PART 2: CHAPTER 8
LIFE AND VALUE
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The Concept Value Derives From The Concept Life
The value of life is appreciated when it is realized that it has an end.
If a man exists, it is because, though he could have been dead, he is alive; though he could never have been born, he was born. Many fortunate synchronicities were necessary to produce the fact of his existence. In this sense, being alive is like winning the universe’s lottery, considering the scarcity of life in billions of galaxies and surviving 4.5 billion years of biological evolution on Earth. Life itself is a statistical miracle.
If being alive is winning this cosmic lottery, why leave the ticket in your pocket? Why not collect the cash? To collect it, a man must discover the value of his own death. This is captured in Achilles’ words to a woman in Homer’s Iliad:
“I will tell you a secret, something that is not taught in your temple: the gods envy us. They envy us because we are mortal, because each moment of ours could be the last, everything is more beautiful because there is an end. You will never be more beautiful than you are now, we will never be here again…”
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