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If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
#31
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
I have a mammoths penis.
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#32
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 27, 2012 at 6:00 am)5thHorseman Wrote: I have a mammoths penis.

Do you have to take anti rejection drugs for that? Or is it something you just have on your mantle?
Cunt
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#33
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 27, 2012 at 5:10 am)pocaracas Wrote: How about we put the question like this:
If there is something after death, how do we find out?
How did some guy in the bronze age come to find this out?

Quote:
Souls are a another powerful part of the rhetoric of religion. Without an intuitive belief that we possess an immaterial essence instead of just a biological brain, threats of hellfire or promises of paradise would hold little persuasive value. Again, we can look to developmental research with children to see the most intuitive default thinking in humans:

[Jesse Bering] put on a puppet show for a group of pre-school children. During the show, an alligator ate a mouse. The researchers then asked the children questions about the physical existence of the mouse, such as 'Can the mouse still be sick? Does it need to eat or drink?' The children said no. But when asked more 'spiritual' questions, such as 'does the mouse think and know things?', the children answered yes (Brooks 31).

Belief in souls requires a dualistic conception of human beings where the mind of an individual is conceptually separable from the body. Unlike a scientific, monistic view of individuals where the mind is an epiphenomenon of the living brain, a dualistic conceptualization sees individuals as having a soul that "is typically represented as the conscious personality" (Bering, "Souls" 453). The alligator-and-mouse experiment bears this out. From an early age human beings (across cultures) conceptually separate cognitive and biological processes, and even though we learn that biological bodies die, it is much more difficult to conclude that immaterial personalities die (Pyysiainen 94). There are several reasons for this difficulty. Bering's "The Folk Psychology of Souls" cites a study conducted with 5-month-old infants ascertaining their ability to reason about the law of continuous motion as it applies to human bodies:

Like any material substance, human bodies cannot go from A → C without first passing along the trajectory B (a continuous space between two points). For inanimate objects, infants are surprised (i.e., look longer) when the object disappears from behind one barrier and then seems to emerge from behind another adjacent barrier. In the case of a human who violates the law of continuous motion, however, 5-month-olds are not surprised (i.e., they do not look longer at this event than the non-violation event) (454).

Infants, it seems, already have the foundations for thinking of humans (at least in part) in nonmaterial ways. Their intuition seems to be that while inanimate objects cannot violate the law of continuous motion, animate objects can because they possess agency (an immaterial property) and can exhibit goal-directed behavior. If this intuition is carried into adulthood, it becomes obvious why human beings can entertain the notion at a funeral that "he's up there smiling down on us" when the inert decedent is really in a casket. On Justin Barrett's account there is evolutionary logic behind this way of thinking: "Requiring a body around to think about its mind would be a great liability" (Brooks 31). And the subjective experience of dreams, where the "person" "leaves" the sleeping body, also seems to (partly) explain why the human mind naturally demarcates between the (seemingly) immaterial cognitive and material biological aspects of human beings.


Why Religion is Persuasive: How Religious Rhetoric Taps into Intuitions Underlying Religious Thought by Adam Lewis ( (2011)



(See also, The Belief Instinct by Jesse Bering, and Religion Explained .)



[Image: extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg]
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#34
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
So... apophenia, you're saying we can find it out because we find it easy to consider that the mind and the brain are two separate things?
Doesn't make sense... Sad

Or because the mind and brain are two separate things, there must be something after death?
Start from a likely wrong presupposition -> arrive at a very likely wrong conclusion Sad

Or did I miss the point and should return to my own dark corner of stupidity? Sad
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#35
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 27, 2012 at 9:00 am)pocaracas Wrote: So... apophenia, you're saying we can find it out because we find it easy to consider that the mind and the brain are two separate things?
Doesn't make sense... Sad

No, I'm suggesting that the question itself is an artifact of the nature of the brain or mind. It would be like looking at the faces / vase illusion, and asking where the faces go when you see the vase. The question itself is better explained as an artifact of how our minds work, than as a mystery needing to be solved.


[Image: 7798292.gif]


[Image: extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg]
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#36
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
Our minds don't like to know that they will end.... so they build this other world where they can continue and believe in it. Am I getting warm?
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#37
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 25, 2012 at 12:06 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Ultimately, they are right. The light goes out and the xtians don't get to spend eternity kissing jesus' ass. But they will never know it which leaves them free to delude themselves whilst they live.

It's actually a bit of a pisser that they'll never know it.

(August 26, 2012 at 7:48 am)Ace Otana Wrote: And besides, for those who like to hold onto the idea of another life, perhaps we may exist again in yet another life form generations from now, no memory of our past life.

Whilst I don't believe in souls, spirits, re-incarnation or anything like that I often ponder about consciousness. Yep, i know it's a product of my brain, but the question I always ask (which cannot be answered) is "why me? Why am I experiencing this consciousness in this body, right now. Why am I not instead the consciousness of 7 billion other people?" It's brain bending.
You are currently experiencing a lucky and very brief window of awareness, sandwiched in between two periods of timeless and utter nothingness. So why not make the most of it, and stop wasting your life away trying to convince other people that there is something else? The reality is obvious.

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#38
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 25, 2012 at 7:31 pm)apophenia Wrote: This is not necessarily true. While I would agree that it's improbable that there is a naturally occurring process which would "takeover" the hosting of our mind after the death of the physical, it's not impossible in principle.

Let's say it is possible. Where is the evidence that the possible is also the reality in the particular case of the person in question?
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#39
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 27, 2012 at 6:00 am)5thHorseman Wrote: I have a mammoths penis.


Wow! Really? Have you had it professionally mounted?Angel Cloud
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#40
RE: If there is nothing after death how do we find out?
(August 27, 2012 at 6:00 am)5thHorseman Wrote: I have a mammoths penis.


It's frozen, shriveled, and stuck in Siberian permafrost?
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