Re: Probability of existence of God, hell and heaven
Posted: October 16th, 2022, 2:20 am
Paul91 wrote: ↑October 15th, 2022, 8:35 pmRegarding the faith we have in other minds, this does not seem to be an exclusively human trait. Other species have no doubt about the reality of other minds, eg. squirrels being careful that no one is looking when they hide their nuts. Again, this would be natural selection. An animal that doubts the reality of another's sentience may come in for a rude shock; an animal that underestimates others will tend to breed less successfully than an animal with a more realistic view.Sy Borg wrote: ↑October 15th, 2022, 7:59 pmI suppose in an ontological sense, is there a stable existence of anything? I'm certain I love my brother, however, there are times when our relationship is strained to the point where empirical evidence would suggest the contrary. Nothing has yet broken our bond, despite some frustrations on the surface.
I don't ascribe to Cartesian dualism. I think Descartes got it wrong. It should have been "I am an intelligent animal, therefore I think". The guy was so off-beam that used to cut up living dogs in public displays because he did not believe that they actually felt pain, due to lack of a human soul. A sad and appalling mistake by him.
Yes, I did mean "incomplete" as in "not in full focus". In terms of natural selection, brains are very expensive energetically. Our brains make up about 2% of our body mass but they draw about 20% of the energy we consume.
Further, imagine if you could perceive everything - every gas in the air, every magnetic wave, hearing insects and birds munching, seeing atoms and so forth. My guess is that, if we could see and hear everything around us, our eyes would be filled with blinding light and ears would be overloaded by a constant din. Interestingly, this is what some people describe after being brought back after almost dying - they find reality to be both blinding and deafening until their re-acclimatise. Thus, our senses only pick up that which had helped our ancestors to pass on their genes and our brain has its own limits.
As for no subjective experience, sure you can imagine it. You crave a lack of subjective experience every night and, if you don't get it, you will have physical and mental difficulties.
People love their nightly oblivion and, eventually, we all go to sleep and don't wake up, hence the term "Rest in peace". Oblivion is really, really peaceful! ;)
There may be some intense death dreams as the brain is dying but, once the brain oxygen goes, it does not appear that there is a future. After all, what the future after death for a blue-tongued lizard or a koala? I'd say, the same as us. The only way would be if there are other dimensions, and that these dimensions contain the ground for eternal life.
But would you really want eternal life, for your mind to keep continuing through all the death and loss and grief and illnesses and cruelty and suffering along the way until there's nothing solid left?
If I wanted to get to know you, and I don't believe you truly exist (as much as I think I exist), then I believe you are nothing but a character in my dream state. So, there needs to be some "leap of faith" in order for me to form a recognisable connection that would also align with my reasoning that there are "other minds". Does that resonate with you?
There are many things in our experience which we cannot control. If we have no free will, then who are we to say we actually exist, let alone "other minds". Based on evidence, there is simply continually changing experience.
Yes, we definitely do not wish to have full perception of our reality, as it's not needed for our survival on this planet. That is a good point.
If you are happy about dying when "you time is up", then it may become a self-fulfilling prophesy. I think "believers" desire eternal life, and so they by necessity have to form a relationship with the eternal.
We humans increase the complexity of these interactions, as always, but the principle is the same. There is a natural assumption that others function similarly to you. Sometimes in humans this assumption goes too far, and people will not only assume similarity, but demand conformity, eg. homophobia is based in the idea that it's surely impossible for someone not to feel attracted to the opposite sex, and thus homosexuality is deemed invalid, a distortion. Politics is another example.
As for free will, I have never cared. It feels like I have free will and that will do me. Thanks to physics and other people's impositions, if I am free in an ontic sense, I am still only somewhat free.
I doubt that we have enough control to inflict self-fulfilling prophesies on ourselves at death. There's plenty of accounts of non-believers having amazing NDEs. Given that only about 15% of revived people report having an NDE, ie. they were completely unconscious as in deep sleep, and many more than 15% of people believe in God, it's clear that many believers were oblivious in near-death.
Whether we just let whatever happen when we die or try to influence the experience, would seem to make no difference, just as it doesn't matter what you do if you are standing near the caldera of a volcano when it explosively erupts and a boiling flow of gas rushes at you at 600 kph. You can run but ...
Most of life is out of our control - where we are born, when we are born, who our parents are, our parents' experiences, luck, etc - so I don't see how death will be any more controllable. Often, by then, dying people feel pretty cooked and NDE reports seem to suggest that the dying people at that point are simply going with the flow.