The soul seems like a good candidate for reincarnation - that immaterial substance that, like a rolling drop of water gathers sawdust, collects memories of existence as a particular person/being; these memories giving it identity, defining it as to who it is. — TheMadFool
The soul seems like a good candidate for reincarnation — TheMadFool
collects memories of existence as a particular person/being; — TheMadFool
..and the soul is...? — Banno
That means a theory of reincarnation is consistent with two statements that contradict each other:
1. There are verifiable memories of past lives
and
2. There are no verifiable memories of past lives
This state of affairs reminds me of the following statement made by the philosopher of science, Karl Popper:
A theory that explains everything explains nothing
— Karl Popper — TheMadFool
But if soul is the totality of being, so are you. — Banno
The totality of a human being, not 'being as such' (although the mythology of the world-soul is interesting in its own right.) — Wayfarer
So, on to "what is the totality of human being?" — Banno
At this point, you've removed yourself from science though. The only way you can get reincarnation and science to work together, is if you can define reincarnation as something science can examine.
A soul is simply an idea someone came up with. Like a unicorn. No one has ever observed a soul. People can think, "I will live forever in some way," but they never do. A soul does not exist by fact, because no one has ever observed a soul. No one has ever observed it gathering memories, or forming an identity. It is only an idea that our mind exists as something separate from the real universe.
To believe in something that cannot be tested or thought of apart from faith is religion. Philosophy can ask questions about faith, and whether it is viable and helpful in our lives. But philosophy itself is not having faith, it is seeking the truth as reality is. If faith is viable, a philosopher would know this because their logic shows that it is, not because they desire that it is. — Philosophim
...and the soul is...?
You will need to set out what more there is to the soul than just "what is reincarnated"; else you will have a quiet tragically circular definition: the soul is what is reincarnated, and what is reincarnated is the soul.
Nothing will have been said. — Banno
Why do you think the idea of souls is unscientific? — TheMadFool
What is a soul? — Banno
And also that falsification as principle is now under attack by some influential figures in physics.
— Wayfarer
Any references? Thanks — TheMadFool
A leg of lamb survives death and transmigrates into another body...
So a leg of lamb is a soul?
Or have you more to add to the definition? — Banno
Why do you think the idea of souls is unscientific? If there are cases where a person has verifiable memories of being someone else before s/he was born then, one explanation, among others, is that there's something that survives death and enters another person and that something is the soul. — TheMadFool
So first we have to construct what a soul is. — Philosophim
I don't wish to go that far. All I'm interested in is showing that a theory of "something" that retains memories of its past existence and gets transferred from one life to another is one possible explanation for "past life" memories. — TheMadFool
If you want to keep it scientific, then you have to demonstrate how we can test that something. — Philosophim
Well, that's the point. It can't be tested. — TheMadFool
Then you have your answer. It cannot be scientific. — Philosophim
But being unfalsifiable relegates any theory of reincarnation based solely on memories of past lives to pseudoscience. Can we do anything to repair such theories to make them scientific? — TheMadFool
This is why I was looking for ways to fix the theory of reincarnation predicated on verifiable memories of past lives. Making such a theory scientific will push up its credibility rating to 100%, a desirable state of affairs, don't you think? — TheMadFool
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