In regards to the first quotation, I am making the assumption that such a tortured man as this never developes a mind (psyche) that understands empathy. Moreover, he is completely ignorant (Socrates' ignorant as in not aware) of empathy due to his upbringing never showing empathy.roid wrote:I'd say the person's empathy pushed him to want to protect others from the same fate he had (after he had discovered other people existed who did NOT have his same painful upbringing). Be more specific and i'll be able to tell you more. I would agree it would seem to be impossible for a person to turn out "very normal" with this sort of upbringing - if he is truly rejected by absolutely EVERYONE. It could perchance be possible to find an inner source of a coping mechanism inside the psyche - as a form of psychosis perhaps. But this would disqualify from the "very normal" category.Aggressor Prime wrote:I'm not saying we make choices without regard to the physical world. What I'm saying is choice finds its origin not in the physical world, and therefore has the ability to make decisions outside of physical boundaries. For example, someone who is raped, burned, and just totally rejected by his parents and everyone else he knows while growing up has the ability to turn out to be a very normal and caring guy, even if physically that would seem impossible.
Give me more info.
I'm not sure how you're going to gauge anything from this, here goes.Aggressor Prime wrote:Also, let me apply the test of the soul upon you. Are you aware of your own existence? Do you think animals are aware of their own existence? Do you think computers, devices that think on the same level as animals, are aware of their own existence? Can you confidently say "I am" or "I exist" without any doubt in your mind, as if you know that you have knowledge of your existence, existence being the basic statement of "I am" or "I exist" and not even going into I am human or I have a body or I am a creature of God or god or gods or whatever you believe or do not believe in?
- Are you aware of your own existence? yes
- Do you think animals are aware of their own existence? Unsure. I'd guess yes, in some form. Higher intelligence animals would be more aware. They all have innate self-preservation so something in them is striving to be alive and not dead - implying an understanding of the difference. A want of one, and do-not-want of the other. This might be the simplest incarnation of an "awareness of existance" i can think of - self-preservation.
- Do you think computers, devices that think on the same level as animals, are aware of their own existence? No, as far as i know they completely lack egos. I'm not sure we actually have a device that thinks on the same level of animals yet - do you have a source for this statement? But building on what i said above, if a computer is programmed with a form of self-preservation, then perhaps they could be said to be aware of their existance, i'm not sure.
- Can you confidently say "I am" or "I exist" without any doubt in your mind, as if you know that you have knowledge of your existence, existence being the basic statement of "I am" or "I exist" and not even going into I am human or I have a body or I am a creature of God or god or gods or whatever you believe or do not believe in?
No i cannot confidently say with no doubt in my mind, that i exist. I understand that i might not exist at all, nor the world around me. This pains my ego to consider, but i understand it is a true possability . ie: if some paradox causes the destruction of our unviverse and all time and space - i will not only cease to exist as in "die" - but will have never existed throughout all of time.
what's the prognosis? do i have a soul according to your religion? (is this an original religion btw? or is this based on a more common teaching i can look up?)
In regards to whether you have a soul or not, or rather if you can realize if you have a soul or not, I cannot determine yet nor have I convinced you. You connected self-preservation with the awareness of existence. I just simply can't see this connection in terms of animals. Let me explain. Self-preservation is the instinct to survive. It is encoded into the firing neurons of the brain to continue working in so much as it can continue working. There is a sense of holding out until one can hold out no longer. Am I correct in saying this? Is this what you mean? If so, I believe computers hold this same concept. Don't computers continue operating in so much as they are able to operate? Are they not following the software given to them to stay active as long as possible, granted no human shuts them down. When you hold a dog under water, doesn't the dog struggle to let lose of your grip so that he may live? In the same way, doesn't the computer in so much as it is able tries to resist crashing after a serious overclock? And must not the dog obey the ultimate command of death given by man when the dog is shot in the head? In the same way, doesn't the computer obey the ultimate command of man to shut down immediately once man pulls the plug? And if man decides to shut down his computer slowly through normal means, doesn't the computer stay active in so much as it can stay active until the internal software switches force it to shut down in the multiple stages that occur during a normal Windows shut down?
Now let us consider your doubt in your existence. Are you not aware of this argument we are having? Do you not reason what is and what is not? "I think, therefore I am." Take this statement to heart. How can you disprove your own existence if your very attempt to disprove it proves that you exist? You bring in the concept of the complete destruction paradox. Let us assume there are two planes of time, the time of now and the time of change. In the time of now, your perspective now is correct. You exist now and no matter what will always exist now because now is now and independent by it being now. In the plane of time of change, your paradox works. Then again, there has been no proof that the time of change has power over the time of now. Moreover, many Buddhists believe that the time of change is an illusion and the time of now is reality.
Time of now-a timeless time that focuses not on the making of choices but the understanding of the choices we have/are/will made/making/make. Past, present, and future have no relevance. This is the same perspective Christians take of God being a timeless being. He lives in the time of now. We still make choices, but by living in this state we make the choice at the same time we think about making the choice and at the same time we wonder if the choice we made is correct. This can be demonstrated in virtual worlds as a functional water fountain. A water fountain has an equation rather than a placement of water set in a certain order by time. This concept of a time of now connects more with the realm of ideas than the realm of the senses that the time of change takes.
Time of change-conventional concept of time. As we come to understand the timeless choices we have/are/will made/making/make in the time of now, we move forward in this illusion of the time of change.