Don't we all assume that? Again, in my view, unless it's just a sim world or a dream world that "we" are interacting in then, of course -- click -- all of us have physical bodies that persist from the cradle to the grave. And most of us interact with others socially, politically and economically. We have accumulated countless individual experiences. Also, most of us have accumulated as well all manner of personal things and personal relationships that are truly near and dear to us.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amOK, but you seem to assume, yourself, that at death something that persisted, stops persisting THEN. Have I misunderstood you?And it's not the answers we give that most intrigues me. It's the part where we attempt to demonstrate why our answers -- answers derived largely from what we believe "in our heads" -- are that which all rational men and women are obligated to share if they wish to be thought of as rational men and women.
But, in regard to meaning and morality, believing things about them is not the same as actually demonstrating that what you do claim to believe about them really does reflect the optimal or the only rational things to believe.
But: the distinction I make here between the either/or world -- where rationality is often bursting at the seams -- and the is/ought world -- where reasoning itself is often rooted existentially in dasein and in the Benjamin Button Syndrome -- ia the part that most here seem inclined to challenge me regarding.
Lament what? Given what particular frame of mind regarding what particular set of circumstances out in what particular world? And, again, in regard to moral nihilism, while we all come into the world hard wired to experience and to express lamentation, what some lament others might instead actually embrace enthusiastically. Then there are the sociopaths who lament nothing that they do...unless, of course, they don't get what they want. And then, if they do get it, it can be at the cost of great pain and suffering to others. Which they are not likely to lament either.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amI have never seen you lament that it won't be you tomorrow. I have seen you question what an authentic or real self is, but I missed where you have expressed that you worry about the persistence of self through the life. If you do, please let me know. That answers the question.
Are there then behaviors that philosophers can pin down as, say, always lamentable? Which, of course, given my own main interest in philosophy, revolves around how "here and now" I construe the existential relationship between identity, value judgments, conflicting goods and political economy. And if I lament anything at all here, it's that, so far, I have been unable to find someone with a frame of mind able perhaps to actually explain to me how these things...
1] that my own existence is essentially meaningless and purposeless
2] that human morality in a No God world revolves largely around a fractured and fragmented assessment of right and wrong rooted existentially in dasein.
3] that oblivion is awaiting all of us when we die
...are not in fact something that is applicable to them. Given particular personal experiences they have accumulated pertaining to meaning and morality.
And all of our lives persist, of course. Until something happens and we die. Here, in my view, what individuals worry about in regard to this existential trajectory from the cradle to the grave is rooted historically and culturally in dasein. And then embodied subjectively/subjunctively in the lives that we live. Our own uniquely personal experiences.
Then the part where what we do believe in our heads about things like this are rooted existentially in dasein far more than anything philosophers can conclude.
Though, sure, if anyone here believes they have a soul, give it a shot. Let them note, for example, all of the empirical evidence they have accumulated so far to back it up.
Fine. You didn't assert this. But my own emphasis is always on those who not only do assert that souls exist, but insist in turn that if others don't recognize and accept their own One True Path to immortality and salvation.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amI wasn't asserting there was a soul. Who are you responding to here?
Click, of course.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Dec 02, 2024 7:01 amYou have expressed a - very human - concern about the loss of yourself at death. This implies strongly that you think something/something that is present now, today, continues up until that time of the death. THEN it gets lost. Something that continues or persists, THEN gets cut off.
That, in my view, is how it works in a No God world: Birth...School...Work...Death. And what gets lost is, well, among other things, all that you love and cherish.
Right now, I believe that when I die, my body [from head to toe] and all of the thoughts and feelings and memories and knowledge, etc., inside my head, and everything that encompasses "I" to me socially here and now will be on its way back to star stuff. Or oblivion as some call that. Unless, of course, one of the religious objectivists here is able to convince me that is not the case at all.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 am] Sure, but then you seem to think there is a self that gets lost AT THE END of life. That there is a persistent self. So, I am asking you about that.
That, in part, explains my reaction to those like IC. He insists that his own belief in the Christian God is not a leap of faith rooted existentially in dasein or another rendition of "it says so in the Bible". Instead, he claims it is something that he insists is actually demonstrated "scientifically and historically" here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... SjDNeMaRoX
William Lane Craig apparently, demonstrates the existence of the Christian God in Heaven here as one might demonstrate the existence of the Pope in the Vatican.
