Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Feb 14, 2026 1:05 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Feb 14, 2026 2:31 am
No, it wouldn't have to imply pre-existence of that sort. All it would have to imply is that a soul, once created, cannot any longer be destroyed...not that it always existed.
Oh this is where, I think, your present, determined and rigid metaphysical picture does not serve you.
Pleas explain your own "non-rigid metaphysical picture," so we can see how it's serving your argument here.
...your practiced and perfected tactics of avoiding alternate and expansive views.
Not only am I not "avoiding" it here, I've three times now asked you to explain it. But you don't.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Feb 14, 2026 2:31 am
No, it wouldn't have to imply pre-existence of that sort. All it would have to imply is that a soul, once created, cannot any longer be destroyed...not that it always existed.
This is a very good place to start, in my view. First: It is impossible for any one of us to determine with scientific certainty even if the 'soul' exists.
Well, it was the word you chose. If you don't know it exists, that's an odd thing to do, don't you think?
Second, any statement you or I or anyone would make about it is (let's say) speculative or intuited.
Not necessarily. If there were (let me grant you, merely for argument's sake) a Book that had some things to say about things like the Soul, and if that were dispensed by the Deity, there would be no such difficulty, obviously.
The 'proof', if you will, within the language model of metaphysical description, that the soul is eternal, is linked to the core and principle metaphysical notion that God is eternal.
If you don't believe in God, or in His revelation of facts about the soul, then there's no grounds to believe in it at all, that I know of. As you say, science will not help, because science deals only with physical things, and the soul is notoriously not composed of the material. Rationality won't help, because rationality requires premises, which require something established and known from which to begin...and you're saying there's no such thing. So there are no premises from which a logical deduction could proceed.
I refer to Vedic notions
Why? If there is no divine revelation, Vedic notions are a useless as any other notions, all of which must be imaginary.
If I recognize that I am,
Well, you need more: you need to be able to say precisely WHAT you are. You have already insisted you're an entity with both a body and a soul -- the latter "using," you said, the former. But on what basis do you say so? This remains unclear.
The implication is that there is something essential in me that makes me me. That is also to say, or to note, or to propose and to suggest, that I am not merely a physical or material confluence of circumstances, or a biological computer that will dissolve away when the hardware fails to function. And yes, that is another extremely difficult hurdle for those raised up in the philosophy of physicalism that in so many arenas dominates our mode of viewing reality, being, our world, life and also action in this world.
Well, I would assent to that. And, since I believe in God, in His self-revelation, and hence, also in the soul, I have grounds to assent. But I can't see what you're standing on: what gives you, from your metaphysic, any confidence to believe in any such thing, far less to deduce that it's "eternal."
After all, we all realize there was a time when we did not exist. We began to exist only when we were created, conceived and then birthed. Before that, neither history nor we ourselves had any consciousness of us, so the burden would certainly be on anybody who believed in a pre-existent soul to explain what warrant he had for assuming it. It's certainly devoid of any evidence at all.
Immanuel: I know that no part of what I have written here can even be registered by you!
On the contrary: as anybody can see, I understand what you are saying, and so well that I can point to the significant holes that remain in it. Can you fill the holes, so far, in your own metaphysic, and present it as a complete one?
I guess we'll see.