Commentary
Death is generally taken to be bad for the one who dies. "It's a hell of a thing, killing a man. You take away all he's got and all he's ever gonna have."
I personally used to agree with aforementioned sentiment. In fact, I used to agree with it so vehemently that I was formerly part of the so-called "life extension" movement that attempts to indefinitely prolong the healthy span of human life using biotechnology.
But after doing philosophy I'm not sure if I still agree with it. After repeatedly arriving at devastating philosophical conclusions (No God or gods, no external world, no other minds, no mind-body interaction, no free will, no moral responsibility, no reliable cognitive faculties, impending human obsolescence due to AI, etc.) I am beginning to see death in a whole new light. It is like a magical escape route from the horror show of existence.
Socrates said the unexamined life is not worth living. But I think he got it backwards. I believe it is the examined life that is not worth living. Or maybe we’re both right and life is just not worth living at all.