ABSTRACT

In this chapter the author critically explores answers to the question of how immortality would affect the meaningfulness of a person’s life, understood roughly as a life that merits esteem, achieves purposes much more valuable than pleasure, or makes for a good life story. The author expounds three arguments for thinking that mortal lives must be meaningless, and provides objections to them. He then offers a reason for thinking that a mortal life could be meaningful, and responds to the position that, even if life could be meaningful to some degree if it were to end, it could be much more meaningful, and to an infinite degree, if it did not.