Everybody can only focally be conscious of one thing at a time. — bahman
You cannot change the property of a irreducible thing without changing it. — bahman
This is off topic so please lets put it aside. — bahman
(1) What is the "soul"? — Mitchell
(2) why even believe that there is such a thing? — Mitchell
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
A chain of causality cannot start from nothing. — bahman
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
What you are supposed to design? The thing in your disposal is irreducible. — bahman
I already argue about the fact that soul cannot be created or destroyed whether accidentally or intentionally. — bahman
No, reducible thing can be built. — bahman
You need knowledge to perform any act. — bahman
This is very definition of design. — bahman
No. We never "perceive amounts", since we need to already have the concept of amounts before. — darthbarracuda
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
You just need to reverse time to see this. — bahman
1) Soul is irreducible — bahman
Scientific testing involves the use of mathematics — darthbarracuda
that have already been discovered by synthetic a priori analysis. — darthbarracuda
I am not a solipsist by any means. How is 5+5=10 different from saying murder is wrong? — darthbarracuda
How cryptic... — darthbarracuda
We don't "see" numbers. — darthbarracuda
Could the elephant succeed in the self-recognition test, if it had no self-consciousness? — Bitter Crank
"Tyranny is always better organized than freedom." — Bitter Crank
Maybe other animals have some limited self-consciousness, but "it is thought by some people" that they don't have a lot, if they have any. Personally, I think some animals have at least a glimmer of self-consciousness. For instance, some animals (like elephants) pass the "self - mirror test". (An elephant is familiarized with its image in a mirror; later, a mark is applied to its forehead. Will the elephant notice the mark when it next looks into the mirror? Yes. Most animals don't.) — Bitter Crank
How do we "see" they are equal to 5, if not through an intuitive, a priori understanding of certain mathematical concepts? — darthbarracuda
I don't just "see" 2+3=5 — darthbarracuda
Example: a person claims it is true that God exists, and I claim it is not true. I am not claiming that God doesn't exist, only that it is not proven true that God exists, which is correct. — JustSomeGuy
But if anyone can intrinsically value any act then there doesn't seem to be good reason to tell someone that they shouldn't do something. — SonJnana
I lack the belief because I haven't been presented with an argument that convinces me morality is objective. So do you have one? — SonJnana