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| Re: The Soul Quote:
Is there a particular conception of the soul you are interested in? |
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| Re: The Soul The soul is, usually, used to describe the unique character of some one and is, usually, a separate entity which travels off after death to a theme park in the cloud. Focusing on the ‘character’ part the soul is, in my opinion- a culmination of all your experience giving way to preference and opinion depending on the perceived ‘quality’ of said experience, or something to that effect. If your interested, see if you can find to buy/download, ‘Ghost in the Shell’, it’s a cool anime film that uses androids to convey the point of gathering experience to develop personal preference. I guess my idea of the soul/character also relates to Hume as well; the way Hume describes our understanding by observing cause and effect and learning the uniformity which leads to certain effects from causes. If every time I was nice to a certain person I received money from them, I could develop a very manipulative tendency, based on a behavioural cause-and-effect uniformity that I’ve learnt. So its easy to see how the ‘soul’ is shaped into a unique character but, unfortunately this means when it comes to choices we are limited to what we know; we can’t have a personal preference for that which we have never tried (unless one has learnt to appreciate the mystery of it, but this to is learnt by exposure to the cause of picking what one doesn’t know and the desirable effect of surprise.) Another test could be to monitor very closely, two clones living the exact same life; going to school together, sitting next to each other at school, having same friends etc. Every thing is exactly the same but, because they can’t physically occupy the same space, all the little discrepancies in sensual information that result from them standing next to each other (as opposed to on each other, in the same physical space) add up and equal to extremely different personalities. For example, sitting next to each other in class would give two slightly different stereo images of the teacher’s voice, and would mean the clones are both sitting with different people on there left and right who they would probably interact with. But I think the soul is part of the brain- memory, not a separate ghost living inside us waiting to break out. Dan.
__________________ Thanks for reading.
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| Re: The Soul No particular conception, I'm leaving it totally open to what ever conception one has.
__________________ "Why is there something rather than nothing?" |
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| Re: The Soul Quote:
Once that assumption is uncritically accepted, one can 'progress' to "what is it?", etc... Personally, I think that it is a 'fantasy', an illusion of 'appearances', in the 'spiritual' (there's another one!) sense, anyway. |
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| Re: The Soul
To me the soul is an abstraction / idealization of the "us as persons" that lives inside the "us as animals". When someone dies, all that's left is the dead "him/her as an animal". That human vitality and uniqueness is gone forever. No wonder the soul has taken on such importance as a concept, no wonder it is central to our sense of self esp in religious contexts. |
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| Re: The Soul
I know that it's popular today to disbelieve in that concept that human beings throughout history have called the "soul". And that is nearly enough of a reason for one to go right ahead and claim it for oneself as real!! But seriously one has to find out these things for oneself. Consider the importance of the question if you may entertain just for a moment the possible existence of it. I have spent a considerable amount of time myself contemplating the question in meditation and looking hard around me for any clues. I was quite surprised to discover that in fact the soul is real and also that substance or matter is what is in reality the more questionable concept. And the fact that matter is what pragmatists rely upon to the exclusion of everything else should give a more noble thinker the proper amount of pause...to meditate and perhaps rediscover for himself that premodern preoccupation which was the tending of that all too real thing which we call the soul. And seeing how it is as difficult to "prove" as it is to disprove I would say that the real debate should rest upon the importance of the question as opposed to its definitive resolution. I say this because I don't believe that those who reject the concept of the soul without proper refutation (which as I say is too difficult) simply don't think the question of it's existence is important at all. -- |
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| Re: The Soul
My feeling is that there is no reason to believe that the Soul is a separate entity (apart from the biology; the chorus of electrochemical and neurological processes that create that effect). Nonetheless, I find it a useful term to describe that part of me that is self-aware, individual and feeling.
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| Re: The Soul Quote:
And that is nearly enough of a reason for one to go right ahead and Quote:
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It is a common phenomenon that the more often that we hear something, like about a 'soul', the more apt we are to 'accept as true' that which we often hear, without critical thoughtful examination. Quote:
And one can never adequately 'disprove' the subject of a 'belief' to a 'true believer'. Again, because there is no room for logic/rationality in the home of a 'belief'. Go ahead and argue a true believer in Allah and Mahommet away from their 'belief'. Or a Xtian. It is not possible when the 'belief' is strong enough. No matter the 'evidence', it will be 'refuted' with pathological psychological processes and logically fallacious mumbo-jumbo. Might even get violent. Try to cut a Sikh's hair and he is supposed to kill you to prevent it. The hair is just a 'symbol' of a belief and yet... Quote:
"The great snare of thought is the uncritical acceptance of irrational assumptions." -Will Durant |
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| Re: The Soul nameless, Sorry, but I can not really be a partner in such a hateful discussion because such discussion is against the rules of the forum as set down by its owner. Your post is very cruel and not thoughtful at all. I really don't appreciate the gratuitous invective and name-calling. I already said that it was too difficult to prove or disprove. I can't be more evenhanded than that. Unless you can definitively prove to the whole world and everybody in it that it does not exist, which neither you nor the sciences can do. More importantly, science does not even demand that the soul doesn't exist, there are many great scientists who are active today who believe. Any decent and intelligent person would know this. Religion doesn't refute science and science doesn't refute religion or else one would abolish the other. That is what a refutation is. Your thoughtless and cruel attitude doesn't really have a place in this forum in my opinion. Last edited by Pythagorean; 06-28-2008 at 06:50 AM. |
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