From there, it is then said that the 'burden of proof' is on any of those who challenge this supposedly scientific consensus, and that the only acceptable kinds of proof for such claims, are those which meet the standards of proof found in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. — Wayfarer
I think that the very notion that all of human abilities, tendencies, talents and skills are encoded physically, seems quite under threat by emerging models such as epi-genetic inheritance. My belief is that there must be something very like Sheldrake's morphological fields - there might be 'biological fields' which transmit memories or the imprints left by experience to future generations. That may turn out to be something that can be naturalised in the long run, but I don't see how it could be explained in materialist terms. — Wayfarer
What I would like to know though is how materialism is incomplete in explaining the notion of annihilation at death to be true. is there room for other theories? Is it only because "we can never know anything for certain" or is there actually some room for probable alternatives here? I know logic fails at times to explain many aspects of existence and I wonder if that is not the case with understanding the notion of death. — intrapersona
I mean every atom would be connected like a puppet is on strings to higher dimensional space of which we have no way of currently measuring (apart from anecdotally through the subjective experience of various psychoactive substances). This would thereby allow information exchange by ordering the atoms arrangements from the movement of objects (or even possibly entities) in higher dimensional spaces. — intrapersona
In the western world majority of people I meet think materialism is intuitively true, probably because the absence of self-awareness during sleep seems to confirm to them that self-awareness is synonymous with their big ol lump of flesh called the brain.
But how is materialism incomplete in explaining this to be true, why is there room for other theories? Is it only because "we can never know anything for certain" or is there actually some room for probable alternatives here? — intrapersona
it is rather incomplete since there does not appear to be any evidence anywhere to support such a conclusion, unless one proposes that invisible forces of nature, quanta, light, and dark matter, time, emotions, ideas, qualia, etc. are material — Rich
Yes, of course one can always make everything that is non-material into material, and everything that is purely subjective, personal, and unmeasurable into emergent and call it Hinduism (that is precisely what Hindus do, i.e. everything is Hindu), but atn done point it is worth considering the possibility that not all things are material, and indeed there may be immaterial and material. Such a new line of inquiry can be quite exciting and illuminating. No reason to get stuck along one path especially when other paths are begging to be traveled. — Rich
Yes all possibilities aside, I am interested in understanding how physicalism fails in providing an accurate reflection of death. Does the fact that we don't understand consciousness grant us reason to infer beyond annihilation at death? — intrapersona
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