• Title/Summary/Keyword: the meaning of death

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A Consideration on the Solitude in Nietzsche's Philosophy (고독에 관한 니체의 성찰)

  • Kim, Jae-chul;Gu, Bo-sang
    • Journal of Korean Philosophical Society
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    • v.142
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    • pp.51-74
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    • 2017
  • As the phrase 'solitude death' implies, solitude generally has a negative characteristic as an object to avoid. But on the contrary, Nietzsche attempts to accept solitude and even affirms it in his overall philosophy. This study is about the authentic meaning of Nietzsche's solitude concept, aiming to clarify what true meaning solitude has to Nietzsche. This study will examine the 'external situation that humans face today' first. To do this, the study will consider the situation that humans who lost the earth and homeland faced in the period when God is dead. This study will then look at 'memory' and 'oblivion', as human's internal situations. And following that, this study will examine what meaning 'creativity' has to Nietzsche, which has a close relationship with those internal situations. Lastly, the meaning that 'body' and 'dance' imply to Nietzsche and what relationship these have with true solitude will be presented. Human is the being who can not avoid solitude whether they want it or not. Even though we make whatever effort we can to run away, solitude is unavoidable. The smart phone that makes me feel emptiness when I don't hold it on my hands, the hobbies which attract and force us to do, and new products which make us feel lonely if we don't buy them, don't they prove these efforts? What meaning does solitude have to humans that we have no other way but to run away from it like this? By understanding the authentic meaning of Nietzsche's solitude concept, we can change our view point on solitude so we can eventually accept 'solitude' as something that we must truly embrace and affirm, instead of something we must run away from.

A Narrative Inquiry on the Experience of Bereavement to an Elderly Male (남성 노인의 사별 경험에 관한 내러티브 탐구)

  • Kim, Seo Hyun
    • 한국노년학
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.103-123
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    • 2018
  • The purpose of this research is to study how an elderly male lives after the experience of bereavement, and to understand the experience's essence. The researcher picked 3 elderly men living alone after separation by death as test subjects and gathered information through in-depth interviews. The analysis of the information was done based on the three-dimensional space of narrative presented by Clandinin and Connely(2000), and it restructures the common experience under five meanings. The mutual themes of 'It's the life of a sinner, but not wanting to be seen as a widower to others', 'The fear for death, and the preparation for after death', 'Trying to stay alive for the children', 'Entering the world to find meaning in a gloomy life', and 'A lone goose lost in search of social warmth' came from the research results. The essence of the experience studied with the mutual themes as basis came out to be 'A struggle to take flight again after one broken wing'. This research has a major significance in that elderly males' experience of bereavement was studied in the dimension of time continuity, and that individual social interactions that are made by elderly males to continue their lives after the experience of bereavement were studied.

Existential Philosophic at Approach to Nursing Science (간호학의 실존철학적 접근-서양의 실존주의와 동양의 불교사상을 중심으로-)

  • 최연자
    • Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.759-767
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    • 1996
  • This study was done to provide an understanding of nursing in relation to the existential philosophy of the West and Buddhistic philosophy, It examined how human beings and death are interpreted and understood in existential philosophy as well as in Buddhistic philosophy. Then the study suggested that nursing should focus on helping the sufferer to find meaning and a sense of responsibility in his or her existence. When people have the opportunity to realize certain important but painful truths about their existence, they develop internal strength and control of their lives. Just as people learn to face their being, so can they come to terms with their non-being. According to the causal process in Buddhism, Human Being is not always annihilation of self. Therefore, birth, aging, disease and death go through the process of natural change and it is the appearance of human existence which is inherent in the health of every human being. To promote our health we must gain an insight about this phenomenon. This study viewed nurses' clients as 〈good friend〉 rather than 〈patient〉 which focuses on a disease-oriented concept. The concept of 〈good friend〉 views nurses' clients as active participants to create their life and as responsible persons in a constantly changing life. The study also examined the concept of recovery which means to come back to the previous healthy state and it suggested that the concept of recovery should be changed to 〈good change〉, because in existential philosophy, human beings are viewed as never going back to the past but moving on to the future by creating their existence. This study also suggested that nursing should help 〈good friend〉enlighten their existence to be free from pain and death and to get control over their existence.

