Friday, 8 August 2025

The Afterlife

I have started to read The Case For The Afterlife (Woodbury, Minnesota, 2025) by Chris Carter who has written two previous books on this subject. I have a Religion And Philosophy blog for discussing such subjects. However, I have become used to discussing everything on Poul Anderson Appreciation precisely because Anderson, and some related authors, do cover everything! 

Survival of death is a premise of fantasy fiction:

a ghost appears and speaks in Conan: Blood Of The Serpent by SM Stirling;

a deceased character is seen wandering in the hereafter in The King Of Ys by Poul and Karen Anderson;

some departed souls are summoned from Heaven to help the living in Operation Chaos by Poul Anderson.

Characters of the Andersons, of Stirling and, of course, of many other authors believe in Christianity etc and this affects what what they do and how they live. When Kossara Vymezal lies in state in a Cathedral before her burial, her bereaved fiance, Dominic Flandry, asks her for a sign... Her fellow Dennitzan Ortho-Christians canonize her.

I have done a better job of introducing this topic here than I had expected to.

6 comments:

S.M. Stirling said...

I've been an atheist, an arid materialist, and an ethical nihilist since the age of 6 or so. I didn't have all the words to -express- it until later, but that was my outlook.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

I think that this is the kind of issue on which we need to keep reviewing and maybe refining our views.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

I am again realizing how little I know.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

A fellow SF writer, John Wright, was a very vehement atheist hostile to Christianity before his conversion to Catholicism. But, as a writer, Wright took it as a matter of professional honor to write accurately and fairly about Christianity and Christian characters in his pre-conversion stories.

Except for not being vehemently hostile you remind me of Wright, taking Christianity and Judaism seriously and treating them accurately in your stories.

Ad astra! Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

Sean: well, you have to get into your character's head. And atheism isn't my religion, so I don't feel driven to castigate competing faiths... 8-).

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

That's good enough for gov't work! And I have come across self avowed atheists who treat their belief as a weird kind of religion--a phenomenon examined by Flannery O'Connor in one or her stories, featuring the Church of Christ Without Christ.

Been wondering when readers might see a Christian character in your Antonine Rome books. Christians would be able to come out of hiding when Marcus Aurelius repealed the anti-Christian laws, as Artorius persuaded him to think of doing.

Ad astra! Sean