Filip Sandor
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2004
- Messages
- 259
Oleron said:Someone has probably thought of this question before but I'm interested in knowing at what point in human evolution the soul appeared.
As far as I'm aware, most philosophies/religions (apart from the reincarnation crowd) indicate that humans are special among all life because man has an immortal soul.
So if man has a soul but the ancient common ancestor between man and the apes did not, when did the soul evolve? Homo Habilis? Homo Erectus? Did the Neanderthals have souls?
Well let's think about this for a moment..
If a limited number of Souls existed in the Universe there would likely come a time in the future (if not already past) when Soul-less creatures would be born basically "dead" into the world, once the Soul pool has run dry. From a philosphical and scientific point of view it would not make sense for this to occur in my opinion because there is no logical or intuitive formula that can determine how many Souls exist or should exist and why. Such a idea is so far detached from ordinary reasoning that it has no real place in our common sense, which makes it all the more less believable.
The next most logical assumption would be that there are an infinite number of Souls in existence. From a scientific point of view this makes more sense because the rules of physical life wouldn't suddenly change for no apparent reason and everything could continue to evolve, all physical bodies would have a Soul to 'connect' to. The down-side to this theory in my opinion is that there would also be an infinite number of Souls that would never be incarnated. Mathematically speaking infinity may cancel out infinity, but in reality, at any point in time spreading infinitely into the future, there would be an infinite number of Souls 'lost' in a void (or whatever..) never being able to incarnate. Somehow this point of view just seems unfair and wrong, bringing into question the any purpose of a Souls evolution at all. This point of view is probably more difficult to accept than the latter point of view of a limited number of Souls.
If there is such a thing as the Soul then maybe there is only one. Maybe this one Soul is expressing itself through all living things and even what we might call 'non-living things', seeing a unique view of every perspective that is offered to it through the physical world.
Perhaps this could offer an explination to why we all feel 'separated' as individuals. It would also eliminate the need to explain when a Soul began to evolve since it would be much like a seamless evolution of the one Soul.