nateriver10 wrote...
Even though I find this conversation very interesting, it is a little frustrating to talk about it because the concept of nothing is a paradox in every language. I'll try my best to clarify it.
The thing about my assumption is that,
in a philosophical sense, we have already experienced nothingess[1].
You know about Ancient Rome, Ancient Egypt, World War II but those things didn't scare[2] you but you didn't exist. Following that reasoning, the year 3001 will be the same.
There's no reason to assume death will be something else other than what was before you were born.[3]
[2]Those things do scare me for the same reasons they would scare me then, though. Also ever heard of the idea/concept that all knowledge is available to us at birth, simply locked away within our minds, and that our "living and experiencing" is simply unlocking that knowledge. It has nothing to do with what were talking about, but your example reminded me of it.
[3]I understand this part, but I also see it as an assumption to "Assume existence before is the same as existence after life" and that "Either/both are simply nothing". [1]As well "That we have experienced nothing" I find to be an assumption. Though I am curious of what philosophy talks about this (would love to understand how they reached that conclusion). I've been procrastinating with a lot of things, one of them is to study some of Immanuel Kant's writings.
nateriver10 wrote...
I'm not sure I understand the Buddhism part but my argument has nothing to do with it or any religion. In fact, I heard it from an atheist.
I am not one to side with religion often, but religion has as much bases a in "truth" as philosophy, often times tied hand in hand (philosophy that is true becomes fact). Buddhism, itself, has a deep tie into philosophy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_philosophy
nateriver10 wrote...
Regarding the consciousness thing, you can read the work of Antonio Damasio...
Antonio Damasio seems interesting, I think I'll look into him.
nateriver10 wrote...
Granted, using spirituality, you can turn that concept into a subjective, unknowable word but you can do that for other words like love, which, not matter how many pseudointelectual poets try, it has a
definite meaning.
Sorry lol, I disagree. Using the example of, (can't remember what it's called) the perfect ideal. That what we conceptualize has no "perfect form" that uniquely defines it as "what it is". The example my teacher used at the time was "What is a chair?", "What makes a chair a chair?".
nateriver10 wrote...
But I digress. Antonio Damasio reached the conclusion that there is no body/mind duality since the mind, the consciousness, is a product of our brain. Therefore, it is part of the body.
I would love to see him in a debate with Ray Kurzweil. I have to find out how he reached his conclusion.