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Angels_Unaware
Guest
No, that’s incorrect. nytimes.com/2007/01/02/science/02free.html?ei=5090&pagewanted=allThe limited articles I have read on experiments like these showed that while people saw and did certain actions while their brains were being stimulated, they were aware that they were being manipulated and not consciously making the choices. Not being a doctor, I don’t have the same scope of information open to me, but it actually wouldn’t change my point.
Ok, I don’t think you are 100% wrong, it’s just the way you are trying to conceive this is illogical, and is better explained in a different conceptual form.For the connection between the mind/soul and the brain to have any point, the brain has to be under at least partial, sometime control of the soul. There is no other part of us that responds to moral questions other than the brain, so if the soul is controlling anything it must be the brain.
If not, then the soul seems a meaningless concept, not rooted in anything other than wishful thinking(which for all I know, it might be).
If the soul is not at all responsible for moral decisions, why would it be what is held accountable when we die?
You are proposing a material information-processing machine, which is similar to a computer, in some ways, yet “runs the programs” with carbon, that has a ghost controlling it that doesn’t respond to the same laws of cause and effect that the machine responds to.
What I am saying is that is illogical. There cannot be some circumstances where “wiring” took over, and others where the “soul” stayed in control, because both instances took place in the same dimension of the universe where the same physical laws were operating.
(And actually, this is really where the problem becomes interesting, because it points to the real issue, which is that we are within the boundaries of time and subject to the domination of time. Did you know that in Roman and Greek mythology Saturn represents both Satan and Time? That’s an entirely different thought, though, so I will not go off on that tangent)
What I am saying is that to resolve that physical problem, we have to conceive of the soul/mind (I will use the two terms to denote the continuity of experience, consciousness, and personality through linear time) as an irreducible, intangible, information network that is projected from the material brain.
When we see the soul like this, then we see how intimately connected it is to the brain, but we realize that we have more than one level of immateriality.
In the Bible, we are told that even the soul and the spirit can be separated. They are two different things.
I think that the soul is not always conscious. That is how I resolve the moral problem of attributing evil to mentally ill people (it cannot be done, no matter how hard you try to justify it to yourself). The spirit is pure consciousness, and is born from God. But the soul does not always behave like the spirit that is within the person. Sometimes, the true spirit of a person is overshadowed, and I think there are probably higher spiritual purposes to experiencing life like that.
No. This completely wrong, but unfortunately reflects the attitudes of at least 80% of people who just don’t bother to think very deeply about these things. You don’t understand sin if you think “sin is just sin”.I quite agree that treating the mentally ill unfairly is wrong. And as I said in my post, I don’t think God would judge someone’s soul for the actions of their malfunctioning physical brain. But sin is still sin. It’s not any less so for someone who lacks the ability to know better. It’s just more excuseable. And only God will know at the end what was really sin, and what was just behavior society didn’t like. We won’t know to what degree the soul actually had a part in every act of decision making.
John 9:41 Jesus told them, “If you were blind, you would not have any sin. But now that you insist, ‘We see,’ your sin still exists.”