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Arguments against Soul
#91
RE: Arguments against Soul
Well, a soul existent or not, mine is saved forever, when I was barely 1 year old. They did a strange ritual that from that splash in the head a few gestures and people moaning to rebuke satan, etc... My soul is forever saved, blah blah blah hocum pocum, imbued with the holy spirit, abracadabra Big Grin

Don't remember a thing, but it's said I protested with the reasoning I knew. WAAAAAAAAAMMBULANCE!
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#92
RE: Arguments against Soul
(September 22, 2019 at 5:43 am)LastPoet Wrote: Well, a soul existent or not, mine is saved forever, when I was barely 1 year old. They did a strange ritual that from that splash in the head a few gestures and people moaning to rebuke satan, etc... My soul is forever saved, blah blah blah hocum pocum, imbued with the holy spirit, abracadabra Big Grin

Don't remember a thing, but it's said I protested with the reasoning I knew. WAAAAAAAAAMMBULANCE!

Priest:  'Do you renounce Satan and all his works?'

Michael Corleone:  'I do renounce them.'

Spoiler: 



Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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#93
RE: Arguments against Soul
(September 22, 2019 at 5:50 am)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote:
(September 22, 2019 at 5:43 am)LastPoet Wrote: Well, a soul existent or not, mine is saved forever, when I was barely 1 year old. They did a strange ritual that from that splash in the head a few gestures and people moaning to rebuke satan, etc... My soul is forever saved, blah blah blah hocum pocum, imbued with the holy spirit, abracadabra Big Grin

Don't remember a thing, but it's said I protested with the reasoning I knew. WAAAAAAAAAMMBULANCE!

Priest:  'Do you renounce Satan and all his works?'

Michael Corleone:  'I do renounce them.'

Spoiler: 



Boru

The local priest did asked me if I was planning to baptize my daughter. I told him she was 1 year old and she will have time to form those decisions whatever religion she chooses when time comes. Just like piercings and tatoos. He nodded acceptance and drank his coffee.
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#94
RE: Arguments against Soul
I still find it funny that - technically - I am qualified to be elected Pope.  I'm male, I was baptized, and I haven't been excommunicated.

'Pope Brian I'.  I like the sound of it.

Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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#95
RE: Arguments against Soul
(September 21, 2019 at 6:34 pm)Belaqua Wrote:
(September 21, 2019 at 9:30 am)EgoDeath Wrote: @Belaqua

Do you think souls exist?

I'm waiting for someone to tell me what a soul is, so I can answer that question.

(September 21, 2019 at 9:34 am)Jehanne Wrote: I am a materialist, and so, I think that your mind ("you") is entirely and completely the activity of your brain, nothing more.  When you die someday, you will cease to exist.  Think of death as an endless, dreamless "sleep" from which one will never, ever awake.

Right, I understand that. But here you're talking about mind again, not soul.

Do you have some argument as to why mind and soul must be identical?

I already posted that -- Conservation of Energy.
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#96
RE: Arguments against Soul
(September 22, 2019 at 11:07 am)Jehanne Wrote:
(September 21, 2019 at 6:34 pm)Belaqua Wrote: I'm waiting for someone to tell me what a soul is, so I can answer that question.


Right, I understand that. But here you're talking about mind again, not soul.

Do you have some argument as to why mind and soul must be identical?

I already posted that -- Conservation of Energy.

I missed your argument as to why conservation of energy applies to the soul.
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#97
RE: Arguments against Soul
I've been thinking about the two views of the soul that have been presented here. I'll summarize them this way, and then if I've misstated anyone's opinion I hope they'll correct me.

1) The view that Jehanne and others have is that a soul will be a particular object in the material world. Perhaps a field of energy or some interaction of electrical forces. If a soul is this way, it makes sense to say we could detect it with instruments. Maybe we could even isolate it and put it in a jar.

2) In contrast to the above, I've pointed to the classical view of the soul, as the form of the body. This is the definition used by Greek philosophers and classical theologians. In this system, soul is not a material thing itself but the complete form, history, interaction, operation, and function of a material body. We can study any number of things about the soul, in this sense, but soul itself doesn't exist separate from matter.

I think the classical view is useful. It points to objects, and, more importantly, people, as more than their matter. What I'm writing here I've learned mostly from William Blake, but the same ideas are found in Martin Buber, Simone Weil, and many other people who think about non-quantifiable value.

OK, as an easy example, I'll point to the can of cold coffee that I'm currently drinking from. This is not at all important in the larger scheme of things, but it's easy to talk about.

The can of coffee is, for me, a thing of utilitarian value. I own it for about two hours -- I put 130 yen into the vending machine, get the can, drink the contents, and throw it away. The can means nothing to me but its practical function.

Blake writes about the possibility of opening the doors of perception to the point where we could see the can in its entirety. This would mean that I could see the inside of the can as well as the outside. It would also mean that I would see it over its entire lifespan. Working backward, I could see it coming on a truck into the vending machine, getting the coffee put into it, getting printed with the label, getting formed at the can factory, the raw materials imported from Australia (it's aluminum, so I'm guessing it's bauxite from Australia). Also I could see the person who designed the label, the farmer who grew the coffee beans, the lives of the people who work in the can factory, etc. And I could see what happens to the can after I put it in the bin.

In this way, the can becomes more than a practical thing I use for two hours; it becomes integrated into the whole world. The world in a grain of sand.

We could call the totality of the can its soul, without doing too much violence to the classical definition. Because a person's soul also includes everything that he is and everything that made him. It is not currently present, not detectable by electrical monitors, though it does depend throughout on a purely material world. If we could see a person's soul, we would see the entirety of what he or she is, does, has been, could be.

Blake holds that seeing in such a way -- or imagining that we could see in such a way -- makes us better people. It stops us from treating things and people as abstractions, and makes us see their totality. In Kantian terms, an end and not a means. In Buber's terms, a Thou and not an It.

The view of the soul which assumes it is a wisp of material is in danger of treating people's real being as an object that can be measured and put in a jar.

The classical view of the soul urges us to engage with the totality, extended to infinity, and respect that the person is far more than what can be measured.
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#98
RE: Arguments against Soul
@Belaqua

Let's try this ..

Do you think there is anything you feel comfortable calling a soul ?
If so, how would you describe it ?
'Those who ask a lot of questions may seem stupid, but those who don't ask questions stay stupid'
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#99
RE: Arguments against Soul
(September 22, 2019 at 8:56 pm)possibletarian Wrote: @Belaqua

Let's try this ..

Do you think there is anything you feel comfortable calling a soul ?
If so, how would you describe it ?

I'm willing to use the word "soul" in the way I describe above. Nowadays it's probably misleading, though, because of the strange "spirit energy" idea.
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RE: Arguments against Soul
(September 22, 2019 at 9:04 pm)Belaqua Wrote:
(September 22, 2019 at 8:56 pm)possibletarian Wrote: @Belaqua

Let's try this ..

Do you think there is anything you feel comfortable calling a soul ?
If so, how would you describe it ?

I'm willing to use the word "soul" in the way I describe above. Nowadays it's probably misleading, though, because of the strange "spirit energy" idea.
Ding ding ding.
Reply



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