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EN
The article consists of a discussion about selected issues which were taken up in Cardinal Ratzinger’s lecture, Faith, Philosophy and Theology. The lecture was delivered by the Cardinal in 1984 on the occasion of receiving an honorary doctorate from the College of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. In his lecture, Joseph Ratzinger refers to the first images of Christ that can be seen on the sarcophagi which date from the early centuries of the Church (the Good Shepherd, the Philosopher, etc.). According to Ratzinger, these depictions constitute an attempt to provide a Christian reply to questions about the sense of death. Today, this issue can bring theology and philosophy together and assist in the search for a new rationale.
PL
Prezentowany artykuł dotyczy problematyki śmierci oraz jej sensu w ujęciu dualistycznym. Wiele osób zadaje sobie pytanie, czy śmierć jest końcem naszej egzystencji, nie tylko mówiąc o życiu doczesnym na ziemi, ale również o kontynuacji naszego życia po śmierci. Życie człowieka toczy się z nadzieją, że kiedyś czeka na nas jakiś transcendentalny wymiar bytowania, który nie oznaczałby naszego unicestwienia lecz kontynuację na doskonalszym, niematerialnym poziomie. Takie myślenie ukierunkowane w stronę nadziei o kolejnym życiu nadaje naszej śmierci jakiś sensowny wymiar.
EN
This article is concerned with the problem of death and its sense in the concept of duality. Many people ask themselves a question of whether death is the end of our existence, not only considering our worldly life but also the continuation of our life after death. Man lives with hope that some transcendental dimension of living is awaiting him in the future, which means that we are not going to be completely destroyed but will be continuing our life on a more excellent, non-material level. Such thinking is aimed at hope that there is a future life, which gives our death a meaningful dimension.
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