[Merged] Immortality & Bayesian Statistics

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Mojo,
- Maybe this will help...
- Think about one computer controlling, and observing through, two robots.

That analogy would apply to one brain that was somehow attached to two bodies.

If you're talking about consciousness being separate from the brain, just so.
 
Slowvehicle said:
Hmm, I wonder if this list of all Jabba lists would contain itself...
Until it did...then it could not.
Yes, but only if none of the others contained themselves...

What was the topic again?

Oh yes; I seems to me that you could have immortal consciousness if you redefine time in terms of your consciousness of it... would that be cheating?
 
Yes, but only if none of the others contained themselves...

What was the topic again?

Oh yes; I seems to me that you could have immortal consciousness if you redefine time in terms of your consciousness of it... would that be cheating?

I would also add that it helps to redefine immortal as well.

And redefine prove and statistics and evidence.
 
- Still trying to indicate exactly what it is that I think is immortal.

- Roughly, I'm claiming that each of "us" is immortal. I'm not claiming that our bodies are immortal, I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal.
- And clearly, I'm just confusing people with my terms...

- For now, it seems like the best I can do is say that the "selves" to which I refer are the selves that keep returning -- according to those who believe in reincarnation, that go to heaven or hell -- according to Christians and that live one, short, life (at most) according to atheists.
- From Wikipedia:
Reincarnation is the religious or philosophical concept that the soul or spirit, after biological death, begins a new life in a new body that may be human, animal or spiritual depending on the moral quality of the previous life's actions. This doctrine is a central tenet of theIndian religions.[1] It is also a common belief of various ancient and modern religions such as Spiritism, Theosophy, and Eckankar and is found in many tribal societies around the world, in places such as Siberia, West Africa, North America, and Australia.[2]
- I haven't used "soul" or "spirit" to indicate the concept because I didn't want to inextricably tie the concept to religion.
 
- Still trying to indicate exactly what it is that I think is immortal.

- Roughly, I'm claiming that each of "us" is immortal. I'm not claiming that our bodies are immortal, I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal.
- And clearly, I'm just confusing people with my terms...

- For now, it seems like the best I can do is say that the "selves" to which I refer are the selves that keep returning -- according to those who believe in reincarnation, that go to heaven or hell -- according to Christians and that live one, short, life (at most) according to atheists.
- From Wikipedia:
Reincarnation is the religious or philosophical concept that the soul or spirit, after biological death, begins a new life in a new body that may be human, animal or spiritual depending on the moral quality of the previous life's actions. This doctrine is a central tenet of theIndian religions.[1] It is also a common belief of various ancient and modern religions such as Spiritism, Theosophy, and Eckankar and is found in many tribal societies around the world, in places such as Siberia, West Africa, North America, and Australia.[2]
- I haven't used "soul" or "spirit" to indicate the concept because I didn't want to inextricably tie the concept to religion.

Mr. Savage:

At the risk of being accused of being condescending, it has been clear for a while that you are trying to claim that the existence of the "soul" essentially proves immortality. What you do not realize is that most of us are aware of that--in fact, many of us predicted exactly that--but it does not help you, because all you are doing is asserting the existence of the "soul". For the existence of the "soul" to essentially prove immortality, you would need to demonstrate the existence of the "soul".

You have, as yet, not even begun this demonstration.

And, just as with the 14C issue in ShroudTM, and Shroud IITM the evasion upon which you have spent more than a year is only the first of your problems.

I will be interested to see what evidence you offer that the emergent property of consciousness should, properly, be understood to be the "soul" of metaphysiscs.
 
The concept of a consciousness that is separate from a physical brain is inherently religious. Using a different word will not change this.
 
- Roughly, I'm claiming that each of "us" is immortal. I'm not claiming that our bodies are immortal, I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal. ...

That's very interesting, jabba.
How do you define "self"?
 
- Still trying to indicate exactly what it is that I think is immortal.


Why?

It's not as if everyone doesn't already know that you're talking about the religious concept of a soul.



- Roughly, I'm claiming that each of "us" is immortal. I'm not claiming that our bodies are immortal, I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal.


In other words, you're claiming that individual consciousness is the product of something other than an individual brain. It seems to me, in light of this, that you need to forget about the immortality nonsense for now and concentrate on somehow demonstrating that disembodied consciousness exists.

Perhaps as part of this process you might like to attempt an answer to this earlier question of mine (which, like so many others, seems to be missing from your "comprehensive" list of unanswered questions):


The Population Research Bureau estimates that the total number of people that have ever lived on Earth is 108,000,000,000 which means (if immortality is essentially true) that there are currently 103,000,000,000 more selves than there are brains.

Where are they?


Or should I assume that your earlier explanation that they're all in a big cosmic bucket somewhere still stands?

- My best guess is that each of us is part of an infinitely divisible drop of consciousness from an infinitely divisible bucket of consciousness, and are really just one, and conscious all the time (whatever time is).


