The author facing life
The main lesson we can learn from my last blog is that
death comes often in an unexpected way. If these inhabitants in Herculaneum had
been asked how they might die, perhaps they would have mentioned ten or more ways
how death could come to them, but probably none of them would have thought that
they could die because of a volcanic eruption: For them, volcanic eruptions were
an unknown phenomenon. Actually, the way these people in Herculaneum died, and
even more what they knew about ways of dying is an argument in support of
Montaigne’s contention that “seeing we are threatened by so many sorts of
death, is it not infinitely worse eternally to fear them all, than once to
undergo one of them?” For if we are afraid of all kinds of possible deaths, we may
be afraid of the wrong one. And if we simply try to avoid that one of these
kinds of death will happen, we are on the wrong track. I don’t mean that it
isn’t good to take precautions against a possible premature death. It’s good to
get injections against common illnesses and I should advice everybody to wear a
seat belt in a car. But such measures should be seen as what they in fact are: They
are not precautions – which suggests that they can prevent what we don’t wish to
happen – but safety measures that reduce the chance that something undesirable happens but doesn’t exclude it. If
this is the only thing we do, we are in the wrong. Safety measures are
necessary but they are not sufficient and it is not right to think that this is
the way to face death. It’s only negative and it doesn’t help us stand in life.
In his essay “That to Study Philosophy is to Learn to Die” (Essays I, 19), from which I borrowed the quotation above, Montaigne
tells us about Chiron who rejected to get eternal life from his father Saturn.
Why? In Montaigne’s words: “Do but seriously consider how much more
insupportable and painful an immortal life would be to man [if it were eternal].
If you had not death, you would eternally curse me for having deprived you of
it”. Suppose that you had eternal life. What would you do? What reason would
you have to act? Everything could be done later. It’s quite likely that you’ll think
so and act accordingly, even if having eternal life does not involve having
eternal youth (many people who think that eternal life is something to be
wished for, forget that it may be a life in which you still become physically older
and cripple and helpless after some time). To my mind, just the fact that man is
forced to act in order to survive gives life sense. Not taking precautions
against death – which is impossible in the end, also because, as we have seen,
death can come in an unexpected way – is the way to face death but acting is and
so performing what we positively want. By doing so we give sense to life and we
give it a meaning – namely in the way we act. Therefore I can fully agree with
what Montaigne had written a few paragraphs before: “The utility of living
consists not in the length of days, but in the use of time”. It’s what
Montaigne learned from his own experiences. When he was about thirty years old,
several people dear to him died, including his father and his beloved friend
Étienne de La Boétie. It made him afraid of death. And then it happened almost
to himself, when he fell from his horse. Although he was unconscious and
vomiting blood, for himself it was not an unpleasant event. When Montaigne came
round, he tells us, “I shut my eyes, to help, methought, to thrust it out, and
took a pleasure in languishing and letting myself go. It was an imagination
that only superficially floated upon my soul, as tender and weak as all the
rest, but really, not only exempt from anything displeasing, but mixed with
that sweetness that people feel when they glide into a slumber.” (Essays II, 6). It made that Montaigne changed
his attitude towards death and he was no longer scared of it and he became
positive towards life. As we have seen, we find this vision on life already in
his essay “That to Study Philosophy is to Learn to Die”. Even though the essay
is mainly about death, it’s why I think a better title would have been “That to
Study Philosophy is to Learn to Live”, for what it actually says is that facing
death is facing life.
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