Not exact matches
How is going for those who will live and
die with question no one can explain...
Consciousness.
I can totally get «wouldn't it be cool if our sense of
consciousness survived our physical deaths and we got to hang out
with the
consciousnesses of all the people we loved who
died» but the jump from that to «I'm positive we have immortal souls» seems too much like wishful thinking that's been codified by some form of group consensus.
With the germ of
consciousness hatched upon its surface, the Earth, our perishable earth that contemplates the final, absolute zero, has brought into the Universe a demand, henceforth irrepressible, not only that all things shall not
die, but that what is best in the world, that which has become most complex, most highly centrated, shall be saved.
8 - 10) or
with inherited concepts of corporate personality, (E.g., «as in Adam all
die,» etc.) were commonly in the Christian
consciousness; but the power of self - sacrifice as an indispensable factor in saviorhood was none the less the orienting truth of early Christianity.
I find much greater meaning in recognizing how cool it is that I'm here, briefly,
with a
consciousness that will vanish the day I
die, and the elements that are currently me will return to the universe, to be recycled into something else.
With a deeper understanding of these timeless truths, the student will be better prepared to both live and die with consciousness and fearlessness, as well as the ability to guide and inspire others in this direct
With a deeper understanding of these timeless truths, the student will be better prepared to both live and
die with consciousness and fearlessness, as well as the ability to guide and inspire others in this direct
with consciousness and fearlessness, as well as the ability to guide and inspire others in this direction.
In Transcendence, the wife and colleague of a
dying man attempt to upload his
consciousness into supercomputer AI
with less than optimum results in a story bookended by a quiet, post-internet post-apocalypse world.
In an interview
with the Los Angeles Times, Franco says he hopes to follow his recent adaptation of As I Lay
Dying by crafting yet another movie from of one of the author's ostensibly unfilmable texts, the prose's scattered focus, stream - of -
consciousness expression, and tendency toward uncomfortable sexual themes speaking to Franco, for obvious reasons.
From developer Frictional Games, SOMA is a survival horror game
with serious existential questions about humanity,
consciousness, and what it means to
die.
The works in this collection are supremely imaginative in both form and content: from the semi-autobiographical novel painted by a young artist who
died in the Holocaust (Charlotte Salomon) to Alison Knowles» computer - generated chance operation for «imagining» houses and their inhabitants; from the pseudo-scientific examination of a conversation between a mother and a daughter (Eleanor Antin) to the dark, comic interrogation of violence against women (Sue Williams); from the transformations of newspaper headlines (Suzanne Treister) to the probing of animal
consciousness (Cole Swensen & Shari De Graw); from the body maps drawn by South African women
with AIDS (Bambanani Women's Group) to the alchemical transformation of the pregnant body into an evolving landscape and philosophical meditation (Susan Hiller).