In my experience, if there was no subjective soul distinct from the brain and everything was purely physical, the experience could be like I were dead or a robot..........
You're confusing experience with imagination.
In my experience, if there was no subjective soul distinct from the brain and everything was purely physical, the experience could be like I were dead or a robot..........
rakovsky said:I sense that I exist distinct from my physical body
In my experience, if there was no subjective soul distinct from the brain and everything was purely physical, the experience could be like I were dead or a robot. Rakovsky's physical brain would get electrochemical responses and reactions, but "I" would not observe them, there would be no subject, the phenomenon would be robot-like and soul-less. "I" would not have my sense of free will, creativity, responsibility, observing the world. I would not observe anything at all.
If there was no distinction in any way between my Self and my physical body, then this whole discussion about the Self might not be possible. There would be a purely physical brain, but no observer in it experiencing the body in the first person, since an observer experiencing the brain presupposes a distinction between the observer and what is observed. The soul must be the entity that is observing and acting on the world through the brain in the first person.
Certainly, the brain could be an entity observing the brain, itself.
However, the physical brain is not the same exact thing as the observing soul for another reason: the distinction between the physical body and soul shown at death. After death, the physical brain still exists, but the soul no longer is alive, I am no longer in existence, and I cannot experience the world anymore, unless theories of immortality or afterlife are true.
You're confusing experience with imagination.
I think that this reflects a failure of imagination on your part.
I think this is a good point- one could consider an observer to be a brain that is observing itself.I think that this reflects a failure of imagination on your part. You can't imagine how a physical object could observe and make choices so you conclude that there must be something "higher" than the physical involved.
You make this argument, but then refute it in the first sentence of your next paragraph.If there was no distinction in any way between my Self and my physical body, then this whole discussion about the Self might not be possible. There would be a purely physical brain, but no observer in it experiencing the body in the first person, since an observer experiencing the brain presupposes a distinction between the observer and what is observed. The soul must be the entity that is observing and acting on the world through the brain in the first person.
Originally Posted by rakovsky View Post
Certainly, the brain could be an entity observing the brain, itself.
A subject can know that he/she exists, he/she can tell that he/she has a mind and a brain, and he/she can sense a difference between himself/herself and his/her physical brain.
How are they going to do this in any sort of meaningful way?
They could do it by observing their brain and others' brains, and then drawing a distinction between themselves as the observer and their physical brain and others' brains.
There is a huge difference between the detailed physical make-up of a living brain vs. a dead brain which explain why one functions while the other does not without any need to reference a soul.
Would it still be right to say that "I" exist if I no longer think, experience or do anything?
........."I", the observer, am an entity, but I am not the same exact entity as my brain, since when my brain stops pumping electrochemical processes and dies, I end and vanish - unless immortality and an afterlife are true. This "I", with its end distinguishable from the end of the brain, is the soul..........
I suppose one could still propose that "I" still exist in a dead form if my brain is dead and still exists. But there would no longer be any more observation, no one saying "I.... " to anyone, no more experiencing. Would it still be right to say that "I" exist if I no longer think, experience or do anything?
Would it still be right to say that "I" exist if I no longer think, experience or do anything?
Agreed. That's why I didn't bother to answer.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/cate-montana/proof-of-the-soul_b_10112150.htmlProof of the Soul
By Cate Montana
I don’t feel any different now, checking out the gathering storm of wrinkles on my face, than I did as a teenager, checking out the zits depressing my chances at getting a Saturday night date.
“I” haven’t changed at all. Never mind it’s not the same face looking back at me from the mirror. Never mind it’s definitely not the same body. (Holy God! If I’d seen then what I see now I wouldn’t have believed my eyes. Or wanted to.) I’ve even recently caught myself making strange grunting noises getting up from my desk after sitting for a few hours. And I don’t do cartwheels in the backyard in springtime anymore. And I can’t do a backbend walkover like I used to.
Yes, my body is definitely older. But “I” am not. The essence that I call my “self” has not aged a day. Of course, anybody over forty knows this phenomenon. At some point every human being on the planet looks in the mirror and says, “I can’t believe I’m 42 (or 62 or 74 or 87 or...). I’m the exact same person on the inside. What the hell happened?”
But maybe quantum physics? After all, physicists (not the Newtonian kind) have discovered the world as we know it is actually an intangible realm of information and energy. The great search for the mysterious “point particle”—you know, that elusive smaller-than-an-electron-microscope-can-see grain of matter that was supposed to lie at the foundation of all things material if we could just probe deeply enough—was a complete flop from the materialist perspective.