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A Study on How Elderly People are Preparing for Dying Well (웰다잉을 어떻게 준비하고 있는가: 노인을 대상으로)

  • Lim, HyoNam;Kim, Kwang-Hwan
    • Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society
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    • v.20 no.9
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    • pp.432-439
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    • 2019
  • This study was a qualitative study that attempted to find out the meaning of preparation for dying well that the elderly think through a question of how to prepare for dying well. The focus group interview was conducted on 10 elderly people aged 65 or older who visited the elderly welfare center in B city, Gyeonggi-do, and a total of two groups were interviewed with five subjects as one group. As a result, eight themes were drawn from four dimensions of physical, psychological, social, and spiritual aspects. In physical preparation, 'health management' and 'doing what you want to do' were derived. In psychological preparation, 'not regretting' and 'giving to others' were derived, and in social preparation, 'organizing property', 'determining a place of death you wish', and 'writing a letter of advance life sustaining care directives' were derived. In spiritual preparation, 'relying on religion' was derived. The elderly were preparing for well-being in various aspects, and when developing a program for well-being, the program should be planned to prepare for actual death in various aspects.

A study on the meaning of Death Observed by Nursing College Students (간호 대학생의 시뮬레이션 실습을 통한 간호 의미고찰)

  • Mi–Hwa Kim
    • The Journal of the Convergence on Culture Technology
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    • v.9 no.3
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    • pp.49-56
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    • 2023
  • This study is a qualitative study that explores the essential meaning of nursing through a simulation curriculum targeting nursing students. In this study, 18 students, who were 4th grade nursing students at a university in M city, Gyeongsangbuk-do, completed a simulation during the curriculum. Data collection was done through free-form reports and interviews to help students understand the part of nursing they thought through simulation classes. The collected data was analyzed using Krippendorff's phenomenological method. As a result of analyzing the meaning of nursing through simulation class, 3 categories, 10 topics, and 28 meaningful statements were derived. The three categories were derived as 'virtual nursing', 'thinking nursing', and 'together nursing'. As a result of this study, nursing students were seeking their own solution to solve nursing in unpredictable situations based on the philosophy of nursing through virtual simulation. It is expected that this will be used as basic data to develop various and in-depth simulation education programs in the future.

Interpretation of Shijo poems which featured handicapped animals and "The night a green frog ached its stomach to death" (불구동물 등장 시조와 "청(靑)개고리 복질(腹疾)하여 주근 날 밤$\sim$"의 해석)

  • Lee, Young-Tae
    • Sijohaknonchong
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    • v.30
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    • pp.301-318
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    • 2009
  • This article aims to interpret the meaning of the sentence "The night a green frog ached its stomach to death $\sim$", based upon the characteristics of certain Shijo poems which featured handicapped animals. Many Shijo poems feature animals, but they rarely feature them in a handicapped state. In those cases, readers usually try to identify the intentions of the author with the unjust and wrongful situations of the time the poem was written, but yet another interpretation could be presented, considering the premises necessary for understanding Saseol Shijo poems. Only among Saseol Shijo poems handicapped animals can be found in a Shijo text, and they are referred to and sung not in the stage of 'serious outbursts' being fired but during the stage of 'hollow jokes' being made. Any handicapped condition that an unhandicapped one could imitate could be imitated for humor, so the actions of a frog, a toad or an ant which forgot their own inabilities can be considered very comic and farcical in the eyes of the readers embracing the contents of the poem. In "The night a green frog ached its stomach to death$\sim$-"(#2834), the death of the green frog is no ordinary death. This particular frog could be referring to the baby frog which appeared in #3160, or the entire sentence could be referring to the fact that a particular figure which had already disrupted the atmosphere of the world inside the poem is no longer present in that world. Considering all these conditions inside the poem's own world, Shijo poems which featured handicapped animals were not meant to be delivering any kind of educational or critical messages, but they were rather either maintaining or heightening the mood inside the poem's own world.

