Abstract
A significant feature of the love–based immortality in Marcel‘s philosophy is its ontological and anthropological dimension, or the way that the structure itself of the human being suggests the real possibility of immortality. The task of this article is to explicate these conditions for the possibility of immortality. The first section begins with a reading of an Augustinian lack–based approach to the afterlife where the restlessness of the person orients her outside of herself in love. The second section develops this movement of love through Marcel‘s characterization of love as gift, culminating in the act of self–sacrifice for the sake of the other in which the person exists not in herself but in the thou. This implies, as discussed in the third and final section, that through being for the other, there might be a shared eternity between self and thou, which together transgress the boundaries of death.