Despite over a hundred years of searching, we’ve still found nothing material at all. Even structures as massive as electrons are more like events than things. As the noted Austrian physicist Erin Shrodinger put it, “What we observe as material bodies and forces are nothing but shapes and variations in the structure of space. Particles are just schaumkommen [appearances].”
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Maybe such scientific discoveries will make it easier for behaviorists to embrace the possibility of the soul.
I understand that a simple reply can be that subjective experiences exist because brains observe the world for themselves, and those experiences are experienced by brains in the first person subjective. Still, I don't find this reply satisfactory, maybe because I haven't formulated the argument clearly enough. I can understand that brains observe the world for themselves, but why am I experiencing the world in this brain in this moment? The question might not make sense, objectively speaking. A simple answer can be: Of course you are experiencing the world in your brain, because you are just your brain. Still, this doesn't really get to what I intended to ask, but I don't know how to clarify what I mean because what I said. In asking the question, I am experiencing the world right now, just me. I am having a first person experience that feels totally different than just saying that some brain somewhere observes the world.While neuroscience has made tremendous progress illuminating the functioning of the brain, why we have a subjective experience remains mysterious. The problem of the soul lies exactly here, in understanding the nature of the self, the “I” in existence that feels and experiences life.
Read more at https://beyondbiocentrism.com/does-the-soul-exist-evidence-says-yes/#CUUby7Z00pYyxVkT.99
http://www.chabad.org/library/artic...Is-There-Proof-of-the-Existence-of-a-Soul.htmDear Rabbi, Ever since the death of my brother seven years ago, I have been grappling with the concept of the soul. I wish I could believe in it.
[REPLY]The pain of losing a loved one is so deep because it is so final. You can never replace a person whom you have lost. But what if you could? Imagine it were possible to clone your late brother. A genetically identical replica could be created who talks, thinks, looks and smells precisely the same as the person you grew up with. Furthermore, what if scientists developed a way to preserve and replicate memory?
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Would you opt for this? Would you be satisfied with an exact copy of your brother? Would his death be reversed when you met his clone? I can't imagine the answer could be yes. I can't imagine anyone would truly believe that a clone could replace a brother or sister, son or daughter, parent or spouse or best friend.
But why not? Why would a refurbished model be any different from the original? Because something is missing. This is not your brother. ...he doesn't have your brother's soul. It just isn't him.
That's what soul is. It is what makes you, you. It is the fragment of G‑d that makes each one of us unique. Above your body, beyond your personality, transcending genetics and even deeper than memory is the core of your being, the ineffable essence that is you. We call this your soul. It is soul that makes each person irreplaceable. And it is your brother's soul that you miss. You don't need scientific proof of the soul, neither do you need blind faith. You know it to exist just as you know your own existence. You can choose to ignore it, or to remember it constantly.
Scientists might be able to mechanically trigger a brain to take a course of action, but this would be experienced by you as a reflex and you would not feel it to be a decision that you were making with your free will. Yet your decisionmaking experience of free will does not appear to be itself physically observable.Consciousness has 5 states: 1) sensation, 2) thoughts, 3) beliefs, 4) desires, and 5) acts of free will. All of these are non-physical states. Within these states, there are things that cannot be measured as brain activity. That is to say, although our consciousness can feel the sensation of the brain being mechanically stimulated, it’s not the same thing as a brain state.
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Further, we all know the brain state is physical, and the consciousness is not. ... And therefore, although our body carries a brain, the soul is separate and immaterial, but utilizes the brain, just as we would pick up a tool box and utilize the tools inside for specific purposes.
http://www.chabad.org/library/artic...Is-There-Proof-of-the-Existence-of-a-Soul.htm
The subject was able to distinguish his own free will to raise his arm from the external physical compulsions enacted through his brain to raise his arm, even though in both cases his brain raised his arm.Then Dr. Penfield, using state-of-the-art technology, artificially activated that part of the brain and the arm rose up. The subject described the event as: “My arm went up.” Dr. Penfield specifically asked: “Did you raise your arm?” The subject replied with full certainty: “I didn't raise my hand. My arm rose up by itself.” When Dr. Penfield deactivated the brain and the arm went down, the patient described: “My arm fell down; I did not bring it down.”
