God, Blake, that’s all you’ve been doing. You think it’s not probable but possible. That’s all you’ve said and THAT is a provable logical fallacy.
Most others are saying it’s SO unlikely it’s not possible. Cite some proof that it IS possible.
So far we’ve learned that:
The brain stops functioning, consciousness ends.
Afterlife is based on old wives tales and fiction.
Blake still thinks it’s possible.
Shouting “fallacy!” is not proof that it’s possible.
For an interesting take on the plausibility of an afterlife, I recommend Martin Gardner’s book The Whys of a Philosophical Scrivener, specifically chapters 17 (“IMMORTALITY: Why I Am Not Resigned”), 18 (“IMMORTALITY: Why I Do Not Think It Strange”), and 19 (“IMMORTALITY: Why I Do Not Think It Impossible”).
In discussing ways that things might work to allow a person to survive physical death, he mentions to the model presented by William James in Human Immortality that our true self is in another world, and our earthly body a “shadow self,” with our earth-brain transmitting sensations and experiences to our true self. And he mentions the idea presented by Balfour Stewart and Peter Guthrie Tate in The Unseen Universe: or Physical Speculations on a Future State, that the world we know is is embedded in a higher dimensional world, a la Flatland, and “our solid brain is a three-space ‘surface’ of our higher four-space body. Death is the shuffling off of our three-space mortal coil.” He then concludes by saying
Speaking of guys who knew their shit, Gardner was tremendously knowledgeable about philosophy, theology, mathematics, and science, and was a noted skeptic and debunker of pseudoscience and woo. Having died a few months ago, he now gets to see, or not see, for himself.
Probably the one most relevant to this discussion would be the “hive mind” behaviour of certain insect colonies. It’s a function of the interaction between the individual insects, but not dependent on any one of them. Wikipedia has a good article on emergence, which I’d link to if I weren’t posting from my phone.
Wait, so we have absolute scientific proof that all religions that feature an afterlife are wrong/impossible? I’m surprised we don’t hear it more often from the atheist side. Maybe I’m not reading the right things, but I’d think that it “should” have gained the penetration where even I would hear it by now…
(IE, to take a slightly different tack, I hear all the time “ghosts don’t exist,” but I rarely hear “we’ve proven scientifically that ghosts cannot exist.”)
Proposition: The spacetime beyond the event horizon of a black hole is described by the Schwarzschild metric.
Is that proposition a fact, opinion, or something else? Nobody’s ever crossed the event horizon of a black hole to check, and even if anyone ever does so, they would be unable to communicate their findings to anyone who has not crossed the event horizon. Yet, a person could do the experiment themself, and determine whether the statement is true or not.
There is a doctor named Sam Parnia who is running a test to see if he can get objective evidence of near death experiences. IIRC he has images posted near the ceiling of hospital beds. None of the staff knows what the images are. The idea is to try to get someone who claims to have has a NDE to correctly describe the image.
I heard him on a radio call in show. The poor guy was getting it from both sides. The scientists and the religious folks were all unhappy with him.
As far as the “prove I don’t have a pink dragon in my garage” argument goes, I think there is a big difference between saying, “It is possible that conciousness survives after bodily death through some mechanism we don’t yet understand” and describing a very specific scenario. It’s like the difference between, “I believe it is possible there is intelligent alien life somewhere in the universe” and “I believe there is a race of aliens on the 5th planet of Rigel that has green skin and three heads, communicates via burping and they all wear sequined leisure suits.”
We know the Brain is the seat of our consciousness, because we know how damage to it can change anything from memory, body control, personality, etc. There are ways to measure how abuse or drugs actually physically change a brain that is in development, and we can observe the effects this physical changes have on the behaviour of people. All this proves that we are our brains beyond reasonable doubt. Not all doubt, but reasonable doubt.
It’s not impossible that our brains are just antennas, no, but it’s very, very unlikely. After all, nothing is impossible in the strictest sense, there just might be the most ridiculous way that something we thought was impossible is actually possible. Objects might decide at some moment that they actually won’t fall down tomorrow for exactly 2 seconds at 5:13pm. It’s just ludicrously unlikely. So unlikely that for all intends and purposes we consider it impossible. Still, it might happen, and there would be evidence to prove it.
