The Soul and the Brain

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The *soul *is comprised of 1)memory 2) intelligence and 3) will…
To be more accurate I should say that the soul is comprised of 1)memory 2) intellect and 3) the will. (I had used the word intelligence for the word intellect in a previous post, but the Catholic Church uses the word intellect…so I should stick with the word intellect for our use, as it could mean something slightly different than intelligence.
 
Ready, can you elaborate on the relationship between the soul and the memory? It would seem like quite a stretch to say that there is no link between the memory and the brain…
 
It looks like you’ve already assumed the soul’s existence… A thing which is somewhat ill-defined, and not at all self evident.

Please describe some of the characteristics of the soul (without overlapping into mental functions we already know arise from the brain).
The point of the OP was to speculate on what the relationship was between the soul and the brain, if you take for granted that there is a soul. Whether or not one believes the concept of a soul serves any purpose is a topic for another thread.

IMO, if we have souls, it is impossible to conceive of them NOT sharing some of the functions related to brain function. Without the capacity to retain memory, make decisions, or think abstractly a disembodied soul seems pretty worthless.

How that would be possible I have no idea, but then again, we aren’t nearly done discovering things about physics, the brain, or any other scientific field yet so I am not willing to ditch my hope just yet! I have nothing to lose, and I’d like to think when I’m a widow, I can look forward to being with the love of my life once more instead of looking forward to a nice dirt nap.
To be more accurate I should say that the soul is comprised of 1)memory 2) intellect and 3) the will. (I had used the word intelligence for the word intellect in a previous post, but the Catholic Church uses the word intellect…so I should stick with the word intellect for our use, as it could mean something slightly different than intelligence.
I guess you mean the soul has to have some capacity for memory, intellect, and will that is NOT wholly dependant on the physical brain? Something non-corporeal that interacts with the living brain in some way that is unable to be scientifically verified, but is real in some way?

We don’t need to insist that the soul is the only thing behind all of these brain functions. People are born with all different capacities for intelligence, memory, etc. If we tie the soul to those, then are we saying that some souls are handicapped from conception? That their souls bear their intellectual limitation or possible psychoses right from the get-go?

There’s no need to think that just because some types of thoughts can be tied to certain locations in the brain that the physical brain itself is always the origin of those thoughts.

There is no definitive proof that the brain is all there is. No neuroscientist yet has been able to prove definitively how it is we experience subjectively, or whether we truly have free will. The nature of consciousness still seems to be a very debateable subject. Sure, you’ll have more lining up on the materialist side, but that’s the nature of scientists. It’s their job to look for explanations that can be verified and anyone with that mindset will tend to be a skeptic.

It seems safer to assume, if we believe in a soul, that our souls can affect our brains and vice versa (hence the importance of sin avoidance)and that while we live, the soul cannot experience anything we don’t (hence the lack of memory under anaesthesia?).This way doesn’t seem to contradict anything modern neuroscience has found to be accurate.
 
Ready, can you elaborate on the relationship between the soul and the memory? It would seem like quite a stretch to say that there is no link between the memory and the brain…
There is a link between memory and the brain, of course. Part of the brain’s function is to store memories for our use and benefit. Regarding the soul: our memory informs us of that which we need to know to continue in making good choices. e.g. If we recall all the many benefits our Lord has done for us, we do not allow ourselves to get hopelessly discouraged in times of trial. Another example: If we know and remember that something is a greater good than another thing and love that greater good, our will is then able to choose that greater good as something desirable.

Maybe that doesn’t help you too much , but I’ve got to run (to go to Mass.) Peace!
 
The point of the OP was to speculate on what the relationship was between the soul and the brain, if you take for granted that there is a soul. Whether or not one believes the concept of a soul serves any purpose is a topic for another thread.

IMO, if we have souls, it is impossible to conceive of them NOT sharing some of the functions related to brain function. Without the capacity to retain memory, make decisions, or think abstractly a disembodied soul seems pretty worthless.

How that would be possible I have no idea, but then again, we aren’t nearly done discovering things about physics, the brain, or any other scientific field yet so I am not willing to ditch my hope just yet! I have nothing to lose, and I’d like to think when I’m a widow, I can look forward to being with the love of my life once more instead of looking forward to a nice dirt nap.

