| «Reasoning from the common course of nature,
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| and without supposing any new interposition of the
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| supreme cause, which ought always be excluded from
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| philosophy; |
| what is incorruptible must also be ingenerable.
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| The soul, therefore, if immortal, existed before our birth:
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| And if the former state of existence no wise concerned
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| us, neither will the latter.»
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| There is no comfort in the idea of the eternal soul to me
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| How could it live on without the experience of the colour of the sea?
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| If Heaven was to be an empty white sphere
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| Devoid of anything that you could taste or feel-without feeling need
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| Then I take more comfort in the idea
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| That one day my eyes will cease to see what’s right there in front of me
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| Are you prepared to face the one big question: Have
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| you lived everyday as if it had been your last?
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| RIT:
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| What would you see?
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| What would you see?
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| What would be on Heaven TV?
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| What would you see?
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| What would you see?
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| All that you never dared
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| All the things you were to scared to try
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| You haven’t lived everyday as if it had been your last
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| If Heaven was to be a blank projection screen for all
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| your most secret dreams:
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| RIT.
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| The infamous inventors of eternity have ruled our lives long enough
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| They refuse to see that we are animals
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| We need to feed, fight, sleep and make love
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| RIT.
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| Have you lived everyday as if it had been your last?
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| Have you lived everyday as if it had been your last?
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| They refuse to see that we are animals
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| We need to feed, fight, sleep and make love
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| And I tell you one thing: When all you put on the table
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| falls short of all your great promises
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| Then I don’t want my share in any of this |