Fake Emmanuel Kant quote?
Reply #14 - February 05, 2013, 11:55 PM
The simplistic argument for the need for “justice” screams out to me that this quote is a fake. Why do people have such a problem accepting that life is not fair? Belief in an Islamic-style after life does nothing to solve this problem either. In fact, for most of the world’s downtrodden, oppressed and miserable humans, this life is INFINITELY better than what awaits them in an Islamic afterlife. From the untouchables of India to the homeless of Chicago, nothingness would be an infinitely better state after death than jahannam.
What did trouble me, as I began to loose my faith in God, was not the problem of injustice, but the idea of not being witnessed. It was (and sometimes still is) hard
for me to fathom the idea that through out all of the absolutely amazing and awe inspiring things that have happened since the Big Bang, as far as we know, we are the only ones intelligent enough to appreciate any of it. And we have only begun to do so, and only recently. From the destruction of stars to the formation of planets, none of it really mattered to anyone or anything, until now. We are the only ones capable of even noticing. And if we were to one day go the way of the dinosaurs, either by way of a rogue comet or through our own destructive devices, there would be no one out there to care. The universe would continue on, unnoticed, just as it had for 14 billion years before us. To me, that is mind blowing.