Evidence of Consciousness Surviving the Body Wayfarer & MysticMonist—
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(I wrote this in Word, and I didn’t want to post it till I got it the way I wanted it. But I don’t know if I’ve really neatened it up enough. But I was fairly careful and conscientious about that.)
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I try not to be, and don’t want to seem, dogmatically “know-it-all” or overconfident in my metaphysical claims, but I think that if there are or might be metaphysical certainties, then they’re worth considering.
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1. MysticMonist—
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Regarding your post about disadvantageous births, bodily-injury, and fairness, as relates to Materialism vs souls:
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Materialism is a grim, pseudoscientific, fraudulent accountant, and its account of what happens to us is dire, as you described.
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In contrast:
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The Idealism that I’ve been proposing, an Eliminative Ontic Structural Anti-Realism, implies an openness, looseness and lightness.
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There needn’t be any solid, concrete, objective basis for physical “reality”.
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(Of course I’m not claiming that that’s original)
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Experience is metaphysically primary (I understand that some have reasonably spoken of “Will” as the basic component of experience). What would a physical world or even abstract facts and objects mean without experiencers?
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A possibility-world and its component abstract facts obtain for someone. …a life-experience possibility-story is about someone’s experience.
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The Materialist fraudulent accountant says that life and whatever is good is a commodity in limited supply.
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No, Life is timelessly there, for, relevant to, in relation to, and because of us.
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As for death, we can all agree that it’s like going to sleep. A well-deserved rest and peace & quiet. For one thing, that’s an end to whatever ordeals we had in life, and the experience ends with peaceful rest. That’s another thing that we can all agree with.
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There’s nothing wrong with going to sleep—It happens daily.
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Of course, as Shakespeare pointed out, sleep has dreams, and the experiential details are another question. …one that we probably can’t know for sure (When we get there, we’re too unconscious (lacking in waking-consciousness) to know that we’ve found out). We needn’t agree on the experiential details in the sleep at the end of a life.
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It’s now known that we don’t remember most dreams—only the ones that occur at or near the time when we wake up. And, in those dreams, we don’t know that there’s this waking-life.
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That’s experience that we don’t remember, during which we didn’t know about our waking life. …suggesting caution in ruling-out metaphysically-implied experiences after death.
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No one would deny that this life is temporary. Our experience is Timeless—a statement that I’ve justified in various posts to these forums.
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The NDEs are early immediate after-death experiences, but I’m referring to later experiences.
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I suggest (I’ve talked about it in other topics) that probably it usually leads to a next life, because obviously, whatever is the reason for this life starting, and if that reason remains later, then what does that suggest?
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Just a plausible suggestion.
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I’ve posted at length about that in other topic-threads.
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…and also about the Timelessness at the end of lives. No one ever reaches “oblivion”, or the time when the body is entirely shut-down and no longer supports experience, perception or awareness. Only your survivors will experience that time.
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I suggest that, at the end of lives, shortly before complete body-shutdown and fully complete unconsciousness, of course there already isn’t waking-consciousness, and the person, at that late stage of shutdown, is far past any knowledge or memory regarding life, identity, time or events, or that there could even be such things. …and has reached Timelessness.
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Eastern traditions suggest that very few people get that far into the shutdown at the end of their life, because, before that stage of shutdown, while their unconscious life-related inclinations and feelings (including “Will”) remain, those remaining life-inclinations mean that they’re in a life-experience story. …the beginning of one, because those subconscious life inclinations, feelings and identity are an early beginning experience in a life.
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But I admit that those end-of-life experience suggestions are speculative. All that we can agree on for sure is that the end of a life is like going to sleep.
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So I’ll just emphasize something that’s more certain—the lightness, open-ness, and looseness of metaphysical reality.
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…a metaphysical reality without lack, final loss, or some sort of limited supply—There’s nothing concretely, objectively existent anyway.
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…in contrast to the pessimistic, closed, and grim account that we’ve always been told.
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2. Wayfarer & Mystic Monist—
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You spoke of spirit and soul. Are you referring to a Dualism or an Idealism? I think that, contrary to the poll-result, most people here are Idealists (as am I).
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I regard Experience (some people emphasize “Will”) as metaphysically primary, but I don’t think that’s inconsistent with my claim that the animal (including the person) is unitary and can’t be divided into mind and body, soul and body, or spirit and body.
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I claim that there’s a principle of complentarity or correspondence, such that even though experience and experiencer are metaphysically primary--nonetheless, in the physical story, the experiencer is the body, the animal, part of the physical world that is the setting for the life-experience possibility-story. It can be discussed either way. I mean, how could it not be, if the experience-story is to be consistent?
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With respect to the “physical story” (the account in terms of the physical world), I’ve defined “experience” as a purposefully-responsive device’s surroundings & events, in the context of that purposefully-defined device’s built-in purposes (“Will”), with any acquired modifications.
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That different description of experience, from a different point-of-view, the “physical story” point of view, isn’t inconsistent with taking experience as metaphysically primary.
