Elestar wrote:
I know this can be an unsettling subject, but I would like to hear the different fantasy world theologies behind this defining experience. Do you view death as a punishment? How is it personified (if it is at all)? Did it start because of a sin, as in Eden, was it always part of life, or did something else trigger it? Are there immortals in your story? If so, why? These are just a few of the questions I have, reading through the posts on here.
Death in the Red World is not punishment. Men were created with an inclination to do evil. Thus they were also created with an inclination toward death, which is the end of all men.
There is actually a person, a character in a way, called Death in the Red World. When people die he takes their spirit (and perhaps their shadow, still working on that) away to one of four places: the White World, the White Prison, the Grey, or the Dark Prison. The Grey is where most end-up, remaining almost completely unconscious unless they attempt to escape. The Dark Prison holds those "good guys" who are to powerful for the dark side to be okay with them coming back to life, so they are specially guarded. Likewise with the White Prison, there the good side holds its enemies that it can't afford to have coming back. The White World is where the good side will take the most exceptional and most good people when they die.
You probably noticed that death is a very temporary state for some. There are some who come back from the dead multiple times. There are some who die just so that they can bring others back with them when they escape the Grey. Death as such is very transient.
There are semi-immortal spirits, though like anybody they can die in battle. The early generation dragons have no biological limit on their lifespan, so some of the oldest are still around.