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File: 1462120108803.jpg (52.12 KB, 564x801, 188:267, 81a307fd11e65c584d29a0fb73….jpg)

 No.75066

First of all, i want to apologize for my english, a read a lot of books but it still pretty bad and there will be some mistakes. (a lot, maybe haha)

The intent of this thread is not to ask a question, but to start a discussion about soul and what's the function of the soul, why it should and need to exist. We have a lot of different point of views here, and that's why i'm making this thread. I'm not a fedora guy in any way, i practice magic.

It's not about if soul exist or not, because that would be useless for now. It's about why.

I have 3 questionings here from 3 different explanations to why soul need to exist:

1- The soul is responsible for your life.

Well, the biology explains why we are alive, why you can talk, move and so on… The cells have movements, and they have organelles that make them work, the bacterian cell is a lot more simple, it's just some genectic material there, cytoplasm and one or another micro organelle around there. The eukaryotic cells are a little bit more complicated, they have a closed core, sorting out the DNA from the rest, and there's another series of organelles. So, you have a complex manufacture working on your body.

But i don't see people saying that a bacterium, a protosoario have a soul, but they are alive. A cell can remain alive by itself, and it's a completely understandable mechanisms of why they are alive, explained by the biology, the chemistry, the physical. There's no need of a soul for the cell live.

If you want to use the assumption that a cell have a soul, then you are (and any other human) a BIG set of souls, with trillions and trillions of souls, we are trillions of souls inside a single human.

2- Soul is consciousness.

Consciousness is a very hard term to define because you have a lot of different interpretations for consciousness. So, if i give a anesthetic to a dog, he will be uncounscious until the anesthetic effect goes of and he came back to the consciousness state. This state means that he's able to interact and react to the environment, he's on "patrol" state.

If you're saying that consciousness is the soul, then basically all living beings have counsciouness, but sometimes they are uncounscious.

But when people talk about consciousness, i have to admit that they are not just talking about of a "awake" state. They're talking about have consciousness of your acts, i mean, to consent of your acts, to accept things, to deny things, to make decisions, to react to things in some kind of way and so on… In this point we would be a almost unique specie on our planet, if just some other species that can make decisions, like a dolphin, a dog, horse, elephant…

Then if you're saying that soul is consciousness, you're saying that another aliving beings don't have a soul (i know that some people think this way, that the human is the only specie that have a soul).

This thing that make we different from other species is exactly the brain size, it's not even that our brain is special regarding like a monkey brain, it's just larger in some areas that are crucials. They have a cortex, and we have a cortex, but our cortex is a lot larger than their. The monkey have a cerebellum, potalamo, amidala, we too, but our is a lot larger and the disposal on the brain is different.

And is the brain that is responsible for our individuality. So it is, when a person have a brain death, there's no turn back, he's dead and game over. I know that some people claim that they had a brain death but they hadn't, we don't have any docummented case that someone had a brain death and that happened. Brain death is forever.

And it's by the brain that we can watch our consciousness and uncounscious, by brainwaves, brain impulses that are created by our brain and we can observe variations of those waves when we are consciousness and uncounscious.

And for the other people that says that consciousness is the other thing, we have a lot of people that got a brain damage and totally changed their way to act and react to things. Even people that don't have this kind of consciousness anymore. We have childrens for example that until a determined age don't have consciousness of who they are of their individuality, we have people with serious mental limitations… Then someone with alzheimer don't have a soul?

Then, if i can turn off the brain, there's no soul?

 No.75067

File: 1462120175612.jpg (37.04 KB, 463x750, 463:750, 0dba3e7ae21144312938b62c0c….jpg)

3- Soul is nature, temper.

All those things that make the human capable of express herself would be our soul, some people are more angry, some people are more sad, more sociable by nature and so on…

We are not 100% emotional or 100% rational. Today we know that those things are reflex from our neurotransmitters from our brain, at least a large part. We have a lot of mental disease diagnosed like depression, bipolar disorder, psychoses… So you have there a chemical reason for that happen.

And, allied to this we have a gene pool, that some traces of our behavior are very hard to distinguish from those that are learn on your life. They are passed by the DNA on some kind of way.

There's a study that kids that lived separated from each other but with the same mother and father, have a lot of common characteristics, common interests.

TV teach us values, the school, our friends…

We have people that suffered an accident and lost a little piece of the brain, and then when the person wake up after surgery and other things, the person was a completely different person. People that was good and turn bad, people that was bad and turn good, people that developed a talent for music, things like that.

So. If soul is not needed for the life, if it's not responsible for the consciouness, if it's not responsible for your temper, what's the point of having a soul if everything can be done without it?


