Benjamin Franklin — "Fear not death for the sooner we die, the longer we shall be immortal."
Fear not death for the sooner we die, the longer we shall be immortal.
Fear not death for the sooner we die, the longer we shall be immortal.
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"Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy."
"In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes."
"Wine is constant proof that God loves us and loves to see us happy."
"Preparation is the burden of fools."
"If you would not be forgotten, as soon as you are dead and rotten, either write things worth reading, or do things worth the writing."
Polymath Founding Father, diplomat, and Poor Richard's Almanack author who helped draft the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Closely associated with John Adams (fellow Founder, Massachusetts statesman) and Thomas Jefferson (fellow Declaration drafter). For an intellectual contrast, see Thomas Hutchinson, last royal governor of colonial Massachusetts — Franklin leaked Hutchinson's loyalist correspondence to Boston in 1772 to inflame revolutionary sentiment — Hutchinson represented the colonial-aristocrat crown-loyalty that Franklin's revolution was organized to dismantle.
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Death shouldn't frighten you because immortality — whether through legacy, memory, or an afterlife — begins the moment you die and lasts forever. The logic is straightforward: the sooner that endless state begins, the longer it runs. This reframes death as a starting line rather than a finish line, stripping away dread by pointing out that dying sooner simply means more time spent in that immortal condition.
Franklin wrote his own epitaph as a young man comparing his body to a worn-out book to be "published anew in a more elegant edition" — proof he treated death with rational calm rather than dread. As a Deist, he believed in an afterlife but rejected religious terror. A printer, scientist, and statesman obsessed with reputation, Franklin spent his life building the kind of remembered achievement that validates immortality through legacy.
In colonial and revolutionary America, death was omnipresent — smallpox, war, infant mortality, and frontier hardship made it a daily reality. Yet the Enlightenment pushed thinkers toward reason over superstitious fear. Deism, which Franklin embraced, taught a rational universe where terror of death seemed irrational. Founding-era culture also elevated civic virtue and lasting reputation as secular paths to immortality, making Franklin's framing resonate with both religious and Enlightenment-minded audiences simultaneously.
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