Nothing Left to Do But Die: Difference between revisions

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(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.8)
 
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** In ''Grendel'', by [[Larry Niven]], Larchmont Bellamy dies of a case of this.
* [[H. Beam Piper]] wrote a story titled "Last Enemy," about a culture that had accepted reincarnation as a scientifically proven fact. As a result, they'd developed a rather ''different'' attitude toward death—it was, at worst, a (temporary) inconvenience; often enough, it was a social event. "Evidently when the Akor-Neb people get tired of their current reincarnation they invite in their friends, throw a big party, and then do themselves in in an atmosphere of general conviviality."
* [[Isaac Asimov]]'s ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20131020115022/http://www.thrivenotes.com/the-last-answer/ The Last Answer]'' (not to be confused with the more widely known ''The Last Question'') deals with a superior entity which turns out to have created universe and everything in it, but isn't in fact any sort of god as imagined by humankind. It has grown to know everything, with the exception of anything concerning its own origin and ending. Thus it collects countless intellects from the universe, and gives them just one thing to do: think. The intellects soon find out that they can do nothing else as they are disembodied, and even suicide is easily reversed by the entity; left with no alternatives, all the intellects eventually resolve to find a way to destroy the entity so they themselves can cease existing. The entity is satisfied, for that is exactly why it has created the intellects in the first place.
{{quote|"For what could any Entity, conscious of eternal existence, want – but an end?"}}