• @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    That’s be nice. I could make arrangements early and adjust my life insurance to maximize payout with minimum payments. It’d also be good to know the how so I can be sure not to be home when it happens - or at least wear a diaper so I don’t poop all over the sofa.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    No, I don’t want to see my expiration date every single time I close my eyes. That would just ruin whatever time I have left because that’s all I would ever think about.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I think you’d get over that. I don’t think it’d be any worse than normally contemplation of mortality, eventually. There’d be the initial shock, and then again as it nears, but I think it’s worth it to know.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    Sure. It would make planning for retirement a lot easier; I’d have a pretty good idea of how much I needed to save and invest.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Also for deciding when to retire or how much money you can/should spend to maximally enjoy your life.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    1 year ago

    Causality issues aside, yes I would. Makes a big difference if I found out I had 40+ years left vs 5 years left.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    Absolutely. Brushes with and actually facing death force people to see their life more purely, more actively and honestly. Why turn down that chance to live your life exactly as you’ve always known you wanted to because you can’t see it any other way? We all know this concept in our minds, but few, if any of us, actually live this way. When that time comes, a lot of us will have regrets for not living life more fully.

  • Chloë (she/her)
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    131 year ago

    I don’t know, if such a thing existed it would imply that free will doesn’t exist, if you knew you would die in 10 hours of dehydration, what happens if you drank a bunch of water regularly?

    In that scenario you can’t die of dehydration but you’re going to die of dehydration forcibly. So what’s going to happen?

    I can’t process if I would do it or not because I don’t know what it would imply!

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      You can dehydrate yourself by drinking too much water. You flush the salts out of your system and get water poisoning and die of dehydration anyway.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          It is dehydration, just a different type.

          Losing mainly fluid is known as hypertonic dehydration – or hypernatremia. Losing mainly sodium is known as hypotonic dehydration – or hyponatremia

      • Chloë (she/her)
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        11 year ago

        Yeah but my point was not drinking a huge amount, just enough not to have too much water or too little, like a glass of water every hour or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      In that scenario you can’t die of dehydration but you’re going to die of dehydration forcibly. So what’s going to happen?

      Youre going to die of dehydration, because you we’re simply unaware that drinking too much flushes the sodium out of your body which is what makes you able to retain enough water to function.

      Ironically people in hot environments and drinking a ton of water can end up severely dehydrated (mainly if they don’t eat anything, as food has a sodium and other electrolytes).

      Now if you drank mineral water (or sports drinks but they’re rather sugary nowadays) or just added a tiny bit of salt to the water you drink, then it would break the prophecy.

      Similarly ironic is that a lot of people who aren’t used to cold environments and get lost in the woods or something usually end up suffering heat stroke, as they’ve only a massively thick puffy jacket and walking still generates heat, which the jacket traps and your body can’t cool down and overheats. (Layers and breathing materials underneath the top layers is good, as then you can open or remove a layer as needed to regulate your body temp.)

      For the sake of the topic of the thread, I’d like to know what happens if I’m told I die in 50 years from a heart attack while running a marathon, and after hearing that I jump out of a window, try to blow my brains out or shove a block of C4 up my bowels and blow myself up? I should survive, yes? And in condition to (attempt to) run a marathon?

      Because if it’s not locked like that and can be changed then it’s more of a guess than accurate foreknowledge.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Probably not. Knowing this would be hard not to be consumed with a countdown.

    And besides, it seems like living in a timeline where this kind of knowledge is even possible has so many other implications. Does the knowledge come with the scenario that everything you may try to do to stop it only puts you closer to the outcome?

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Yeah. I come from a family of hoarders, and I’m a little cluttery myself. I always worry that I’ll die unexpectedly and they’ll be unable to part with god knows what random shit they find in my apartment. If I knew when I was gonna die, I’d schedule someone to come help me trash my belongings the day before. I’d set aside the actually nice stuff for them, but no one needs to convince themselves that a broken USB drive I used to keep porn on or a torn up canvas is super sentimental and they need to hold onto it forever.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Yes. Though I wouldn’t want to know the exact day if I could help that. Knowing the year or month would be enough to plan. To have a will. To say the things I want to say to those I care about. To make peace with the end. To do what I can of a bucket list and to feel a bit more secure up to that point not worrying about death.