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Soul, Consciousness, Mind or Sprit could just be another word for Experiencer, in which case I don’t disagree with those terms.
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So is it reasonable to suggest that the Soul, Conscious or Spirit that you’ve both referred to could just be another word for Experiencer?
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The purposefully responsive device (animal, in our case) that we are, and our surroundings, are the possibility-world that is the setting for our life-experience possibility-story. But that experience is metaphysically primary. Or it could be said that we, the experiencer, are primary…as that animal. The animal and its experience are metaphysically prior to its surroundings, a possibility-world, that (in the physical story) produced it, and of which it’s made.
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I’ve never understood what Buddhist metaphysics was saying, and evidently there are many mutually-contradictory versions. For example I don’t know what it means to say that there isn’t anyone. But it’s true that there’s no one for things to happen to. We, as a purposefully-responsive device, have our hereditary and acquired preferences and purposes that we pursue. Of course that includes doing our best to protect ourselves and to last as long as possible. But if we’re doing that, and doing our best at it, then whatever else happens isn’t our fault. We’re here to do our best. That’s it. We aren’t here for things to happen to. Adverse things that “happen to us” are part of the score-keeping narrative, but our purposes are only about a whole other subject—pursuing our purposes, including self-preservation, as well as we can.
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You find suggestions about that in various Eastern writings, about our effort, not the outcome, being what we’re about. …and about the fact that there’s a meaningful sense in which dealing with something nullifies it.
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In fact, it’s also said on a familiar “Desiderata” wall-plaque.
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Maybe we can learn something from simpler, manmade, purposefully-responsive devices: A mousetrap, thermometer or refrigerator light-switch doesn’t care if it goes out of commission and ceases to exist. Its job and sole concern was just to fulfill its built-in purpose while possible. It isn’t wired for an unreasonable insistence on survival.
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Maybe it was natural-selection-adaptive for us to always have a strong wish to survive and thrive, even when it’s impossible, and our time is past—just so that we’d make ourselves survive if there turned out to be even the slightest unexpected opportunity. I suggest, and I think it’s been suggested before, that it’s sometimes better to overcome that instinctive inclination, when it’s causing unnecessary unhappiness.
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And, as I’ve described elsewhere, the life-experience possibility-story and its possibility-world-setting are hypothetical systems of inter-referring if-then facts about hypotheticals.
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I’ve been criticized for claiming that those abstract logical facts, and the complex inter-referring systems of them that are our experience-stories and possibility-worlds, are inevitable.
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But how could they not be? The abstract facts are just inevitably “there”, aren’t they? …at least subject to there being someone to experience them.
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So how could those abstract facts, and complex systems of them (among the infinity of which there must inevitably be one whose events and relations match those of our physical universe), not be?
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Unlike with MUH, I’m not saying that such a possibility-world has relevance or meaningful existence without observers/experiencers. I’ve said that Experience and Experiencer are primary.
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So, nothing that I’m claiming conflicts with what you’ve said about Spirit, Soul, Mind, Consciousness.
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I’ve been saying that all of it is an inevitable system of inter-referring inevitable logical relational facts about hypotheticals. But I’ve probably overstated that case a bit, by making it sound as if logical if-then facts about hypotheticals are metaphysically fundamental and primary.
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But of course the physical world--a logical-system--and the abstract logical facts of which it consists, wouldn’t mean anything without observers, experiencers. Some say that’s even true of abstract logical facts and other abstract objects, and that statement makes sense to me. They “are”, as part of our experience.
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So we’re really the center of our whole life-experience possibility-story and its setting. It’s centered on, and about, our experience. …as a system consistent with our experience. With no one to notice those logical facts and other abstract objects, they wouldn’t have meaning. That’s a familiar position, of course. What would it mean to say that there could be a universe or a logical system without anyone to experience it?
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But even though we and our experience are primary, and though we’re the “why” of our physical world, I like it that the “how” isn’t in question. The “how” needn’t be asked, because the experience-story and its possibility-world are inevitable complex logical systems, whose existence (at least subject to there being experiencers) doesn’t need any explanation..
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Maybe that’s why Nisargadatta once said that we didn’t create our world, but we’re the reason for its meaning and relevance.
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We’re the “why” of our life-experience story, but it and its possibility-world, as a system of inevitable logical facts, doesn’t need a “how” (or is it’s its own “how”) .
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So I’m suggesting that the metaphysics that I’ve been proposing is consistent with your statements, and also doesn’t leave any “how” questions.
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So I claim that there’s knowable inevitable metaphysics, and that definite things can be said, with certainty, about metaphysics.
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That’s just metaphysics though. I don’t agree with Tegmark that such a metaphysics is an explanation of Reality. Physics and metaphysics are only each about a limited aspect, domain or subset of Reality.
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Regarding what you mentioned about God and justice—I don’t use the word justice, but many feel that there’s goodness in what is, and a reason for gratitude, and there’s a feeling that there’s good intent behind the goodness of what is.
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Michael Ossipoff