Only don't ask him to actually explore these videos in depth. After all, if you are not able to believe that Jesus Christ is your only personal savior, I'm sure IC laments the fact that you will suffer the "agonies of the damned" for all of eternity in Hell.
What I lament here is the fact that on two occasions I emailed him and his organization asking them to join our exchange in
what I believe is the Christianity thread.
Isn't that why souls anchored to one or another spiritual/religious path are so crucial here? It's the crumbling material body itself that must rationalized.
Again, given free will and the fact that we are not just illusory characters in some sim world or some dream world, or some fantastic video game played by creatures far beyond our comprehension, I believe I/"I" exist physically, mentally, emotionally, etc.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amThat's about after life. I am talking about a persistent self. It seems you believe in one.
Or, perhaps, "I" reflects the part about identity broached in films like Dark City or The Matrix? Or is it all actually reducible down to solipsism? Sans God.
So much more to point though [mine] is not what Buddhists claim to believe about the self/soul, but what they are able themselves able to demonstrate to us regarding identity on both sides of the grave.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amYou worry about the loss of self at the end of life. So, there is something to lose, and it persists up until that point in your estimation. That's not, for example, what the Buddhists believe and they would want an argument that all rational people would believe, perhaps.
And from my frame of mind, Buddhism is just one of hundreds and hundreds of One True Paths to immortality. Only the "self" itself is understood differently from how many in the West construe it.
But it's still the mother of all psychological defense mechanisms to me because it is just one of hundreds of comforting and consoling One True paths. Something to believe that anchors the Self to Enlightenment on this side of the road. As for the other side, even if you come back as a fruit fly, that's better than oblivion, right? "I" may be gone forever but not life itself? Plus, for those who are truly, truly, enlightened "I" makes to all the way to nirvana!
"In Buddhism, nirvana is the ultimate goal of becoming enlightened and free from the cycle of death and rebirth."
Seriously, though, how does this all unfold other than in comforting and consoling a leap of faith? And how is it determined whether one comes back as a fruit fly or a human being? If you happen to be an exemplary fruit fly is there then a chance that a few weeks later you might die a bug, but then come back as, say, a dog or a cat?.
The part that brings me enormous fulfillment and satisfaction, of course. In fact, when, instead, one's life is filled with enormous pain and suffering, not only are some not concerned with losing whatever it is they think their own "self" is, they end it themselves.
Over and again: what on Earth does it matter what I or you or anyone here believes about any of this, if none of us are able to definitively demonstrate that what we do believe about identity at the existential juncture of value judgments, conflicting goods and political economy, is in fact true.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amSo, you do believe there is a persistent self, one that seems to stop existing at death, but one that persists through time, despite, for example, all the matter in the body being replaced over time via eating/breathing and excretion.
On the other hand, I sustain my own exchanges here regarding it because over the years any number of very, very important things I once managed to convince myself to believe in [philosophically, politically, spiritually or otherwise], have crumbled. What, I am now able to convince myself that dasein and moral nihilism will bever crumble. I mean on this side of the grave.
Besides, though many here might assume it's just bullshit when I claim I am "for all practical purposes" pursuing a win/win agenda here, or that I am not genuinely attempting to find a more optimistic and constructive frame of mind, so be it. I still have my own assessment "here and now" to fall back on.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Dec 02, 2024 7:01 amWhat makes you think it is the same you next week, etc.? Or is it just others that think there is a self?
Huh?
My whole philosophy "here and now" revolves around suggesting that from day to day, week to week, month to month, year to year we might encounter new experiences, new relationships, new sources of information and knowledge that sends "I" in any number of new directions. And, in particular, in regard to our value judgments.
Will all what be the same? My body, of course, may or may not still be around. And if it is "I" may tumble down into a state of dementia or become afflicted with Alzheimer or conditions like schizophrenia or clinical depression or dissociative identity disorder.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 11:52 amSo,will it be the same self in a year? in seven?So,will it be the same self in a year? in seven?
And, again, given autonomy, I suspect any number of men and women will debunk the points I raise in my signature threads regarding identity because a part of them recognizes what the consequences would be if they themselves started thinking as "I" do.