R
Ravemacneil
Guest
You’re close to tilting at windmills, my friend.i would say philosophy has no room for the soul until the soul is proven logically.
Soul is not by any means a concept, term, or thing for which philosophy has no room, and neither is philosophy limited by your understanding of that word, nor by its present majority meaning.
Do you have any idea how many references to “the soul” there are in the Hellenistic philosophies?
Also, as I referenced Aurelius directly, it would not have failed you to learn the concept of soul within stoicism before making your reply.
Please note the following definitions, especially that which would be indicated when predicated by the word moral:
- The animating and vital principle in humans, credited with the faculties of thought, action, and emotion and often conceived as an immaterial entity.
- The spiritual nature of humans, regarded as immortal, separable from the body at death, and susceptible to happiness or misery in a future state.
- The disembodied spirit of a dead human.
- A human: “the homes of some nine hundred souls” (Garrison Keillor).
- The central or integral part; the vital core: “It saddens me that this network … may lose its soul, which is after all the quest for news” (Marvin Kalb).
- A person considered as the perfect embodiment of an intangible quality; a personification: I am the very soul of discretion.
- A person’s emotional or moral nature: “An actor is … often a soul which wishes to reveal itself to the world but dare not” (Alec Guinness).
- A sense of ethnic pride among Black people and especially African Americans, expressed in areas such as language, social customs, religion, and music.
- A strong, deeply felt emotion conveyed by a speaker, a performer, or an artist.