in order to have this human sense of self through time, one must already be the same 'subjectivity' which had the past experiences and which remembers them. ...If there's no subjectivity persisting through time already in existence, how can it be the very same 'self' which has the prior experience which the human without any memory undergoes, and then remembers, in order to form it's first memory? There must be a more prior sene of ownership of experience than that *derived* from the contents of experience like human identity, memory, future anticipation, etc. — dukkha
I'd like to cut this rational justification/ emotional response knot and simply say : Nearly all of us would be scared if condemned to torture & we'd be scared because it's going to be us who is tortured. — csalisbury
So, well & good. but personal continuity is an explanandum, not an explanans. We might posit some sort of soul (which, having been posited, drastically lowers any assurance one might have about the impossibility of one's existing after death.) But if, on the other hand, one rejects the idea of a soul, then another explanation must be put forth.
That second explanation is what I was hoping to draw out. — csalisbury
We lose ourselves in this world; that is why it understood to be a fallen world. — John
There is no hard-and-fast barrier between the empirical world and the 'domain of the transcendent'; it's more like a porous membrane, although in our culture it has been hardened into a concrete barrier.
But the point is, in relation to the subject at hand, if karma doesn't provide a connective principle between past actions and future states, then what does? If karma isn't central to the notion of identity, then what is? — Wayfarer
I am not saying that the self is merely or simply unreal, but is something that is to be transcended; we 'loose ourselves to find ourselves'. In the Christian idiom: 'he that saves his own life will lose it; he who loses his life for My sake will be saved'. — Wayfarer
I would say that it is memory and the sense of unity, that is soul and not so much karma, that is central to the notion of identity. — John
But, doesn't something have to be already in existence that's experiencing those memories and that sense of unity. — dukkha
If memory is to serve as a condition for selfhood, then it must circumscribe some region - it must draw a line and say: that which happens within this boundary will be preserved in the memory of entity x. If memory is to be the eminence grise behind selfhood, it must also be a drawer of boundaries. And that makes things difficult. Because that which draws the boundary is also that which is to be bounded. — csalisbury
Let's imagine though that the self is preserved in a sort of spiritual 'storehouse' of the type Wayfarer described. And that it reappears on the worldly stage at certain moments. When does the soul enter into the physical world? — csalisbury
That doesn't seem like a sincere 'good luck,' indeed it seems like a bitter sarcastic one. Why?Indeed it does! Good luck with that.
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