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Life & Mortality Quote by Arthur Schopenhauer

"After your death you will be what you were before your birth"

About this Quote

Schopenhauer’s line is a philosophical cold shower: death isn’t a dramatic door you walk through, it’s a return to the same blankness you once inhabited without complaint. The move is classic Schopenhauer - deflate the ego, puncture the human craving to be the main character, and treat our metaphysical panic as a kind of category error. You don’t “experience” nonexistence. Before birth, there was no you to miss being alive; after death, there’s no you left to suffer the loss. The symmetry is the argument.

Its intent is less comfort than correction. Schopenhauer isn’t offering a warm afterlife substitute; he’s trying to reframe fear as a confusion produced by imagination. We picture our death the way we picture exile or solitude: as something happening to us. His subtext: the self that feels entitled to continuity is a fragile construction, propped up by memory and desire, and it collapses the moment we stop narrating.

Context matters. Writing in a 19th-century Europe still saturated with Christian moral accounting, Schopenhauer’s pessimism comes off as heresy with a scalpel. He borrows a surprisingly modern rhetorical trick: swap an emotionally loaded unknown (death) with an emotionally neutral known (pre-birth) and watch the terror shrink. It’s persuasion by reframing, not proof.

The sting is that it refuses the consolations we’re trained to want: cosmic justice, legacy-as-immortality, the promise that consciousness “means” something permanently. Schopenhauer’s wager is bracing: if you can accept the before, you can survive the thought of the after.

Quote Details

TopicMortality
Source
Verified source: Parerga and Paralipomena (Arthur Schopenhauer, 1851)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
“After your death you will be what you were before your birth.” (Chapter 10: "On the doctrine of the indestructibility of our true essence by death" (often cited as §135; exact page varies by edition)). This is the sentence as it appears in a modern scholarly English translation hosted by Cambridge University Press, within Chapter 10 ("On the doctrine of the indestructibility of our true essence by death") of Schopenhauer’s Parerga and Paralipomena. The English line is presented as the recommended reply to someone asking about the continuation of life after death. While Cambridge’s hosted text is a 2015 translated edition, the PRIMARY work (Parerga und Paralipomena) was first published in 1851. Page numbers depend on the edition/translation; Cambridge’s chapter spans pp. 241–254 in their volume/online listing.
Other candidates (1)
Selected Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer (Arthur Schopenhauer, Ernest Belfort Bax, 1891) compilation95.0%
With Biographical Introduction and Sketch of His Philosophy Arthur Schopenhauer, Ernest Belfort Bax ... After your de...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Schopenhauer, Arthur. (2026, February 12). After your death you will be what you were before your birth. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/after-your-death-you-will-be-what-you-were-before-377/

Chicago Style
Schopenhauer, Arthur. "After your death you will be what you were before your birth." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/after-your-death-you-will-be-what-you-were-before-377/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"After your death you will be what you were before your birth." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/after-your-death-you-will-be-what-you-were-before-377/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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After Your Death You Will Be What You Were Before Your Birth
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About the Author

Arthur Schopenhauer

Arthur Schopenhauer (February 22, 1788 - September 21, 1860) was a Philosopher from Germany.

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