 No.75070

You must not know the difference then between an emotion and a chemical am I right OP? Any mental experience you have is not the same as what appears to have caused it.

The soul is just the astral/mental/etheric body aka the emotional body, the self-image, and the subtle energy-structure which your cells conform to.

See also: Qualia


 No.75071

>>75070

No, then you can explain it for me. What's the difference between an emotion and a chemical caused emotion? It no "appears to have caused it", you can reproduce the same emotion with chemical experiments any time and how many times you want.


 No.75073

>>75071

It don't*

And, i already talked about the emotional body and you just ignored it.

A "self-image" and a "subtle energy-structure" does not explain why a soul need to exist anyway.


 No.75074

>>75073

You must be an organic portal lacking any mental experiences to report on.

Q U A L I A

Look it up.

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Qualia&t=ftas&ia=about


 No.75075

3. Are Qualia Irreducible, Non-Physical Entities?

The literature on qualia is filled with thought-experiments of one sort or another. Perhaps the most famous of these is the case of Mary, the brilliant color scientist. Mary, so the story goes (Jackson 1982), is imprisoned in a black and white room. Never having been permitted to leave it, she acquires information about the world outside from the black and white books her captors have made available to her, from the black and white television sets attached to external cameras, and from the black and white monitor screens hooked up to banks of computers. As time passes, Mary acquires more and more information about the physical aspects of color and color vision. (For a real life case of a visual scientist (Knut Nordby) who is an achromotope, see Sacks 1996, Chapter 1.) Eventually, Mary becomes the world's leading authority on these matters. Indeed she comes to know all the physical facts pertinent to everyday colors and color vision.


 No.75076

Still, she wonders to herself: What do people in the outside world experience when they see the various colors? What is it like for them to see red or green? One day her captors release her. She is free at last to see things with their real colors (and free too to scrub off the awful black and white paint that covers her body). She steps outside her room into a garden full of flowers. “So, that is what it is like to experience red,” she exclaims, as she sees a red rose. “And that,” she adds, looking down at the grass, “is what it is like to experience green.”


 No.75077

Mary here seems to make some important discoveries. She seems to find out things she did not know before. How can that be, if, as seems possible, at least in principle, she has all the physical information there is to have about color and color vision — if she knows all the pertinent physical facts?

One possible explanation is that that there is a realm of subjective, phenomenal qualities associated with color, qualities the intrinsic nature of which Mary comes to discover upon her release, as she herself undergoes the various new color experiences. Before she left her room, she only knew the objective, physical basis of those subjective qualities, their causes and effects, and various relations of similarity and difference. She had no knowledge of the subjective qualities in themselves.

This explanation is not available to the physicalist. If what it is like for someone to experience red is one and the same as some physical quality, then Mary already knows that while in her room. Likewise, for experiences of the other colors. For Mary knows all the pertinent physical facts. What, then, can the physicalist say?

Some physicalists respond that knowing what it is like is know-how and nothing more. Mary acquires certain abilities, specifically in the case of red, the ability to recognize red things by sight alone, the ability to imagine a red expanse, the ability to remember the experience of red. She does not come to know any new information, any new facts about color, any new qualities. This is the view of David Lewis (1990) and Lawrence Nemirow (1990).


 No.75078

The Ability Hypothesis, as it is often called, is more resilient than many philosophers suppose (see Tye 2000, Chapter One). But it has difficulty in properly accounting for our knowledge of what it is like to undergo experiences of determinate hues while we are undergoing them. For example, I can know what it is like to experience red-17, as I stare at a rose of that color. Of course, I don't know the hue as red-17. My conception of it is likely just that shade of red. But I certainly know what it is like to experience the hue while it is present. Unfortunately, I lack the abilities Lewis cites and so does Mary even after she leaves her cell. She is not able to recognize things that are red-17 as red-17 by sight. Given the way human memory works and the limitations on it, she lacks the concept red-17. She has no mental template that is sufficiently fine-grained to permit her to identify the experience of red-17 when it comes again. Presented with two items, one red-17 and the other red-18, in a series of tests, she cannot say with any accuracy which experience her earlier experience of the rose matches. Sometimes she picks one; at other times she picks the other. Nor is she able afterwards to imagine things as having hue, red-17, or as having that very shade of red the rose had; and for precisely the same reason.

The Ability Hypothesis appears to be in trouble. An alternative physicalist proposal is that Mary in her room lacks certain phenomenal concepts, certain ways of thinking about or mentally representing color experiences and colors. Once she leaves the room, she acquires these new modes of thought as she experiences the various colors. Even so, the qualities the new concepts pick out are ones she knew in a different way in her room, for they are physical or functional qualities like all others.

