questioned. When in fact, THERE IS. Even if death actually is a complete termination of our life, just leaving it at that and then proceeding to lie to ourselves how it's actually some sort of a good biological function that drives us to live fuller lives.. would be a gross mistake and akin to putting a blindfold across your eyes that make it impossible for you to see the breadth of possibilities and freedom that is deploying before our eyes.
It is becoming quite possible for humans to decide how long do they want to live. That's better than immortality because it gives YOU the choice. Immortality implies impossibility to die, but if you can choose your time and prepare for it, that is empowering, that frees you of that fear and allows you to truly prepare, live your life on your time, do all the things you dreamed of doing and then when you are absolutely and fully satisfied, do that one last experiment and allow yourself to die, just to discover that last frontier - face one last unknown.
Take a look at genomics, an emerging science which now allows humans to program and reprogram life. Rapid regeneration of organs is soon to become a technological reality. Combined with nanotechnology it will become possible to devise what I call an "immortality pill", though it'd more precisely be a "life extension pill", which you can drink daily or weekly as a juice that puts nanobots throughout your body which add rapid regeneration and healing capability to your organs, including your brain. When a cell dies, the nanobot regenerates a new one in its place. At first sign of cancer, the nanbots neutralize it before you even notice. It could go as far as regenerate deep stabbing wounds before you lose enough blood and organ functions to kill you.
So don't tell me "death is inevitable". The more I learn about myself, humanity and universe at large the more I realize. The ultimate superstition is one that invokes the concept of impossibility and the dogma of limitedness. Whenever these concepts are evoked they dumb the mind - they tell the mind "there's nothing more to discover here, there's nothing more to try, go away.. " and the mind who believes in this horrid definiteness of these concepts so willingly complies and remains blind. When you don't know, it's better to accept the unknown than to come up with the explanation of the gaps. Even atheists tend to do that. It's just that the thing they fill their gaps with are more sophisticated than religious people's "god of the gaps". But don't fool yourself.
You know.. I don't believe in god. I believe in myself. I believe in human capability to evolve. But more on my pantheistic tendencies elsewhere. ;)
Let me know what you think.