Epikür ve Lukretius’un Ölüm ve Yokluk Algılarına Dair Bir Değerlendirme

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Year-Number: 2018-8:1
Language : null
Konu : Din Felsefesi
Number of pages: 357-376
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Abstract

Ölüm hayatın yadsınamaz bir gerçekliğidir. Onun kötü ve korkulası bir durum olup olmadığı, Antik Yunan filozoflarına kadar geri götürülebilir önemli bir tartışmadır. Bu çalışma öncelikle Epikür’ün; “ölüm bize bir şey yapmaz; zira biz hayatta iken ölüm yok, ölüm geldiğinde ise artık biz yokuz” tezini hangi gerekçelere dayandırdığını ve ne ölçüde tatmin edici sonuçlara ulaştığını tartışma konusu yapmaktadır. Daha sonra Epikür’ün halefi olarak kabul edilen Lukretius’un; doğum öncesi yokluk ile ölüm sonrası yokluk arasında kurduğu benzerlikten, ölümden korkmanın anlamsızlığı sonucunu nasıl çıkardığını irdelemeye çalışmaktadır. Son olarak ise bu iki yokluk dönemi arasındaki ilişkinin, Lukretius’un iddiasının aksine, aslında simetrik olmadığını, zira insanların daha geç doğmasıyla daha geç ölmesi arasında, sebep olduğu yoksunluklar göz önüne alındığında ciddi farklılıklar olduğunu savunan modern asimetrik yaklaşımlara değinmektedir. Bu çalışma temel olarak ölümün, doğasından kaynaklı endişeyi besleyen bir gizeme sahip olduğu, fakat bununla birlikte onun hayata anlam verme arayışımızda bize önemli katkılar sunduğu tezini savunmaktadır.

Keywords

Abstract

Death is an undeniable fact of life. Whether it is a bad or feared thing is an important discussion that can be brought back to the ancient Greek philosophers. This article is primarily concerned with the discussion on what grounds Epicurus's thesis "death, is nothing to us; since when we exist, death is not yet present, and when death is present, then we do not exist," and to what extent satisfactory results are reached. Later, it tries to investigate how Lucretius, who is regarded as the successor of Epicurus, derives the result of meaningless of fear of death from the symmetrical relationship between prenatal and post-mortem non-existences. Finally, it refers to the modern asymmetric approaches which argue that, contrary to Lucretius's claim, the relationship between these two periods of non-existence is not symmetrical, because there are serious differences between the later birth and the later death of people, given their deprivations. This article argues that death has a mystery that raises the anxiety that comes from the nature of death; however, it defends the idea that it makes a significant contribution to the meaning of life.

Keywords


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