Certainly, you can argue that. I was mainly just stating what seems to be a contingent, empirically verified fact about human psychology. Whether the '... comes to appreciate life in the face of death' predicate necessarily applies to other beings similar to ourselves is another matter altogether.prichardson said:I find that concept applies to all things, you've no doubt heard of something along the lines of "how can there be peace without war?" and that type of thing. It's tied in to the ying-yang ideology isn't it?
A lot of arguments for the interdependence of concepts/objects/etc have come out of eastern philosophies. The metaphor I always liked was that of Indra's Net: picture an infinite gossamer cobweb stretched out in space which possesses a single, elegant gem at each vertex. Each gem in the net reflects every other gem in the net, and the reflections of the reflections, and so on in an infinite recursive loop. It thus becomes impossible to describe any one bead in full without also describing all those other beads which are reflected on its many faces. Every object thus depends on all other objects for its identity/being. Such is interdependence.