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A Study of Perceptions among Middle-aged and Older Koreans about Dying Well: Focusing on Typology (중노년층의 좋은 죽음에 대한 인식: 유형화를 중심으로)

  • Lee, Sunhee;Chung, Kyunghee
    • 한국노년학
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    • v.39 no.2
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    • pp.305-323
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    • 2019
  • In recognition of the increasing social attention paid to the notion of how to die well, this study explored what it is that middle-aged and older Koreans think of as "dying well." Specifically, it was aimed at classifying the perceptions people middle-aged and older have regarding dying well. To this end, we used data from the National Survey on Well-Dying, which was conducted in 2018 by the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs, and employed Latent Class Analysis. The demographic characteristics of each of the classified subgroups were identified through technical statistics. The types identified were multilayered depending on the imminence of death, perspectives of the last stages before dying, and the meaning of death in the context of social relationships. These types differed according to gender and subjective health conditions. Based on our findings in this study, we put forward policy suggestions about awareness improvement of personal and social levels, promoting on comprehensive death preparation, providing a system to reduce the cost of medical and nursing expense at the end of one's life, promoting of the right to self-determination regarding death, raising social attention to groups that are least prepared for dying well.

A Study on the Ontological Meaning of Life in The Canonical Scripture (『전경』에 나타난 생명의 존재론적 위상)

  • Baek Choon-hyoun
    • Journal of the Daesoon Academy of Sciences
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    • v.45
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    • pp.1-35
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    • 2023
  • This study aims at determining the meaning of Life in The Canonical Scripture of the Daesoon Thought upon the ontological bases of occidental philosophies; especially upon those of Plato and Bergson. In western philosophy, the word ontology designates investigating the meanings of being, which is derived from the Greek 'onto (being)' and 'logia (logical discourse).' The various meanings of life have been sought from ancient times all over the world, for these are the critical and vital questions that pertain to the nature of human existence. Plato had asserted that life, in his word, soul, had three different kinds of aspects of meaning. Immortal, reciprocal, and divine. Plato scheme was such that the soul could die, but after death it could became reborn into another various forms of living creatures. The real inner life of humans, the soul, would live eternally. Henri-Louis Bergson, a famous French philosopher from the 20th century, claimed that life had three different kinds of aspects. Self-identity, Élan vital (vital impetus) and liberty. Bergson insisted especially the real meaning of life had been characterized by "unité multiple et multiplicitéune," "unity as something multiple and multiplicity something singular." The meaning of life in Daesoon Thought could be said to have three different characteristics, solidarity, earthly immortality and grievance-resolution. Some similarities can be found between certain western ontological meanings of life and those of Daesoon Thought. Namely, the qualities of eternity, reciprocity, and divinity.

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Nurses' Experience in Caring for Infants Who Are Dying (신생아중환자실 간호사의 임종 환아 돌봄 경험)

  • Kang, Hyun-Ju;Bang, Kyung-Sook
    • Child Health Nursing Research
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.252-261
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    • 2013
  • Purpose: The purpose of this phenomenological study was to explore neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) nurses' experience in caring for infants who are approaching death and to identity the meaning and structure of their experiences. Methods: The participants were eight nurses who had experience in caring for these infants. In-depth interviews were performed from December, 2012 to February, 2013 until data were fully saturated. Collected data were analyzed using Colaizzi's method. Results: Four theme clusters were extracted from fifteen themes. The four theme clusters of the NICU nurses' experience in caring for infants who are dying were: 1) Crossroads between life and comfort of infants approaching death, 2) emotional suffering at the death of the infant, 3) adapting and coping with the death of the infant, 4) new expectations for caring for infants who are dying. Conclusion: The results of the study provide useful information in understanding NICU nurses' experience in caring for infants who are dying and establishing effective strategies to support these nurses.

장아이링張愛玲 《전기(傳奇)》 속 공간의 상징적 의미

  • Lee, Seon-Mi
    • 중국학논총
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    • no.70
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    • pp.169-195
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    • 2021
  • The spatial background is a key element in the development of the character's identity. It is very important to understand the symbolic significance of the spatial background in Eileen Chang's Chuan Qi, a collection of short stories and novellas. The space in Chang's Chuan Qi largely consists of Shanghai and Hong Kong. Smaller spaces include the characters' abodes, such as the mansion and apartment. Even smaller spaces are the interior of a room. The mansion is where she experienced abuse and neglect from her father during her adolescence. The apartment is a place of attachment, as was the place where she lived with her mother. This paper categorizes the mansion, her father's abode, as "a place of daydreams," "a place of death and graves," and the apartment, her mother's abode, as "a place of female independence," "a place of hope for a better life," This paper then examines these spaces to analyze how the symbolic meaning of space influences the identity of the characters.