AkuManiMani, it's not that, lo and behold, spirit and matter turned out to be different aspects of one thing, or to refer to one thing. It's that spirit turned out to be nonexistant. The debate was settled on the side of physicality.
You can put the "spirit" label onto "whatever consciousness turns out to be regardless" but in doing so you provide a definition which is irrelevant to a discussion of whether the material model is valid or not.
My argument wasn't that the "material model" is invalid -- that was BDZ's argument. *I* was arguing that and distinction between "material" and "spiritual" is a matter of semantics and categorization and that they are not in conflict. The basic definitions of "spirit" is mind and consciousness. The existence of consciousness is a self-evident fact; it has never "turned out to be non-existent". If you do not accept the definition of spirit as consciousness then what is it that you consider spirit and why is/was it in conflict with the "material model", pray tell? And don't use another invalid analogy about tooth fairies because we both know that thats not whats being discussed.
To recap:
I earlier went out of my way to provide a coherent definition of both terms [e.g. "of or pertaining to the mind"] and you chose to ignore it on grounds that it was somehow irrelevant to the discussion. Even the scientific definition of matter itself is pretty broad. We can all agree that an atom is "matter" but which part of it makes it "material"? Is it the elections that blink about in its outer layers? Is it the quarks that make up the protons and neutrons of the nucleus? Is it the oscillation of the "strings" that they are composed of? This illustrates the reason why I insisted that you define what you mean when you say matter or spirit. Both terms are very vague and very broad and if one hopes to have a coherent discussion about the two of them one MUST clearly define them instead of falling back on the whole "the terms are used all the time so you know what I mean" bit.
Since you
refuse to define why "matter" and "spirit" are contradictory [yet stubbornly maintain that they are], and why former supersedes the latter I will, once again, specifically define why they do not conflict. There is no "ad infinitum" and no "ad absurdum" -- just a clear and definite conclusion based off of strait forward, basic definitions.
mat·ter /ˈmætər/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[mat-er] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–noun
1. the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
2. physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, esp. as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like.
spir·it /ˈspɪrɪt/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[spir-it] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–noun
1. the principle of conscious life; the vital principle in humans, animating the body or mediating between body and soul.
2. the incorporeal part of humans
spir·it·u·al /ˈspɪrɪtʃuəl/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[spir-i-choo-uhl] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–adjective
1. of, pertaining to, or consisting of spirit; incorporeal.
[....]
9. of or relating to the mind or intellect.
The above definitions are not in any way in conflict with one another. "Spirit" defines intangible and incorporeal aspects of reality while "matter" is what is defined the tangible -- that which is tactile in nature. What we define as matter are objects composed of atoms [such as our bodies] that have the properties of mass and generally interact with each other via the electromagnetic force and gravity. A thought, an idea, or a pattern is NOT considered "material" because they are intangible -- we do not experience them in a tactile fashion. Their reality is informational in nature. Even with this distinction tho, it is still artificial. Atoms themselves are just a specific category of oscillating patterns. What makes atoms "material" to us in the subjective sense is the way our bodies interact with similar constructs -- we experience the tactile sensation of resistance against other "material" objects. Our bodies interact with other objects composed of atoms in a specific way, and this system of interaction we call "physical".
The "material" view starts from the domain of atoms and their interactions as a frame of reference. From this point of view all explanations and descriptions revolve around this perspective. The "spiritual" view starts from the domain of mind, consciousness, and intent as a frame of reference.
No one in their right mind would argue that matter is insignificant to understanding the world and only a fool would contend that because consciousness is not matter that is somehow is not real.
The
real point of contention is whether or not the mind persists in some way after the material pattern of the body/brain dissipates. There is no solid evidence that it does and plenty of evidence that suggests that it probably does not.
Yes - that is why I could sum it up as being "trivial and rather meaningless way rather than anything of significance".
The original comment I made (which you sniped and edited out of context) what that one cannot find a literal "Theory of Everything" because it is impossible to have perfect knowledge and understanding. You then went on to pooh-pooh this statement as being mere opinion. When I pointed out that it was a statement of fact you challenged me to explain how I "knew" it to be fact. I then explained that it is axiomatic and self-evident. You then dismissed the answer to your own question as "meaningless". You're just being contrary for the sake of being contrary -- you never had an actual point of any significance yourself.