Souls are same. Why? Because if you dig enough inside you find that there is only a person inside you and difference between you and other people are result of genetics, body and environment.
— bahman
Particles that you talk about are reducible to string.
— bahman
Both are debatable. What if souls are different from each other and reducible, and on top of genes and environment are another factor in who a person is? — BlueBanana
And string theory hasn't been universally accepted yet. — BlueBanana
A chain of causality cannot start from nothing.
— bahman
Again, debatable, but even if we accept that we could say that soul is just another string with another vibrations. — BlueBanana
Experience is a physical state so it cannot be experienced within materialism.
— bahman
When I think of physical states I think of how matter is arranged such solid, liquid, and gas. I find it hard to conceptualize experience (i.e brain states) being a physical state, but then again I'm no brain scientist. — Purple Pond
The thing which feels amazing must have a good functioning in your body. The question is why it should come with an experience? Why things doesn't go in dark? This is hard problem of consciousness as far as I understand.
— bahman
If everything goes in the dark then it would be impossible to communicate what is happening. We (humans) are a social species and we need experience in order to communicate what happens. — Purple Pond
If you did not checked everything you should not say to others that it aplies on everything. (Also an Ethical one.) — Vajk
Sorry for not being clear enough. The soul cannot be created if you agree with OP. I already argued that soul cannot be destroyed if it cannot be created.
— bahman
I wasn't talkng of the destruction, I meant the creation (or becoming to existence to be more accurate) accidentally. — BlueBanana
What you are supposed to design? The thing in your disposal is irreducible.
— bahman
Well if we take irreducible particles for example, they do have different properties (and they can be transformed to other particles but that's beside the point). Those properties can be designed even if what it consists of can't. — BlueBanana
I already argue about the fact that soul cannot be created or destroyed whether accidentally or intentionally.
— bahman
Can't find that. From 2) and 3): souls cannot be created (intentional act). — BlueBanana
2) Why can't irreducible be designed? — BlueBanana
So creation is action, and it's always intentional and planned. — BlueBanana
Therefor souls can just come to existence (event) but not be intentionally created by conscious agent (act)? — BlueBanana
No, reducible thing can be built.
— bahman
What's the difference? Has the universe always existed because it has irreducible parts so it can't have been created? — BlueBanana
You need knowledge to perform any act.
— bahman
No you don't. Tripping over accidentally doesn't, yet it creates a mark on the ground. — BlueBanana
This is very definition of design.
— bahman
It's not the definition of creation. — BlueBanana
Because that is the very person. But suppose that soul is reducible. This means that it has parts which parts are irreducible. So we are back to home, each part cannot be created.
— bahman
So nothing can be created because they contain irreducible parts? — BlueBanana
You just need to reverse time to see this.
— bahman
I'd like to see you reverse time.
And now that you mention it, destroying something irreducible and reversing that would be creation from nothing. I disagree with 3), things can be created without design. — BlueBanana
By making it not exist. It's not reduced to anything if nothing is left. — BlueBanana
1) Soul is irreducible
— bahman
This is based on what? — BlueBanana
Are you sure that experiences can't be physical. Many physical things are the result of physical activity. For example, the rotation of a fan blade produces something physical - wind. — Purple Pond
Are you kidding me? How often did you tell someone "you got to try this, it felt amazing"? — Purple Pond
What many philosophers call "the Socratic Paradox" is Socrates' view that no one intentionally does evil. It is called a "paradox" because it seems so counter-intuitive, yet Socrates had a reputation for being wise. There are several "solutions". The one offered by Plato is that when one does something . evil one mistakenly thinks one is doing something good; we always desire the good. So what do you think? Do you think it is possible to actually desire the bad, knowing that it is bad and that nothing good will come of it? — Mitchell
"You can do as you will but you cannot will as you will", Schopenhauer
You cannot experience what you experience. This is getting silly. — charleton
I doubt we can simultaneously be aware of, as well as aware of our awareness of, anything. I seem to be able to switch instantaneously from one to the other, but not to hold both together. — Janus
You need to elaborate on this. What does experience being a product of brain activity make it hard to understand how we can be aware of our experiences? — Purple Pond
Because we can talk about what we experience. — Purple Pond
Experience requires a division between what is self and what is world. To know where the world and its recalcitrant nature starts, the brain has to know where the body and its intentionality leaves off. So to experience the world requires the equally primary experience of the self.
My favourite example is chewing your dinner. Somehow you have to be very sure which bit is your tongue, lips and cheek, which bit is the grisly steak, as your teeth chomp away with savage abandon.
But as has been said, you seem to be talking more about self-consciousness rather than just conscious awareness.
All animals have a sense of self as part of their states of experience. In seeing the world, they see it from their own point of view - the view that includes themselves in the sense of an embodied intentionality that contrast with a world of external material possibilities.
But self-consciousness is a linguistically-structured and culturally-evolved learnt skill. It is not biological but social. We humans learn to objectify our being so as to be psychologically self-regulating. So the reason we are self-conscious is that society needs us to have that habit of attending introspectively - to be policing our own behaviour as socially-constrained creatures.
Biologically there is every reason to make a psychological self~world experiential distinction, but no particular way that this experiencing could be experienced as experiencing. Animals lack the meta-structure that language can provide.
Socially, you can't be a proper human unless you have mastered self-regulation through language. Objectifying your own psychological being is the central skill required to be part of a social order. — apokrisis
Experience, memory, data and the whole idea of oneself all are the same. — phrzn
Experience exists for you as far as your brain processes the information and keeps the necessary parts in short-term or long-term memory due to its practicality! — phrzn
About materialism, I don't specifically believe in it, actually! — phrzn
I think there should be first some definitions of the concept you've brought up! What is experience?
According to Britannica, "According to one modern version of the assumption, developed by the 17th-century philosopher René Descartes, all experience is subjective, an exclusively mental phenomenon that cannot provide evidence of the existence or the nature of the physical world, the “matter” of which is ultimately nothing more than changeless extension in motion." — phrzn
One can deduce anything from what's going on around.
I somehow agree with Bitter Crank. Yes, it's like observing oneself from above. Imagine you are talking with someone, and at the same time your attention goes to a higher level in a way you can see yourself and the other person from another perspective, so that it may help you in the way you respond and react.
And experiencing something inevitably puts in data in our memory, so that we can analyze it and point out something useful for future.. One can simultaneously experience something and also analyze its data. it depend on where the attention is focused. — phrzn
Just a small point on English... Don't forget to put the article "the" in front nouns, such as the brain, the product, the instant, the content... Now, I wish I could think of one simple rule that would cover all the possible placements of "the", "a", and "an" in front of nouns, but I can not. — Bitter Crank
Not supplying the article where it belongs usually doesn't change meaning a great deal, but it is slightly jarring to read text where "the", "a", and "an" are missing. — Bitter Crank
There is someone (you, bahman) who is speaking as an "I". If there is no "I" speaking as bahman, then who is speaking? — Bitter Crank
Right. This is complicated. We could, as the expression goes, "quickly get lost in the weeds" with this. But... There is the conscious mind and the unconscious mind. Both of them "are you" 100% but one function of the conscious mind is to project a person--"I"--to the rest of the world. The unconscious mind (not the Freudian unconscious, but the unconscious part of the brain that does the work) does not represent itself directly. It provides the "I" with a steady flow of organized data. The conscious mind doesn't see or hear "raw" sensory information, because it doesn't mean anything until it is processed by the hearing, vision, language, and memory centers, etc.
The problem in talking about "I" and "you" is that we just don't know where in the brain the "conscious representation of self" is located, or how it is created by the brain. — Bitter Crank