One problem this approach faces is that it seems to imply that Mary does not really make a new discovery when she says, “So, that is what it is like to experience red.” Upon reflection, however, it is far from obvious that this is really a consequence. For it is widely accepted that concepts or modes of presentation are involved in the individuation of thought-contents, given one sense of the term ‘content’ — the sense in which thought-content is whatever information that-clauses provide that suffices for the purposes of even the most demanding rationalizing explanation. In this sense, what I think, when I think that Cicero was an orator, is not what I think when I think that Tully was an orator. This is precisely why it is possible to discover that Cicero is Tully. The thought that Cicero was an orator differs from the thought that Tully was an orator not at the level of truth-conditions — the same singular proposition is partly constitutive of the content of both — but at the level of concepts or mode of presentation. The one thought exercises the concept Cicero; the other the concept Tully. The concepts have the same reference, but they present the referent in different ways and thus the two thoughts can play different roles in rationalizing explanation.


 No.75079

It appears then that there is no difficulty in holding both that Mary comes to know some new things upon her release, while already knowing all the pertinent real-world physical facts, even though the new experiences she undergoes and their introspectible qualities are wholly physical. In an ordinary, everyday sense, Mary's knowledge increases. And that, it may be contended, is all the physicalist needs to answer the Knowledge Argument. (The term ‘fact’, it should be mentioned, is itself ambiguous. Sometimes it is used to pick out real-world states of affairs alone; sometimes it is used for such states of affairs under certain conceptualizations. When we speak of the physical facts above, we should be taken to refer either to physical states of affairs alone or to those states of affairs under purely physical conceptualizations. For more on ‘fact’, see Tye 1995.)

Some philosophers insist that the difference between the old and the new concepts in this case is such that there must be a difference in the world between the properties these concepts stand for or denote (Jackson 1993, Chalmers 1996). Some of these properties Mary knew in her cell; others she becomes cognizant of only upon her release. This is necessary for Mary to make a real discovery: she must come to associate with the experience of red new qualities she did not associate with it in her room. The physicalist is committed to denying this claim; for the new qualities would have to be non-physical.

The issues here are complex. What the physicalist really needs to settle the issue is a theory of phenomenal concepts (a theory, that is, of the allegedly special concepts that are deployed from the first person point of view when we recognize our experiences as being of such-and-such subjective types) which is itself compatible with physicalism. There are proposals on offer (see, for example, Hill 1991, Loar 1990, Levine 2000, Sturgeon 2000, Perry 2001, Papineau 2002, Tye, 2003), but there is as yet no agreement as to the form such a theory should take, and some philosophers contend that a proper theory of phenomenal concepts shows that no satisfactory answer can be given by the physicalist to the example of Mary's Room (Chalmers 1999). Another possibility is that the very idea of a phenomenal concept, conceived of as a concept very different in how it functions from concepts applied elsewhere, is itself confused. On this view, physicalists who have appealed to phenomenal concepts to handle the example of Mary's Room have been barking up the wrong tree (Tye 2009).


 No.75080

Another famous anti-reductionist thought-experiment concerning qualia appeals to the possibility of zombies. A philosophical zombie is a molecule by molecule duplicate of a sentient creature, a normal human-being, for example, but who differs from that creature in lacking any phenomenal consciousness. For me, as I lie on the beach, happily drinking some wine and watching the waves, I undergo a variety of visual, olfactory, and gustatory experiences. But my zombie twin experiences nothing at all. He has no phenomenal consciousness. Since my twin is an exact physical duplicate of me, his inner psychological states will be functionally isomorphic with my own (assuming he is located in an identical environment). Whatever physical stimulus is applied, he will process the stimulus in the same way as I do, and produce exactly the same behavioral responses. Indeed, on the assumption that non-phenomenal psychological states are functional states (that is, states definable in terms of their role or function in mediating between stimuli and behavior), my zombie twin has just the same beliefs, thoughts, and desires as I do. He differs from me only with respect to experience. For him, there is nothing it is like to stare at the waves or to sip wine.

The hypothesis that there can be philosophical zombies is not normally the hypothesis that such zombies are nomically possible, that their existence is consistent with the actual laws of nature. Rather the suggestion is that zombie replicas of this sort are at least imaginable and hence metaphysically possible.

