Accepting that death ends economic accumulation and agency, which fundamentally reframes how much wealth-building should consume life.
Contemporary culture encourages endless accumulation as though death were not approaching. Zera Yacob's philosophy, grounded in reason and human reality, begins with acceptance of finitude. You will die. Your economic power will cease. Everything you've accumulated will pass to others or institutions. This stark truth, embraced rationally, transforms priorities. If accumulation cannot continue forever and won't benefit you beyond death, what is reasonable to pursue? This concept invites examining whether your life's economic effort aligns with actual human finitude. Perhaps endless growth serves fear rather than reason. Perhaps provision for genuine dependency, creation of legacy aligned with values, and time spent on relationships and meaning would reflect reason better than constant wealth-building. Economic mortality doesn't eliminate prudent planning—quite the opposite. But it eliminates the fantasy of endless accumulation and restores proportion. The rational person accepts finitude and plans accordingly, asking what economic choices honor both living well now and dying well, having distributed responsibility thoughtfully.
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