I guess you mean the soul has to have some capacity for memory, intellect, and will that is NOT wholly dependant on the physical brain? Something non-corporeal that interacts with the living brain in some way that is unable to be scientifically verified, but is real in some way?

We don’t need to insist that the soul is the only thing behind all of these brain functions. People are born with all different capacities for intelligence, memory, etc. If we tie the soul to those, then are we saying that some souls are handicapped from conception? That their souls bear their intellectual limitation or possible psychoses right from the get-go?

There’s no need to think that just because some types of thoughts can be tied to certain locations in the brain that the physical brain itself is always the origin of those thoughts.

There is no definitive proof that the brain is all there is. No neuroscientist yet has been able to prove definitively how it is we experience subjectively, or whether we truly have free will. The nature of consciousness still seems to be a very debateable subject. Sure, you’ll have more lining up on the materialist side, but that’s the nature of scientists. It’s their job to look for explanations that can be verified and anyone with that mindset will tend to be a skeptic.

It seems safer to assume, if we believe in a soul, that our souls can affect our brains and vice versa (hence the importance of sin avoidance)and that while we live, the soul cannot experience anything we don’t (hence the lack of memory under anaesthesia?).This way doesn’t seem to contradict anything modern neuroscience has found to be accurate.
This is a very balanced approach IMO and a good guide for those with faith eneogh to accept the possibility that the soul exists and for those whose faith in the existence of the soul causes them to assume too much about what is really known empiricly.
 
There is a link between memory and the brain, of course. Part of the brain’s function is to store memories for our use and benefit. Regarding the soul: our memory informs us of that which we need to know to continue in making good choices. e.g. If we recall all the many benefits our Lord has done for us, we do not allow ourselves to get hopelessly discouraged in times of trial. Another example: If we know and remember that something is a greater good than another thing and love that greater good, our will is then able to choose that greater good as something desirable.

Maybe that doesn’t help you too much , but I’ve got to run (to go to Mass.) Peace!
 
Also, to add to what I was saying before in a previous post:

Informing the will with knowledge retained in the memory of what is a greater good and willfully constantly chosing good choices based on this knowledge can create good habits or virtues in the individual, thus making it easier for him or her to make a good choice under duress. For those with a malformed conscience [with a lack of knowldege and love for the more desirable (the moral choice)], vice is developed…and it becomes easier for the individual to do wrong under duress based on his or her lack of knowlege of the better or “good and desirable” choice and his/her not having the opportunity to use it.

The soul (memory, intellect, and will) and the brain effect behavior, yes.
 
*There is a link between memory and the brain, of course. Part of the brain’s function is to store memories for our use and benefit. Regarding the soul: our memory informs us of that which we need to know to continue in making good choices. e.g. If we recall all the many benefits our Lord has done for us, we do not allow ourselves to get hopelessly discouraged in times of trial. *

— Ready

Not to nit pick yet again, but earlier you said that “part” of the soul IS the memory. That seemed pretty definitive. Now it sounds like you’re agreeing that the memory is in fact located at least in part in the brain, but is used by the soul. So which is it? Or is their both a brain memory as well as a soul memory? If this is the case, how is it possible to distinguish between the two?

*The point of the OP was to speculate on what the relationship was between the soul and the brain, if you take for granted that there is a soul. Whether or not one believes the concept of a soul serves any purpose is a topic for another thread.

IMO, if we have souls, it is impossible to conceive of them NOT sharing some of the functions related to brain function. Without the capacity to retain memory, make decisions, or think abstractly a disembodied soul seems pretty worthless.
*

– HelenaMT

You’re right, I’ll stay on topic… I know you guys already believe in the supernatural and this is no place for anyone to try and refute that. Still, I think that if we are going to assume the existense of souls, we should be able to provide a definition that adds something to our knowledge of the mind. There needs to be a reason we suspect that naturalistic explanations are insufficient. I don’t see how it’s valuable for us just to duplicate functions of the mind that we’re already pretty sure have a materialistic basis. To me, it would be like suggesting that angels are responsible for lightning. You can’t disprove that statement, but it doesn’t have any futher explanatory power than a wholly naturalistic one. A world where angels are responsible for lightning functions in a way indistinguishable from one where they do not, and I think it’s fair to say that assigning the soul responsibility for the memory is equally ineffective in explaining anything new.

