- Feb 21, 2012
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I understand the dilemma, but it is not unique to my definition. It's an old philosophy problem of trying to separate properties from substance. As with your example of language, when does a language stop being a language? If I remove one word from English, is it still English? If I remove all but one word is it still English? If I only remove one letter and use an alphabet of 25 letters, is it still English? Why can I arrange those 26 letters in one way and get English, and then arrange them a different way and get French? It's a game one can play with anything, and it is a difficult game to answer.
No, it does not. Hence why I said it is material ... or would it be better to say it is dependent upon the material? So, no, the soul would not exist without a material brain, and yet it does not exactly equate with a brain because each brain is unique. Both your brain and mine are human brains, and yet your soul is different than mine. In my analogy (with the soul as the programming language), the brain would equate to the computer. And if we want to extend the analogy further, the mind would be a specific program written in that language ... but the soul is more than the mind. I equate the mind with the rational, whereas the soul also includes the emotional and instinctual - the personality and memories. Those are the other plexuses (the other programs) of the soul.
All of that is what one might call the "clinical" aspects of the soul. Within the context of the Biblical discussion there is also a wealth of symbolic meaning.
Whatever changes you make to a language, whether it be English or French, it's still a language.
So you don't believe a soul exists after a physical death?
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