What is the concept of life and death? The concept of life and death refers to people's fundamental views and attitudes towards life and death. Different outlook on life has different views on life and death, thus forming different views on life and death.
Death is a lesson that everyone cannot escape. No matter emperors and princes, or ordinary people, no matter the life of fresh clothes and angry horses, or the fate of being down and out, they will face eternal farewell-death.
Where life will eventually go is not only the ultimate topic of religion and philosophy, but also the meaning that everyone needs to understand all his life!
Ancient Egypt realized the illusion of life from the flood, dryness and impermanence of the Nile, and thought that human life is like plants along the Nile. There is no difference, and there is always a way home. The Nile, which has been flowing for thousands of years, glowed with surging passion in the wet season, but entered the dead silence of apoptosis in the dry season.
There were no taboos about death in ancient Egypt. All architecture, art and culture eventually point to death, thus giving birth to a splendid culture of the underworld. They believe that living is only a short transition, and the underworld is the real way home. All life is a long preparation for ultimate death. Hegel commented on Egypt's view of life and death, saying that invisible death is more complete than visible life, and their death gains meaning from life?
Japan in the Edo period gave birth to the Bushido spirit, which is a rare heterogeneous civilization in the history of human civilization. They emphasize the collective, so that they can sacrifice themselves without hesitation, and hypnotize themselves into a tool to abandon biological instinct through hundreds of death "exercises" every day. They think that man is only a member of the collective, and it is meaningless to face the honor and responsibility of life itself.
So be tough and don't hesitate. Bloody and extreme cruelty were vividly reflected in the Nanjing Massacre. In Bushido philosophy, life is no longer the only thing, and man is no longer the goal, both of which are means to realize responsibility. Not realizing that responsibility is more terrible than death.
In the Battle of Artu Island in the late World War II, Japan was defeated, and the Japanese tied themselves together and smashed them into pieces collectively. This move scared the Americans to death. This is a belief they can't understand, cruelty to themselves and their enemies. Faced with honor and responsibility, life is meaningless, just a tool to achieve your goals.