On the other hand, if I were a Christian looking at this, it would seem to be quite reasonable to expect a human without his brain (and the rest of the body) to be quite pitiful and incomplete. After all, we’re supposed to have bodies… the concept of a ghost in a shell is antiquated, and no one can seriously think any more that everything going on in our minds is distinct from the brain. Why is it unacceptable to suggest that the memories and other important functions of the mind are lost upon death, and is somehow recreated in a new body for the final judgement?
 
IMO, if we have souls, it is impossible to conceive of them NOT sharing some of the functions related to brain function. Without the capacity to retain memory, make decisions, or think abstractly a disembodied soul seems pretty worthless.

What about those souls whose brains have rotted six feet underground whose souls remain on the earth and haunt houses because they are not yet able to make the transition into the next life? I’m not into the paranormal, but I am well aware that such souls are existing on the earth.
 
*There is a link between memory and the brain, of course. Part of the brain’s function is to store memories for our use and benefit. Regarding the soul: our memory informs us of that which we need to know to continue in making good choices. e.g. If we recall all the many benefits our Lord has done for us, we do not allow ourselves to get hopelessly discouraged in times of trial. *

— Ready

Not to nit pick yet again, but earlier you said that “part” of the soul IS the memory. That seemed pretty definitive. Now it sounds like you’re agreeing that the memory is in fact located at least in part in the brain, but is used by the soul. So which is it? Or is their both a brain memory as well as a soul memory? If this is the case, how is it possible to distinguish between the two?

*The point of the OP was to speculate on what the relationship was between the soul and the brain, if you take for granted that there is a soul. Whether or not one believes the concept of a soul serves any purpose is a topic for another thread.

IMO, if we have souls, it is impossible to conceive of them NOT sharing some of the functions related to brain function. Without the capacity to retain memory, make decisions, or think abstractly a disembodied soul seems pretty worthless.
*

– HelenaMT

You’re right, I’ll stay on topic… I know you guys already believe in the supernatural and this is no place for anyone to try and refute that. Still, I think that if we are going to assume the existense of souls, we should be able to provide a definition that adds something to our knowledge of the mind. There needs to be a reason we suspect that naturalistic explanations are insufficient. I don’t see how it’s valuable for us just to duplicate functions of the mind that we’re already pretty sure have a materialistic basis. To me, it would be like suggesting that angels are responsible for lightning. You can’t disprove that statement, but it doesn’t have any futher explanatory power than a wholly naturalistic one. A world where angels are responsible for lightning functions in a way indistinguishable from one where they do not, and I think it’s fair to say that assigning the soul responsibility for the memory is equally ineffective in explaining anything new.

On the other hand, if I were a Christian looking at this, it would seem to be quite reasonable to expect a human without his brain (and the rest of the body) to be quite pitiful and incomplete. After all, we’re supposed to have bodies… the concept of a ghost in a shell is antiquated, and no one can seriously think any more that everything going on in our minds is distinct from the brain. Why is it unacceptable to suggest that the memories and other important functions of the mind are lost upon death, and is somehow recreated in a new body for the final judgement?
For me, the latter description just doesn’t ring true for me. If the soul is to have any value to me, it must serve a purpose for and have some correlation to my physical existence.

I believe that the soul provides the impetus for certain mental activity,mainly decision making. It works with the brain to push an action one way or the other, against a baser physical drive perhaps. I believe our soul aids us in the practice of free will.

If free will can be demonstrably proven not to exist, or when modern neuroscience has satisfactorily and definitively resolved what they call the “mind-body problem” within their own field, and has proven that creative thought itself arises solely from the physical chemical processes in the brain, I will be more receptive to a purely materialistic approach. It will suck, but I would have to consider it. Until then, the jury is still out for me on that one.
 
I just was reading an excellent book by Peter Kreeft called Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Heaven But Never Dreamed of Asking In it he says that the soul in our natural state is not immortal. Only God is immortal. The soul, when infused with the supernatural grace of God only then takes on immortal nature, if I got Kreeft right. So if a soul dies without this grace, as Kreeft says, it becomes mere refuse and dies incinerated in hell with the rest of refuse. On the day of the ressurection of the dead, the body belonging to that soul will join the refuse of the dead, natural soul in hell. But bodies not in a state of mortal sin will die, but their souls will live on and will eventually be rejoined to their body on the last day, the day of the resuurection of the dead.

