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THE MEANING OF LIFE

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And if you look at life as a whole you might not think that there is a meaning ... setting your sights higher, and asking what the point of the whole thing is. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE MEANING OF LIFE


1
THE MEANING OF LIFE
From the Summit Traveler Looking Over the Sea of
Fog Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840)
2
DEATH, MEANING, AND LONGEVITY
  • Everyone who is now alive on earth will be dead
    at some time in the future. Does the fact that
    everyone will die mean that none of our goals,
    projects, thoughts, and interests have meaning?
  • But just as did Nozick, Nagel wonders why the
    future extinction of everyone now alive should
    make our lives meaningless.
  • Is what we do meaningful only if it lasts? How
    long does it have to last? This is Nozicks idea
    of traces.

3
LIFE, MEANING, AND LONGEVITY
  • Nagel notes what we have already seen, that even
    masterpieces of art and science will one day
    disappear in the rubble of the universe.
  • It would seem then that, if we cant find meaning
    in longevity - since nothing will last forever -
    we must find it within our own lives.
  • We can find explanations and justifications for
    most of the things we do within lives, but the
    problem is finding a justification or meaning for
    life as a whole. And if you look at life as a
    whole you might not think that there is a meaning
    to it at all.

4
LIFE AS A WHOLE, VIEWED FROM THE OUTSIDE
  • Looking at life as a whole, viewed from the
    outside, it doesnt seem to have a point. And it
    doesnt seem to make a difference whether you
    existed or not. And after you are gone that
    wont seem to matter either.
  • This doesnt mean that you dont matter to other
    people, you do, but taken as a whole, their
    lives have no point either, so it ultimately
    doesnt matter that you matter to them.
  • People and the things they do matter to each
    other, but the problem is in giving meaning to
    the whole. And, to Nagel, life as a whole
    doesnt seem to matter.

5
DOES IT MATTER THAT LIFE DOESNT MATTER?
  • You might say, so what? What does it matter that
    life doesnt matter?
  • Nagel says that this is an acceptable reply, but
    only if you can avoid setting your sights
    higher, and asking what the point of the whole
    thing is. For once you do that ask what the
    point of the whole thing is you open yourself to
    the possibility that life is meaningless.

6
LIFE IN THE LARGER CONTEXT OF THINGS
  • Looking at your life and death from the outside
    and seeing it in a larger context of the world
    and its processes makes it seem that the things
    which are important to you within the context of
    your own life are not important within this
    larger context.
  • This larger context of the world and its
    processes seems to be the thing lacking meaning.
  • Nagel asks, what if your life as a whole did
    have a point in relation to something larger?
    Would that mean that it wasnt meaningless after
    all?

7
THE MEANING OF LIFE IN RELATION TO SOMETHING
LARGER THAN LIFE I
  • The problem with giving life meaning in relation
    to something larger than life is that there is a
    shift of the question to the larger thing in
    virtue of which your life is supposed to have
    meaning. Thus we must now ask, what is the
    meaning of this larger thing?
  • Either this larger thing has a meaning in
    relation to something larger or it doesnt. If
    it does, then the problem of meaning is just
    transferred to a higher level. If not, then
    Nagel says that the search for meaning comes to
    an end in something which, in itself, has no
    meaning.

8
THE MEANING OF LIFE IN RELATION TO SOMETHING
LARGER THAN LIFE II
  • That is, the larger thing which gives our life
    meaning - like religion, or art, or belonging to
    a political party - has no meaning itself.
  • However, if the pointlessness of that larger
    thing is acceptable, then why not say that the
    pointlessness of our lives as a whole is itself
    acceptable? Why does life have to be related to
    something larger than life to be acceptable? Why
    then isnt it alright for your life, or life in
    general, to be pointless?

9
THE MEANING OF LIFE IN RELATION TO SOMETHING
LARGER THAN LIFE III
  • If you say that it isnt acceptable for your life
    to be pointless, but it has to achieve meaning in
    relation to something larger, even though that
    thing in itself is pointless, why is it
    acceptable for this larger thing to be pointless
    if it is not acceptable for life?
  • It would seem that we can always raise the
    question about the meaning or pointlessness of
    something at any level of discussion and no
    matter how large or great the thing is.

10
CAN WE GET MEANING FROM GOD? I
  • Nagel says that an attempt to get the meaning for
    life from God or religion has its own problems.
    We think of God as being something which explains
    everything but which does not have to be
    explained itself, but Nagel says that its very
    hard to understand how there could be such a
    thing.
  • Even if we use God as the meaning or explanation
    of the world and human life, we can still ask
    what the meaning and explanation of God is.
  • On the other hand, if God is supposed to bring
    all our questioning to a stop, then why couldnt
    we just have stopped somewhere earlier along the
    way, with the universe perhaps?

11
CAN WE GET MEANING FROM GOD? II
  • Nagels problem with using the idea of God as the
    ultimate explanation of things and the ultimate
    source of the meaning in things is that he is not
    sure that he understands the idea. And by saying
    that he does not understand the idea, he is
    saying that it is not clear that this is truly an
    explanation.
  • What really could be meant by saying that there
    is something which is the meaning and explanation
    of everything but which itself does not require
    explanation, and we are not supposed to ask what
    the meaning of that thing is?

