I stand by first post on this thread: reincarnation is only a metaphor, an existential reminder to live each day, not as if it's your last day, but to live so completely and mindfully as if it each day is a whole lifetime. — 180 Proof
..and no basis for calling it true. Reincarnation becomes a form of life that does not make contact with truth or falsehood. It's use - meaning - can only be in its social function. — Banno
And you really think they care about such help?But anyway, (1) to exercise our gray cells or mind and (2) to show believers in reincarnation that their belief isn't irrational. — Apollodorus
The fundamental mistake you've been making all along is assuming that I'm speaking in favor of religion. When in fact, all along, I've been making the case for why there cannot be a philosophical justification for reincarnation/rebirth. Philosophically, the matter can only be addressed on a metalevel, metaethically and metaepistemically (like I did, in the crude terms you cite above). It's how I finally learned to stop worrying about religion and love the bomb!The distinction between faith and believe does not just apply to religious faith. You've posited this notion of reincarnation while being unable to explain what it is that is reincarnated. That strikes me as pretty fundamental.
One is supposed to "take it or leave it". One either understands it, or one doesn't. One either agrees with it, or one doesn't. That's it. The only action one is intended to take in regard to a religious claim is to try to make oneself see the truth of it.
— baker
That looks like a description of faith. — Banno
Something about the appriopriate time and place for discussing Dhamma comes to mind.That's a good interpretation. But the problem is, I think, the obvious fact of the karma that we're born with. Even if it's a metaphor, in effect it's indistinguishable from the consequences of a previous life (which we will often say in a jocular way, 'in my last life I was a....'). So it might be a metaphor, but it's not only a metaphor, or rather, even if it is a metaphor, the message is bracing - whatever unfinished business you leave at the end of this life, will have to be picked up by another, it will play out in 'some other life'. — Wayfarer
It's jargon. Why concern yourself or even just think about the jargon terms of a social group of which you're not part?...and no basis for calling it true. Reincarnation becomes a form of life that does not make contact with truth or falsehood. It's use - meaning - can only be in its social function. — Banno
The fundamental mistake you've been making all along is assuming that I'm speaking in favor of religion. — baker
It's jargon. — baker
I baulk at having a different sort of truth for science than for religion. Truth is truth. The you that awakes forma coma has the very same body as the you that entered the coma. There is a publicly available way to asses the meaning of "I" in "But was I really unconscious previously". It's missing from reincarnation. — Banno
So by analogy, is personal identity over time an illusion? How should persons being counted? — sime
And operated on several assumptions of your own.I've merely been responding to what you wrote. — Banno
It is of relevance when you talk to me as if I was religious.Whether you are in favour or against religion is of no relevance.
Standard question, standard reply. What did you expect? A non-religious/areligious answer to a religious question??↪baker was your supposed answer to my "What is it that is reincarnated", but is nothing beyond a recitation of dogma - indeed, two dogmas, Buddhist and Hindu. It is you who frames the discussion in religious terms, not I.
Of course it's jargon.This is not about jargon, it's about how one is to make use of talk of reincarnation. If it has no truth value, it cannot be about what happens. Instead its role is myth or ideology.
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