This simple experiment had profound implications: in both cases, the brain was activated to raise and lower the arm. But in the second case, Dr. Penfield, an external agent, was activating the brain. Who was the agent activating it in the first case? In both cases, the brain was serving as the machine to transmit the intention of an agent. In the second case, it transmitted Dr Penfield's intention. In the first case whose intention did it transmit? We can conclude that the intention in the first case, was that of the Self or soul, or will of the patient.
http://www.debate.org/opinions/does-the-soul-exist
If my soul, my mind, my creative ability, my free will, and my independent decision-making powers are all illusions and fictions, and I am only a physical brain with predetermined decisions, then why am I also not an illusion or fiction?
Just your soul is a fiction. Don't get carried away here.
Rather than being pipelines for chains of natural causation that go back before our birth, we can initiate our own causal chains. This ability is commonly called free will. Free will is about voluntary choice, being able to choose one’s own actions, and thus the freedom to make choices that are not determined by prior causes. (For if our actions were forced on us by prior causes outside our control, we would not have free will.) But do we really possess free will? Are we really capable of choosing our own actions? Experiment for yourself. To see if you have free will, intentionally do something, anything at all. For instance, try to move your arm. Can you do it? I think I can. And the evidence (direct perceptions) would seem to indicate that we do indeed have free will.
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Here’s the problem in a nutshell: in a purely physical world, our actions are solely the product of forces completely beyond our control, and thus we would not have free will. ... Because of cause-and-effect ... this corporeal chain of causation would extend back well before we were born. Yet conditions before our birth are clearly outside of our control, so the chain of causation would look something like this:
Natural Processes Outside Our Control
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CAUSE
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Inner Brain States
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CAUSE
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Mental and Physical Actions
But if this is accurate, we would not be originating the cause of anything. We would be just like the tree that fell on Bob's car, being a conduit of natural forces outside our control. In this case, our actions would be determined by prior causes. We would not have free will. This is why free will by definition cannot be an effect in corporeality (hence line 4). To have free will we must exist outside this corporeal tapestry (hence line 5). If free will exists and its basis cannot be corporeal, the only logical alternative is the incorporeal realm. Since its basis must be incorporeal, we must logically have souls if we possess free will.
http://www.angelfire.com/mn2/tisthammerw/rlgnphil/soul.html
.......Logically it appears that for real, deliberate "free will" to truly exist in the full meaning of the way that people sense it, there must be a decisionmaker really distinct from the physical brain...........
Eerok,
Logically it appears that for real, deliberate "free will" to truly exist in the full meaning of the way that people sense it, there must be a decisionmaker really distinct from the physical brain. This is because "free will" is considered decisionmaking unencumbered from any constraints, which would include physical ones.
In fact they can neither "spit out" random numbers, nor generate them in any other way.For example, if a computer "randomly" spits out numbers ...
Are treated by whom as random? A casino wheel is incapable of choice, random or not. But we can choose, and if we have a physical mechanism that makes choices, why should it be random? Do computers make choices entailing random results when they perform such tasks as controlling spacecraft? No. Do they have souls then, that transcend their physical components? No.or a spinning casino wheel comes naturally to a stop on a certain box, then the results are treated as "random", and not as deliberate, intentional choices.
Who, please? And on the basis of what reasoning?However, my personal experience and sense of self and free will suggests to me that I have some ability into which I am not forced by prior conditions and yet which also is not random. I sense that I have a real "free will", but I think that it's not explainable, beyong being something else that others have experienced themselves.
As one philosopher explains how this appears to show that your being exists as a causal force beyond the purely physical world:
And have you demonstrated that this is not in fact the case?From this he concludes that the soul exists: "free will involves the freedom to make choices that are not determined by prior causes. Therefore, free will is itself a cause and not an effect in its interactions with corporeality. So if free will is to exist, its basis must" not be corporeal.
For a person's free will to be truly free, it must be free from all encumbrances, free will must be not be the result of physical forces. A brain's decision to pick chocolate ice cream can't be purely the result of prior physical conditioning on the physical neurons. Otherwise, the decisionmaking would not be free, but rather conditioned.
This sequence of arguments is merely one unsubstantiated statement on top of another, culminating in a triumphant tautology: if it's not physical it must be incorporeal. And then a non sequitur: if it's incorporeal it must be "the soul".And if the decisionmaking is not just the result of the physical structure of the neurons or other physical factors, then it must be the result of an incorporeal entity, you, the soul.