What to call "casual" or "commonplace" death? [closed]
In a science fiction future, people naturally live forever, although accidents and murders are still possible, even if much less common as there's a lot to lose.
Suppose a future person looks at our time, when death was commonplace, when people died left, right an centre, when everyone has dead relatives (e.g. grandparents, those lost to cancer or car accidents), when everyone knew their death was inevitable.
What would future people call our death? Common? Casual?
“Routine” is a possibility. It might strike beings from the future as truly bizarre that death was once ‘routine,’ if dreaded,
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/routine
routine adjective rou·tine | \ rü-ˈtēn , ˈrü-ˌtēn
1 : of a commonplace or repetitious character : ORDINARY
routine problems
2 : of, relating to, or being in accordance with established procedure routine business
Mundane carries the normalcy and hints at the condescension that the future humans would have for such.
characterized by the practical, transitory, and ordinary : COMMONPLACE
Kids' definition (from that same entry):
dull and ordinary
natural death
Merriam-Webster
death occurring in the course of nature and from natural causes (as age or disease) as opposed to accident or violence
These people of the future would not 'naturally' live forever. If possible, this everlasting life would most definitely be artificial:
same source
artificial
1 humanly contrived often on a natural model
2 b: caused or produced by a human and especially social or political agency