Is this naturalist model of what happens after death coherent? You’ve made some very good and thoughtful points here.
I don't see how that follows. Take the number of people who've been born in the 20th century alone, we're beyond 7 billion people now.
For the "replacement" to work in any coherent sense, you'd want to say something like, for every person that dies another person "takes in" or is influenced by the consciousness of the dead person. But population growth has gone up globally, this would require a single experience to subdivide into many people. — Manuel
I guess if I were to continue to defend the original model, I would say in response to your objection about population growth and the ‘replacement’ not being 1 to 1 is that it doesn’t take into account the possibility that other species possess some level of consciousness and that their consciousness might also be considered to be one of the alternative contexts of consciousness that could replace or be replaced by another. Also, there very well could be conscious (though not necessarily intelligent) life on other planets in the universe.
This doesn’t mean that the exact ratio of all conscious life throughout the universe is in a 1:1 ratio, however. It may be that the ‘replacement’ doesn’t necessarily happen instantaneously.
Also, I want to add that I don’t dogmatically defend the model I proposed, I just wanted to see whether it could be a possibility.
How would a newly born person "make up" for the experience they did not receive from the dead person? They'd need to get it from there own internal resources meaning genetics, brain activity and whatever else plays a role in consciousness. — Manuel
What I had in mind with the original model was more like this: when a conscious being dies, their consciousness entirely ceases to exist. This means that their self/identity effectively ceases to exist. But if other selves/identities still exist and new ones come into existence when that conscious being dies, the ‘self-void’ left by the dead conscious being would be ‘filled’ by one of the other existing selves or one of the new selves. Now, I have no proof or evidence that this actually happens, but it’s an interesting possibility to entertain, at least to me.
Few of the terms in philosophy are well defined. So there's no problem with your formulation. I was using my own too. :) — Manuel
Good point haha.