Premise One: Death is not simply the process of living and then dying but is perhaps more accurately identified as the absence of one’s consciousness. — Dante
Premise Two: All forms of conscious life begin initially with an absence of itself, an absence of its consciousness. Via birth this condition is transformed and the consciousness is developed and woken to reality. — Dante
I don't think it's a conclusion we can viably make. How do we know it's a cycle?Given that I proceed an absence of myself, can we conclude that a return to this absence will encourage the cycle to repeat? — Dante
I haven’t quite worked out how to quote and reference precisely yet… so apologies for that! — Dante
In reference to dreamless sleep, the consciousness may not be in a lucid state but the brain continues to function and maintain the body’s sub conscious operations and thus the consciousness, whilst dormant, is not absent from reality. The absence I refer to is of course brain death, in which case the consciousness cannot be retrieved or sustained. — Dante
The cycle that I imply in my question is the supposed observation of absence then formation. It is perhaps possible that the absence proceeding death is similar in condition to the absence required before the formation of life. — Dante
the process of living and then dying but is perhaps more accurately identified as the absence of one’s consciousness. — Dante
Premise One: Death is not simply the process of living and then dying but is perhaps more accurately identified as the absence of one’s consciousness.
Premise Two: All forms of conscious life begin initially with an absence of itself, an absence of its consciousness. Via birth this condition is transformed and the consciousness is developed and woken to reality.
Premise Three: Upon dying the individual’s consciousness returns to an absence of itself and ceases to exist.
Inference: Life proceeds death because death precedes life. — Dante
They're in dreamless sleep indefinitely, unaware even of their own existence. — Hermeticus
I maintain that the state before life and after one’s life meet the same requirement of being an absence of oneself. — Dante
Look back now and consider how the bygone ages of eternity that elapsed before our birth were nothing to us. Here, then, is a mirror in which nature shows us the time to come after our death. Do you see anything fearful in it? — Lucretius
non-existence and death — Dante
I often denote this sequence of non existence, life and then non existence as 010. — Dante
But what if non existence one has life before it? — Dante
Inference: Life proceeds death because death precedes life. — Dante
Consciousness improves the chances of survival and thus that is why it was naturally selected. — Dante
Such a probe would have to be masterfully crafted, concise and elaborate, and very telling. It would be the opposite of a legacy, given that it goes back in time rather than forward or maybe I have misunderstood the task. I have no idea what I would offer in all honesty. Which is a severely lacking response, but I don’t know how to confirm such a gesture — Dante
It’s a nice sentiment, but every emotion is a physical process produced by physical processes, reducing us to a husk if you wish to go that far. I don’t see the magic in the being. — Dante
see no reason at all why we can't construct a mind probe (an old idea but, till date, only employed for nefarious objectives) that can travel in mind space and either return with information or somehow "broadcast" it back. The most interesting thing about the mindspace, germane to this our discussion, is that it doesn't seem to be temporally restricted/constrained insofar as the past is our area of interest - memory. — TheMadFool
And also, I still cannot work out how to quote… — Dante
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