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. And please remember: I am asserting that the system that you operate within, and which you regard as being an absolute and thorough view (of our metaphysical reality in this realm of being) is inadequate to the task, and therefore must be revisioned, re-explained, and in fact understood anew.
My purpose is not to get bogged down with you in what I have come to understand as your practiced and perfected tactics of avoiding alternate and expansive views. You must remember and hold in your mind that every person who encounters you comes away with the knowledge that he is dealing with a stubborn religious fanatic. And when you realize this, or consider it, you may also understand why it is that (in this case) Evangelical Christians are so annoying.
What I propose, and considering that it is the same forum but a new phase of that forum, is an attempt to demonstrate other, viable possibilities to be able to understand Christian metaphysics in what amounts to a different way. As if examination of it from a different angle will shed light on what is solid and valuable within that metaphysical system, and as a result of this realization also the realization that there are valuable things to be honored and maintained. Please note again the following: You have been 'preaching the Gospel' for over a decade and you have not made headway with a single person!
Now, I know and I fully understand that any suggestion I make must be resisted tooth and claw by you. That is a given and I accept this. Your reactions will be, as are the reactions of standard, indoctrinated Evangelicals, quite predictable. I have no problem with this and as you have pushed me to express I (sort of) talk through you and not so much
with you.
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. Second, any statement you or I or anyone would make about it is (let's say) speculative or intuited. Right there we have encountered the first block which nearly every philosopher on this forum will point out. For most it is insurmountable because to assert something as real, as in the sciences, it must be proved. And there is no way to 'prove' the existence of 'soul' and then, from that point, all else that pertains to what is metaphysical to this life. Therefore we have to make another statement: The only way to gain any sort of 'proof' is through experience motivated and moved by intuition. And right there we face another giant wall: How in the name of Heaven can 'intuition' be trusted in any sense comparable to that of science-proofs? At this point again every philosopher-listener will shear away. He will say: "You are asking something that, to me, sounds crazy-making. Where you suggest I might go, I cannot go."
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. And the soul -- I refer to Vedic notions which are far more developed than simplistic Christian metaphysical notions -- because it is part-and-parcel of God is, as God is, also eternal. That eternal nature is something 'believed in' by you as a Christian, but oddly only as it pertains to the future. For this reason I make this suggestion: Add to this notion the possibility of the eternal existence, both forward and backward, of that part of each of us metaphysics defines as 'the soul'. It really does change everything.
If I recognize that I am, within this manifested world, an eternal entity, then I have to clarify just what in me is in fact 'eternal'. That is a metaphysical and existential challenge, don't you think? 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.
Again I am working to some degree within the metaphysical principles that are foundational to your system of belief, but I am attempting to present it in a way that does not in any sense lead to enthrallment by one particular and peculiar *system* -- as is the system that you, like a hermit crab, live within: your smallish shell which is impenetrable to any other idea and which must diminish or refute other systems ands ways of seeing and explaining things metaphysical.
Immanuel: I know that no part of what I have written here can even be registered by you! You have demonstrated time and again that you are 'deaf for all that you have ears'. But remember: In this present age when everything surrounds us that will soon, or is now, collapsing in over us (all these rumors of what are presented as diabolical intelligences and powers that are gaining tremendous power, and that is just one) that I can suppose it true that getting to a 'metaphysical base' that is and represents a sort of safety (I will not use your word: salvation) is not a minor issue in our day. So it is for this reason that self-knowledge and an encounter with our own 'soul' (and eternal existence) is at the very least important. That is, I could present arguments (suggestions) as to why this is important. To discover and to find a way to abide in 'eternal truth' and not mere 'mutable truths' of our physical and biological being.