Now, we do know very well what happens if we, say, move an arm. How the impulse is sent down the nerves. There is a very well understood chain of causes and effects from some point in the brain down to the arm. This chain ends at some point, because the giant network of neurons in the brain makes it impossible to trace the impulse. But we do know how this individual neurons work, we know the physics, the chemistry, all that. We know what neurons can do and what they can’t do in this universe.
If the brain was an antenna, there would be some kind of measurable impact from whatever it is that controls the brain. Measurable, because it would have to influence the very physical and real neurons. It would interact with physical matter, and so it would have to show up in a laboratory. There would have to be some force in our brain that has no origin, no reason. But we didn’t find it yet. There is no evidence at all for it. It’s as likely as all the cars in the world spontaneously turning blue tomorrow morning at the same moment. We can’t strictly call it impossible, but it’s not going to happen.
Don’t need to cite anything. It’s an emergent property of matter. Not necessary to pursue this in this thread, please pm me if you start a thread on it, although I see no point in arguing against the statement.
I suppose my literal interpretation of the meaning of the word isn’t going to fly. My apologies. I looked at the wikipedia article and see that my views of the afterlife are not standard (and probably not pertinent to the thread).
I will reiterate (this once, and drop it) that my knowledge of the “true afterlife” is pretty straightforward and logical: what we do in our life impacts consciousness far beyond our mortal span.
An interesting (Bull-Shit alert) idea about a potential afterlife is this:
Evolution continues until the point that the computational capacity of our descendants exceeds that required to recreate the universe up til this point.
*I know this means that our descendants’ computational capacity must exceed that of the universe at this point in time, but spacetime is increasing (expansion), eventually they may harvest vacuum particles, or perhaps they will learn to manipulate particles at levels unimaginable today (forming extremely complex single quark processors, etc…). *
They recreate a universal simulation in order to save (as in data) every consciousness that has lived up til this point (or some future point past which it is not necessary to resurrect consciousnesses because all consciousnesses are already eternal due to evolutionary developments).
After the recreation, they proceed with the reincarnation faze, in which they place consciousnesses of various levels of (mental) evolutionary development into bodies that are appropriate for their mental development stage, bodies that allow greater mental development than the consciousness’s previous “first evolution” body.
The first to be “reincarnated” and educated (to the level required) will slowly take over for the first of the eternals to initiate the reincarnation plan, allowing the retiring eternals to enter a lifetime of bliss, and/or pursue the creation of new types of consciousness with their technology.
Not a good analogy. Life on other planets is a physical possibility. Surviving consciousness is not. Positing an afterlife is positing magic, and all magic is equally implausible.
Isn’t it possible that there is some kind of survival of bodily death that is not magic or an act of God, it’s a natural process based on science we can’t grasp yet? How could you have proven X-rays exist to someone 800 years ago? How many scientific concepts had evidence of their existence long before they were understood? Either people just hadn’t figured out how to interpret the information or the technology to discover it had not yet been invented.
I’m not saying I necessarily believe in an afterlife but I believe much like the OP. It can’t be entirely ruled out.
Okay. Since it’s theoretical measurement, the only thing we can say is that right now, with the knowledge and tools we currently possess, we no of no means to measure any of the suggested supernatural statems, beings, whatever.
But theoretically we may come up with something that does measure these things we can’t currently measure.
ceases to be present within and and expressed through the human meat structure.
If the soul has a non-material way of being (I know you don’t believe that it does, but hang on) then it simply stops expressing itself via the body. It wears the body like a dress, then discards it to return to a different state of being, one which we are obviously currently unable to observe or measure, and are therefore unable to know whether it exists at all.
But I think your argument might qualify as a tautology, really. It seems you are, in the end, saying that there is no such thing as a supernatural soul because supernatural souls are not possible. And that doesn’t really mean anything.
But I havent’ slept in about 40 hours so I’m not hard and fast about any of it.
No. we can’t measure non-material things even theoretically. Non-material is exactly the same as non-existent. There is no difference, and no theoretical possibility that magic, non-material spirits can ever be observed. There is no theoretical possibility by which they can exist.
If we will one day have the tools to measure it, it’s natural not supernatural. That’s what is meant by existence - something that can be observed, and that has an effect on other things. So, if you wish to claim the existence of a soul separate from the brain, you need to say how, in principle, we could observe it, and what effect it will, in theory have.