Sounds familiar . . .


BorgCube.jpg

No wonder our efforts here seem so futile



- And clearly, I'm just confusing people with my terms...


That's essentially because your "terms" all have special "definitions" which only exist in the Jabbaverse™.

Although I'd also be willing to have a little "side bet" on you being the only one here who is "confused" about what your terms actually "mean".



- For now, it seems like the best I can do is say that the "selves" to which I refer are the selves that keep returning -- according to those who believe in reincarnation, that go to heaven or hell -- according to Christians and that live one, short, life (at most) according to atheists.


In addition to your now having ditched all attempts at pretending to take a scientific/mathematical approach to this topic, you further demonstrate that you have no understanding of the different ways that different philosophies view the concept of a soul (I refuse to use your weasel word - self - any more)

Your statement above implying that Buddhists, Christians and atheists disagree only on the eternal fate of this soul is ludicrous in the extreme.
 
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That's very interesting, jabba.
How do you define "self"?


self

"That part of a consciousness which is immortal"​


consciousness


"Part of the overall concept of self"​


immortal


"What a self is"​


Immortality & Bayesian Statistics


"Round
Like a circle in a spiral
Like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending or beginning
On an ever spinning reel
Like a snowball down a mountain
Or a carnival balloon
Like a carousel that's turning
Running rings around the moon"
 
- For now, it seems like the best I can do is say that the "selves" to which I refer are the selves that keep returning -- according to those who believe in reincarnation, that go to heaven or hell -- according to Christians and that live one, short, life (at most) according to atheists.

and according to Jews. No afterlife in Jewish traditions.
 
That's very interesting, jabba.
How do you define "self"?
self

"That part of a consciousness which is immortal"​


consciousness


"Part of the overall concept of self"​


immortal


"What a self is"​


Immortality & Bayesian Statistics


"Round
Like a circle in a spiral
Like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending or beginning
On an ever spinning reel
Like a snowball down a mountain
Or a carnival balloon
Like a carousel that's turning
Running rings around the moon"

Thanks, O Pharaoh!
I'm trying to make sense of Jabba's claim and your help was invaluable, nay, illuminating.
 
- Still trying to indicate exactly what it is that I think is immortal.

- Roughly, I'm claiming that each of "us" is immortal. I'm not claiming that our bodies are immortal, I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal.

Yes, we know. This is incredibly clear. You've been told it's incredibly clear.

- And clearly, I'm just confusing people with my terms...

No you're not. At all.

- For now, it seems like the best I can do is say that the "selves" to which I refer are the selves that keep returning -- according to those who believe in reincarnation, that go to heaven or hell -- according to Christians and that live one, short, life (at most) according to atheists.

Yes, we know. What you've got to do is demonstrate that such a thing actually exists.

[/I]- I haven't used "soul" or "spirit" to indicate the concept because I didn't want to inextricably tie the concept to religion.

Whether it's tied to religion or not, that is still what you're talking about. And there is no evidence that such a thing actually exists. Unless you can provide some.

So, please, stop repeating that you're talking about what people who believe in reincarnation are talking about, and demonstrate that what people who believe in reincarnation are talking about actually exists.
 
... I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal.
...
- For now, it seems like the best I can do is say that the "selves" to which I refer are the selves that keep returning
I don't expect you to produce any evidence for these 'returning selves', so perhaps you could explain what properties they have that justify calling them 'selves' that are not already accounted for by properties of the brain?

In other words, describe these proposed phenomena in as much detail as you can, and distinguish their attributes from those associated with the bodily self. Any ideas of a mechanism or mechanisms for their support would also be welcome.
 
- Roughly, I'm claiming that each of "us" is immortal. I'm not claiming that our bodies are immortal, I'm claiming that our "selves" are immortal, our "individual consciousnesses" are immortal.


I know what you're claiming. Do you have any evidence for that claim?
 
Jabba, it's been clear from the start that what you think might be immortal is not the body but the consciousness/self/soul - whatever you are calling it. Nobody is confused about that, or by your terms.

We are only confused about why you think the consciousness/self/soul is immortal, and exasperated that you seem to be unwilling to explain any of your reasoning.

What we as humans observe:
Each person has one consciousness which commences prior to or at birth, develops over the life, is temporarily absent during sleep, can be changed by damage to the brain, and which ends at death.

What we as humans do not observe:
Any evidence that consciousness transcends death.
Any evidence that an individual consciousness has at any time been the consciousness of another person.

Where is your evidence for the idea that consciousness/self/soul is anything more than an emergent property of the brain?

In other words, this thread has now run to fifty pages, and we still don't have any idea what leads you to suspect that you can (essentially) prove immortality, or how you intend to do it. Don't you think it's about time you made some actual, substantive posts instead of quibbling about a confusion which doesn't exist, and theorising just how special a snowflake each of us are?
 
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