Elind said:
Originally posted by Interesting Ian
I have no idea what you are talking about. Different "life after death" compared to what??
Elind
I think that is obvious.
Sorry, I don't get your point. I was saying that the survival hypothesis (""life" after death") is not vindicated by the notion that the self is non-physical. Have you misunderstood me? Are we talking at cross purposes, or what?
Indeed consciousness is not the same as personality. Other people can know your personality since personality is simply defined by appropriate behaviour. But I was talking about consciousness. What we might call the raw feel of experience such as thinking, the various emotions, our perceptual sensations such as, to take an arbitrary example, our experience of greenness etc.
Elind
That's personality, in as much as it differs from one individual to another.
Ummm . .our raw experience of greenness is our personality??

I rather think this conversation is going nowhere; extremely quickly!
II
I was not talking about self consciousness, but rather merely consciousness. And science cannot in principle make any progress on the question of consciousness because science only deals with the physical. We know that consciousness is not characterised by structure and function and thus is not physical, but this is all that science deals with, therefore consciousness is not susceptible to a scientific explanation.
Elind
And you think that does not require a "self" in front of it? I think this is a contortionist argument.
Your knowledge of what self-consciousness means (as opposed to mere consciousness), is as lacking as your knowledge of what materialism means. Self-consciousness means the implicit awareness of yourself as an enduring entity. You have a notion that you are a
self. Human beings are self-conscious, other animals are normally regarded as not being self-conscious, but merely conscious. Dogs for example are presumably not aware of themselves as distinct entities enduring through time. However, I would take issue with the thesis that something like dolphins are not self-conscious and are merely conscious. For example, they recognise themselves in mirrors, which tends to suggest they are
self-conscious.
I think your logic about principles of science and consciousness is something you made up and that YOU think you know. Science deals with understanding. You seem to think it's mechanical engineering. You need to study more, and not just self study.
I have always preferred self-study. I don't need to know about science, I simply need to understand the underlying principles of the
philosophy of science. If you think I don't know what I'm talking about, then I guess there's nothing I can do about that. If you're interested, do some reading up on philosophy. I would especially recommend reading up on my website once it's completed.