So natural brains in them selves help us in this world. But the spirit of God working through them can have that brain live on forever in the next even after it dies, as it will be resssurected with the rest of the body on the last day. Great!
 
interesting article on immortality

newadvent.org/cathen/07687a.htm
Yes, that looks like an interesting article. I got to read some of it. Peter Kreeft said that the idea of an immortal soul is a misconception that comes from Platonism and says that the soul in its natural state (without infused grace) is not immortal, but dies and remains as refuse in hell. It caught me off guard because I always heard that the soul is immortal and always had applied it to all souls, even those without divine grace in them.
 
ready,

I think I’ve read the portion in "Everything you wanted to know about Heaven. . . " that you are referring to.

I’m not sure that Kreeft is stating things as forcibly as you have above. He seems to be speaking of a difference between a “living soul” and “dead soul” – but in both cases the soul itself exists beyond the person’s moment of death. That is what I would take as the more general idea denoted when one speaks of the immortality of the soul – i.e. that it continues to exist in a personal way, regardless of the quality or state of it’s existence.

In fact, Kreeft states elsewhere, in his book Catholic Christianity (a sort of summary of the Catechism) that “We can discover the fact that our souls are immortal by the proper use of our natural reason, for souls are immortal by their own nature: they are not material or biological.”

Here he seems to be talking about immortality in the general sense – that a soul continues to exist. Why? Because it is immaterial, and simple, and has no parts. So, barring it being completely annihilated (something he argues against in his handbook of apologetics book, the name escapes me at the moment), the soul would have to continue on after the death of the person, since the only way for it not to continue one would be through dissolution. . .which necessitates parts.

VC

(p.s. when you read the part in the Heaven book, and the part in the *Catholic Christianity *book, they seems somewhat contradictory. I’m not sure what is going on: imprecision of language? Development of thought? I don’t know.)
 
I feel we have individual consciousness expressed through the brain, but pure consciousness, the highest point of the soul is a consciousness of unity or love with everything. The soul is similar to a mountain peak that has been hidden in the clouds of the mind, but when the sun melts the clouds away, the mountaintop receives the full light of the sun. Love burns away ignorance and illuminates the mind with unity and the presence of a pure consciousness that gives rise to a mind that is capable of seeing a totally new dimension. On the mountain peak of the soul one can see a new horizon in the clear, upper, rarefied air of pure consciousness where one is able to guide the mind’s activities in a new direction that one has never before known. In this way God gives the spiritual mind new instincts to prepare it to move in a new spiritual consciousness.
 
Peter Kreeft said that … the soul in its natural state (without infused grace) is not immortal, but dies and remains as refuse in hell…
I wonder whether Peter Kreeft has any evidence to support this quaint and horrific notion, or whether it’s just from his imagination.
 
IOn the mountain peak of the soul one can see a new horizon in the clear, upper, rarefied air of pure consciousness where one is able to guide the mind’s activities in a new direction that one has never before known. In this way God gives the spiritual mind new instincts to prepare it to move in a new spiritual consciousness.
Interesting idea. How does God work with spiritual minds that have never known somatic consciousness?
 
I feel God works with all minds at all levels. I feel Jesus talked in parables because he was teaching at different levels of Spirit at the same time. One gets the lesson one can understand from his own unique experience.
 
(p.s. when you read the part in the Heaven book, and the part in the *Catholic Christianity *book, they seems somewhat contradictory. I’m not sure what is going on: imprecision of language? Development of thought? I don’t know.)
There seems to be a contradiction, yes. But what he says in both books seem to make sense. I

In one thread a gentleman was agruing that the soul was not immortal and I argued that it was. He referred to the Bible passage about God destroying both body and soul in Gehenna and asked me if the soul was not destroyed. I then told him that the soul is not annihilated but must be destroyed, as Jesus Himself says it will be. But I guess I was wrong to think the spiritually dead soul is immortal,as a spiritually dead soul does not live on, but is burned in hell and destroyed with the body.
 
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