T
tonyrey
Guest
What exactly is the soul in your scheme of things?I am so tempted to make the obvious joke, but I will be nice.
A machine is nothing but its constituent parts and an energy source. It is not aware of itself, has no nervous system or brain areas which stimulate reactions of fear, joy, anger, and so on. It has no appreciation of beauty, no love or hate, no instincts or subconscious drives, so it cannot be a person no matter how biological it is (assuming there could be such a thing). I think your confusion comes from dividing the human being into two separate and non-interacting segments, the material or physical part, which you regard as analogous to a machine, and a “spiritual” part, or soul, in which reside all the specifically human attributes I mentioned. But the two are not separate; each has measurable effects on the other, which are well documented. Stress, for example, can affect our physical as well as emotional well-being; whether certain genes activate at certain times can affect our emotions and thought patterns. You seem to think that denying a non-material component to thought leaves no agency or inner source from which actions you attribute to the soul, such as thought, emotion, and will, can emerge. That’s why you call a materialist a “biological machine,” But neurology and molecular biology have revealed an interweaving of psychology and physiology which is quite fascinating.