N
ngill09
Guest
I took my grandfather (in his late 80’s) to the hospital the other day to get some brain scans done and they found that he’d developed a fair bit of scarring due to sustained high blood pressure. The results of this range from memory loss to personality changes to headaches to loss of motor skills. My other grandfather got it worse when he was still alive, developing Alzheimer’s and dementia, which totally destroyed his memory, personality, and ability to perceive and understand the world around him.
This got me thinking - everything about our conscious experience, it seems, can now be attributed to the functioning of our brains, and with neurological stimulation or the use of chemicals, that experience can be dramatically altered. The stock answer for dualists to this is that the brain is just a vehicle through which the mind interacts with the world, but this seems profoundly naive in light of modern neuroscience. Everything that makes you who you are can be tied back to the brain, and it is clearly not just something that your mind is using to interact with your body. Your memories, you personality, and your experiences can all be dramatically altered by manipulating your brain, and the development of all of these things is dependent on the physiology and chemistry of your brain.
So here are the questions: What does it even mean to have a soul in light of this? Is it just a relic from a time when the brain was poorly understood? People get hung up about “not wanting to just be a bunch of neurons firing” but it seems like that’s exactly what we are. Also, if our experience in this life is so dependent on our brains, it seems to me that our experience in any afterlife would have to be so dramatically different as to defy all comprehension.
This got me thinking - everything about our conscious experience, it seems, can now be attributed to the functioning of our brains, and with neurological stimulation or the use of chemicals, that experience can be dramatically altered. The stock answer for dualists to this is that the brain is just a vehicle through which the mind interacts with the world, but this seems profoundly naive in light of modern neuroscience. Everything that makes you who you are can be tied back to the brain, and it is clearly not just something that your mind is using to interact with your body. Your memories, you personality, and your experiences can all be dramatically altered by manipulating your brain, and the development of all of these things is dependent on the physiology and chemistry of your brain.
So here are the questions: What does it even mean to have a soul in light of this? Is it just a relic from a time when the brain was poorly understood? People get hung up about “not wanting to just be a bunch of neurons firing” but it seems like that’s exactly what we are. Also, if our experience in this life is so dependent on our brains, it seems to me that our experience in any afterlife would have to be so dramatically different as to defy all comprehension.