12
CAN WE GET MEANING FROM GOD? III
  • An additional problem with using God to give your
    life meaning is
  • If God giving your life meaning means that you
    are to live according to the plan he or she has
    for you, or that you are to fulfill his or her
    purpose, then that makes you a slave to that plan
    or purpose and limits your freedom to choose for
    yourself - to create your own sense of your
    significance and what amounts to accomplishment
    within the wider context of the shared meanings
    and values of human life.

13
CAN WE GET MEANING FROM GOD? IV
  • Another problem with using God to give your life
    meaning is this
  • If God is supposed to give our life meaning, but
    one which we dont understand, then its not
    much of a consolation.
  • And how does a life which has a meaning which we
    dont understand differ from one which has no
    meaning at all? Arent we equally confused or
    unappeased in either case?
  • Using God as an explanation for the meaning of
    life then is incomprehensible for Nagel.
    However, he admits that he may just not be
    understanding religious ideas.

14
THE MEANING OF LIFE COMES FROM INSIDE LIFE I
  • Nagel says that it may be nothing to worry about
    even if life as a whole is meaningless. Perhaps
    we can recognize that, be honest and brave about
    it, and simply go on as we always have.
  • Perhaps we have to go back to the idea that what
    meaning life has comes from inside life itself.
    The meaning of life comes from the meanings we
    give to the goals, projects, and accomplishments
    in our lives, and which others also recognize as
    being meaningful.
  • Nagel The trick is to keep your eyes on whats
    in front of you, and allow justifications to come
    to an end inside your life, and inside the lives
    of others to whom you are connected.

15
THE MEANING OF LIFE COMES FROM INSIDE LIFE II
  • Nagel is suggesting that the meanings for what we
    do, and the justifications for what we do, come
    to an end within life, and we do not have to
    derive meaning in relation to something outside
    of the context of life itself.
  • The meanings within life are those which are
    connected to the lives of others. And this
    attitude recognizes and accepts the idea that
    life as a whole has no meaning. This view
    further accepts that, in this larger meaningless
    context, it would not matter if you hadnt been
    born.
  • Some people are perfectly content with this
    attitude, others find it depressing and
    unacceptable, and still others find it
    depressing, though unavoidable. Which are you?

16
MEANING AND SERIOUSNESS
  • Perhaps accepting meaning in the small sense,
    from the inside, is something that people who
    want to see themselves as having meaning in
    relation to a larger context will not be able to
    tolerate.
  • These people want to matter from the outside.
    They want life as a whole to have meaning, and,
    if it doesnt, they feel dissatisfied.
  • Nagel suggest that perhaps its ridiculous to
    take ourselves so seriously. Oscar Wilde said
    that life was far too important ever to talk
    seriously about. We might adapt this to the
    present matter by saying Life is far too
    important a thing ever to take too seriously.
    One might also consider a remark made by Eugene
    Ionesco as relevant to the current issue To be
    an intellectual in the twentieth century means to
    take nothing too seriously and nothing too
    lightly.

17
LIFE AND ABSURDITY I
  • Finally, Nagel says if we cant help taking
    ourselves so seriously, perhaps we just have to
    put up with being ridiculous. Life may be not
    only meaningless but absurd.
  • In a paper titled The Absurd Nagel says I
    would argue that absurdity is one of the most
    human things about us a manifestation of our
    most advanced and interesting characteristics.
    Like skepticism in epistemology, it is possible
    only because we possess a certain kind of insight
    - the capacity to transcend ourselves in
    thought.

18
LIFE AND ABSURDITY II
  • Thus, for Nagel, our capacity for thought enables
    us to see ourselves in a larger context in which
    the ultimate pointlessness of group and
    individual life becomes clear.
  • The absurdity of life, according to Nagel, is due
    to the collision between the seriousness with
    which we take our lives and the perpetual
    possibility of regarding everything about which
    we are serious as arbitrary, or open to doubt.

19
LIFE AND ABSURDITY III
  • Nagel We cannot live human lives without energy
    and attention, nor without making choices which
    show that we take some things more seriously than
    others. Yet we have always available a point of
    view outside the particular form of our lives,
    from which the seriousness appears gratuitous.
    These two inescapable viewpoints collide in us,
    and that is what makes life absurd.

20
LIFE AND ABSURDITY IV
  • Thus, for Nagel, at the same time that things can
    have importance within life, we can also view
    these things in relation to a larger context in
    which they lose that importance. It is this
    taking something to be important which is not
    ultimately important which gives life its
    absurdity for Nagel. It is also what makes us
    human.
  • Nagel If sub specie aeternitatis (L. lit. under
    the aspect of eternity in its essential or
    universal form or nature) there is no reason to
    believe that anything matters, then that doesnt
    matter either, and we can approach our absurd
    lives with irony instead of heroism or despair.
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