Wayfarer
But if it is the case, there is nothing to be evaluated besides physical objects, and so our view has to default to physicalism, and the self can then never be investigated. — Lionino
boagie
Pantagruel
There can only be a serious argument for the permanence of the soul, if the soul is thought to be energy itself. — boagie
Wayfarer
This would be a consequence of the material world and neurology, in which the brain conditions the mental state to have this memory, because the brains corresponding to the previous mental state and the current mental state have spatio-temporal continuity. — Lionino
Wayfarer
You keep trying to push Indian religions because you personally subscribe to it/them, not because they are pertinent. — Lionino
the west is catholic — Lionino
Daniel Duffy
Daniel Duffy
Daniel Duffy
But that adds a very big problem to it: where does it start and where does it end? If the distinguishing criteria of something is undergoing incremental changes, we can't say where it begins and where it ends, as nothing in this world is created or destroyed, only changed — Lionino
Wayfarer
Our minds cannot process those changes to that degree, so we have a generalised idea of what a hammer is, how it looks to our eyes through the reflection of light, and we assign 'hammer' to it. But there can be no 'hammer' outside of this perception and....oh dear, now my brain is wondering whether our perception of the hammer actually does make the hammer exist.
Is this what Buddhism is talking about - that nothing exists and there is only emptiness, and realisation of emptiness brings enlightenment? — Daniel Duffy
Someone on a spiritual path might say this means the soul always lives on. Someone of a more scientific ilk might suggest that consciousness arises as a result of electrical activity in the brain, and since energy cannot be created or destroyed, only changed, some form of soul always exists, but at what point do we stop considering it a soul and just a collection of energy? — Daniel Duffy
Daniel Duffy
Welcome to the Forum. — Wayfarer
energy is not intentional, whereas one would think that intentionality is at the very seat of the soul (or mind or consciousness). — Wayfarer
BC
Latin is definitely not the source of any of the daily English lexicon except for the few words I mentioned, French is the source of almost everything productive in English today. English did not exist at the time of Ancient Latin. — Lionino
Wayfarer
javi2541997
You shouldn't, because French is English's mama. — Lionino
javi2541997
Leontiskos
Otherwise, I will remain in doubt, and in absence of any evidence of permanence, I will default to the position that it does not stay at all, and that we are constantly as always dying, as the comic posted in the first page depicts. — Lionino
I’d cite the abundance of veridical near death experiences as evidence of the soul and an afterlife. — Captain Homicide
Thus, in process philosophy, the soul (or mind or whatever you wanna call it) would be not the substances that stay through time but as an integrating process. — Lionino
Janus
the soul is the interconnectedness of those experiences, that gives rise to a sense of self which is the subject. — Lionino
Leontiskos
In the sense that "From that I am the same person I was before, I can't infer that I will be afterwards."? — Lionino
My question is a bit more extreme, it denies the first premise. Though the focus is indeed on the future, as the past is past, the question also applies to the future: ¿how do I know I am the same person I was minutes ago, but not another person with the same memories due to us sharing the same bodily brain? — Lionino
How so? — Lionino
The alternative is that it is constantly being annihilated and created through time; though it is not an appealing alternative, he does not address or refute that possibility. — Lionino
The process is the perdurance through time, so, if there is such a thing as some experience in time, and each point in time there is this same element, the soul is the interconnectedness of those experiences, that gives rise to a sense of self which is the subject. — Lionino
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