Philosophical zombies pose a serious threat to any sort of physicalist view of qualia. To begin with, if zombie replicas are metaphysically possible, then there is a simple argument that seems to show that phenomenal states are not identical with internal, objective, physical states. Suppose objective, physical state P can occur without phenomenal state S in some appropriate zombie replica (in the metaphysical sense of ‘can’ noted above). Intuitively S cannot occur without S. Pain, for example, cannot be felt without pain. So, P has a modal property S lacks, namely the property of possibly occurring without S. So, by Leibniz’ Law (the law that for anything x and for anything y, if x is identical with y then x and y share all the same properties), S is not identical with P.


 No.75081

Secondly, if a person microphysically identical with me, located in an identical environment (both present and past), can lack any phenomenal experiences, then facts pertaining to experience and feeling, facts about qualia, are not necessarily fixed or determined by the objective microphysical facts. And this the physicalist cannot allow, even if she concedes that phenomenally conscious states are not strictly identical with internal, objective, physical states. For the physicalist, whatever her stripe, must at least believe that the microphysical facts determine all the facts, that any world that was exactly like ours in all microphysical respects (down to the smallest detail, to the position of every single boson, for example) would have to be like our world in all respects (having identical mountains, lakes, glaciers, trees, rocks, sentient creatures, cities, and so on).

One well-known physicalist reply to the case of zombies (Loar 1990) is to grant that they are conceptually possible, or at least that there is no obvious contradiction in the idea of a zombie, while denying that zombies are metaphysically possible. Since the anti-physicalist argument requires metaphysical possibility — mere conceptual possibility will not suffice — it now collapses. That conceptual possibility is too weak for the anti-physicalist's purposes (at least without further qualification and argument) is shown by the fact that it is conceptually possible that I am not Michael Tye (that I am an impostor or someone misinformed about his past) even though, given the actual facts, it is metaphysically impossible.


 No.75082


 No.75083

This was refuted a loooooooooooooooooong time ago.

Read this: https://books.google.com.br/books?id=yGzZ5tNiRFgC&pg=PA28&lpg=PA28&dq=christopher+s.+hill+qualia&source=bl&ots=y9tl0vzVEG&sig=T1Bf2qvC2YLEfr9q-alW8blz7mE&hl=pt-BR&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiyt7bivLnMAhXGE5AKHVCwDRsQ6AEIaTAJ#v=onepage&q=wrong&f=false

Holly shit you copied and pasted a entire book for nothing. I know about qualia, and it's just a argument a philosophy, there's no proof of anything.


 No.75084

OP have you ever astral travelled btw? Just doing this alone should be proof enough of a soul for you.


 No.75085

>>75083

>It's just an argument of philosophy

So is physicalism, faggot. Why should your philosophical positions be given undue merit as being "beyond philosophy"?


 No.75086

>>75084

I think you don't even read what i'm saying. The point here is not if soul exist or not.


 No.75087

>ITT


 No.75088

>>75085

Because i can reproduce it any time i want (?)


 No.75089

>>75086

Does ANYTHING at all NEED to exist?


 No.75090

>>75089

Yes, you need a leg to walk. Damn…


 No.75091

>>75088

That's not a proper answer to my question.


 No.75092

>>75090

That also is not a proper answer to my question.

Why don't you study philosophy and come back to discuss philosphical questions when you finally understand what constitutes a metaphysical proposition and how to answer it.


 No.75093

OP you can't talk intelligibly on this matter without knowing first what are the right questions to ask, laying out your assertions, and defining your terms.


 No.75094

You might want to read Dynamic Thought if you want an idealist explanation that should help you understand these things better.


 No.75095

>>75092

>Does ANYTHING at all NEED to exist?

Again, you need a leg to walk. What i'm saying is: if a soul exist, it's useless.

What you're saying is: "i have a soul, and qualia, and soul, and qualia, and philosophy, and qualia"

You could use this "anything at all need to exist" for anything and just end a discussion. lol


 No.75096

>>75094

I already did. But you can't explain those 3 points that i mentioned.


 No.75098

>>75095

"Useless" in what sense?

Your legs thing has nothing to do with answering my question.

>>75096

What are your supposed points? You aren't even a sophist, you're just a confused idiot.


 No.75099

>>75098

I think you're the confused idiot here… Explain my 3 questions and we continue.


 No.75110

>>75066

You don't HAVE a Soul, you ARE the soul.

The soul isn't responsible for life, consciousness, nature or temper. It is the true essence of your existence.

For the idea of a soul making sense to you, you either have to believe in spirituality or some concept of essence defined by a philosopher.


 No.75111

>>75110

The OP question was for what need a soul, if it is the true essence of your existence, for what we need this essence




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