No and our souls always have been and always will be and there is no problem with that either.
Here is evidence from the famous scientist and doctor Robert Lanza
http://www.robertlanza.com/
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/...e-says-yes
Life and consciousness are central to this new view of being, reality and the cosmos. Although the current scientific paradigm is based on the belief that the world has an objective observer-independent existence, real experiments suggest just the opposite. We think life is just the activity of atoms and particles, which spin around for a while and then dissipate into nothingness. But if we add life to the equation, we can explain some of the major puzzles of modern science, including the uncertainty principle, entanglement, and the fine-tuning of the laws that shape the universe.
Consider the famous two-slit experiment. When you watch a particle go through the holes, it behaves like a bullet, passing through one slit or the other. But if no one observes the particle, it exhibits the behavior of a wave and can pass through both slits at the same time. This and other experiments tell us that unobserved particles exist only as ‘waves of probability' as the great Nobel laureate Max Born demonstrated in 1926. They're statistical predictions – nothing but a likely outcome. Until observed, they have no real existence; only when the mind sets the scaffolding in place, can they be thought of as having duration or a position in space. Experiments make it increasingly clear that even mere knowledge in the experimenter's mind is sufficient to convert possibility to reality.
Many scientists dismiss the implications of these experiments, because until recently, this observer-dependent behavior was thought to be confined to the subatomic world. However, this is being challenged by researchers around the world. In fact, just this year a team of physicists (Gerlich et al, Nature Communications 2:263, 2011) showed that quantum weirdness also occurs in the human-scale world. They studied huge compounds composed of up to 430 atoms, and confirmed that this strange quantum behavior extends into the larger world we live in.
Importantly, this has a direct bearing on the question of whether humans and other living creatures have souls. As Kant pointed out over 200 years ago, everything we experience – including all the colors, sensations and objects we perceive – are nothing but representations in our mind. Space and time are simply the mind's tools for putting it all together. Now, to the amusement of idealists, scientists are beginning dimly to recognize that those rules make existence itself possible. Indeed, the experiments above suggest that objects only exist with real properties if they are observed. The results not only defy our classical intuition, but suggest that a part of the mind – the soul – is immortal and exists outside of space and time.
"The hope of another life" wrote Will Durant "gives us courage to meet our own death, and to bear with the death of our loved ones; we are twice armed if we fight with faith."
Here's an argument for proving existence of the soul with quantum mechanics by Hans Halvorson at Princeton
https://www.princeton.edu/~hhalvors/pape...review.pdf
Everena: Yes, I know that processes that begin after a planet already exists, do not create anything and that God created this planet and and all food and our fleshly bodies. But I was asking him for a response.
Ahh..... that's so sweet.
(November 28, 2018 at 5:45 am)IWNKYAAIMI Wrote: Just typing shit (sometimes in bold) and then walking off doesn't help.. Show me some evidence for the existence of a soul for example.
Here is evidence from the famous scientist and doctor Robert Lanza
http://www.robertlanza.com/
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/...e-says-yes
Life and consciousness are central to this new view of being, reality and the cosmos. Although the current scientific paradigm is based on the belief that the world has an objective observer-independent existence, real experiments suggest just the opposite. We think life is just the activity of atoms and particles, which spin around for a while and then dissipate into nothingness. But if we add life to the equation, we can explain some of the major puzzles of modern science, including the uncertainty principle, entanglement, and the fine-tuning of the laws that shape the universe.
Consider the famous two-slit experiment. When you watch a particle go through the holes, it behaves like a bullet, passing through one slit or the other. But if no one observes the particle, it exhibits the behavior of a wave and can pass through both slits at the same time. This and other experiments tell us that unobserved particles exist only as ‘waves of probability' as the great Nobel laureate Max Born demonstrated in 1926. They're statistical predictions – nothing but a likely outcome. Until observed, they have no real existence; only when the mind sets the scaffolding in place, can they be thought of as having duration or a position in space. Experiments make it increasingly clear that even mere knowledge in the experimenter's mind is sufficient to convert possibility to reality.
Many scientists dismiss the implications of these experiments, because until recently, this observer-dependent behavior was thought to be confined to the subatomic world. However, this is being challenged by researchers around the world. In fact, just this year a team of physicists (Gerlich et al, Nature Communications 2:263, 2011) showed that quantum weirdness also occurs in the human-scale world. They studied huge compounds composed of up to 430 atoms, and confirmed that this strange quantum behavior extends into the larger world we live in.
Importantly, this has a direct bearing on the question of whether humans and other living creatures have souls. As Kant pointed out over 200 years ago, everything we experience – including all the colors, sensations and objects we perceive – are nothing but representations in our mind. Space and time are simply the mind's tools for putting it all together. Now, to the amusement of idealists, scientists are beginning dimly to recognize that those rules make existence itself possible. Indeed, the experiments above suggest that objects only exist with real properties if they are observed. The results not only defy our classical intuition, but suggest that a part of the mind – the soul – is immortal and exists outside of space and time.
"The hope of another life" wrote Will Durant "gives us courage to meet our own death, and to bear with the death of our loved ones; we are twice armed if we fight with faith."
Here's an argument for proving existence of the soul with quantum mechanics by Hans Halvorson at Princeton
https://www.princeton.edu/~hhalvors/pape...review.pdf
(November 26, 2018 at 1:38 pm)Everena Wrote: Food exists by the same process we exist? What process is it that created food and all conscious life on this planet?
(November 28, 2018 at 5:45 am)IWNKYAAIMI Wrote: You know the answer to this already, stop deflecting away from providing me with any evidence for an eternal creator.
Everena: Yes, I know that processes that begin after a planet already exists, do not create anything and that God created this planet and and all food and our fleshly bodies. But I was asking him for a response.
(November 26, 2018 at 1:38 pm)Everena Wrote: Sorry, there is an intelligent creator. DNA+food+consciousness= God
(November 28, 2018 at 5:45 am)IWNKYAAIMI Wrote: DNA+food+consciousness+Everena= God
Ahh..... that's so sweet.