For debate:David the apologist wrote: 1) All living things have "souls," but "soul"=/="immaterial."
Please offer some means to confirm the referenced claim is true.
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For debate:David the apologist wrote: 1) All living things have "souls," but "soul"=/="immaterial."
Actually, I had spent all my time working on a reply to Divine Insight in the cosmological argument thread.JoeyKnothead wrote: From Post 11:
"I ain't got me no time to present it, 'cause here it is, I spent all my time explaining why I ain't got me no time to present it" is as poor an excuse as I've ever known.David the apologist wrote: I have several "big posts" I'm working on right now, so the best I can do for the time being is reference you to chapter 8 of David Oderberg's book Real Essentialism.
Parsimony...or Occam's razor or whatever you want to call it, is actually a lousy 'law.' that is, it might be a lot easier for the thinker to go for the simplest answer, but 'simple' doesn't always equal 'true.'Jashwell wrote: [Replying to post 25 by dianaiad]
Dark Matter is observable... it has mass, and causes gravity.
It is distinguishable from other massive particles by sheer weight, and by how weakly it must interact.
I didn't say anything of "if I can't see it, it ain't there", I (effectively) said "If souls don't/can't directly interact with anything but their own bodies, even other souls doesn't this make them inherently unreasonable by parsimony?".
Could be, if this is true.Jashwell wrote:I can't think of a better analogy for this than a programming related one, but as simply put as possible, if souls only interact with their own bodies, everything that a soul is/has/does could instead be of the body (making this kind of soul redundant).
What 'something else" did you have in mind?Jashwell wrote:Or at best (as I tried to phrase as 'a poor word to use', a simple description of a subset of properties of something else.
Actually, Diana, Occam's Razor should be considered a principle rather than a law AND it should be applied exactly as stated.dianaiad wrote: Parsimony...or Occam's razor or whatever you want to call it, is actually a lousy 'law.' that is, it might be a lot easier for the thinker to go for the simplest answer, but 'simple' doesn't always equal 'true.'
That is very different from, and much more complex than, the common usage "the simplest answer is best"The principle states that among competing hypotheses, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected. Other, more complicated solutions may ultimately prove correct, but"in the absence of certainty"the fewer assumptions that are made, the better.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam%27s_razor
I agreedianaiad wrote: In fact, 'simple' is always suspicious.

No offense taken.dianaiad wrote: ...
As for the OP, hey, I was responding you you, sweetie, (and I mean that in all the best possible ways...) not the OP. I don't happen to think I need to offer you evidence sufficient to convince you in order for me to believe something.
Please link to and quote verbatim those claims I've made which you seek to challenge, and I'll set to it.dianaiad wrote: After all, do you think you must offer evidence sufficient to convince me that there is no deity in order for you to dismiss the idea of the existence of one?
...

There's another'n.sleepyhead wrote: I can't prove it either.
If.sleepyhead wrote: Part A. We know that life appears and survives on the earth on even the most remote and hostile places. All that life, in order for us to know about it requires a body. It seems to me reasonable that other life (souls) would be produced all over the universe that wouldn't have a body.
Part B. If there are souls, would it really be that difficult if a soul wanted to experience life in flesh for a period of time, for it to inhabit a physical body.

"It just breaks my heart to know I had me the time to make the claims, only don't it beat all, now that you've challenged my claims, I done run so short of time, all I can do is tell how I can't show I speak truth, 'cause it is, I done spent all my time a-tellin' how I can't show I speak truth, 'cause it is, I done run out of time a-tellin' how it is, I can't show I speak truth."David the apologist wrote: Actually, I had spent all my time working on a reply to Divine Insight in the cosmological argument thread.
God is Spirit, He can by will make parts of His Spirit into laws, which create different realities and bodies, like celestial and terrestrial, physical and Angelic spiritual bodies.McCulloch wrote:Of course you cannot prove it. You cannot prove that you or I have a soul. I'll bet 1,000 tokens that you don't even know what a soul is. I certainly don't.Elijah John wrote:I can't prove it, but anyone who has loved a cat or a dog are convinced they have souls too.
God's spirit is infinite in that it's life never ends.arian wrote:God is Spirit, He can by will make parts of His Spirit into laws, which create different realities and bodies, like celestial and terrestrial, physical and Angelic spiritual bodies.
God decided to make 'man', in His and His Sons image. So he took from the dust of the earth and formed mans body (brain and all) and as it was just laying there, God 'breathed' into his nostrils the "breath of Life", which simply means God sent a tiny bit of His Spirit, of 'Himself', into the body of dust, and man became a 'living-soul'.
So a 'living soul' is body, and a tiny bit of God/Spirit inside it controlling and enjoying the sensations of the body, and the bodies surroundings like the earth and everything in and on it.
Our 'mind' in a body is that spirit of God that has taken on individuality of his own. The mind is the 'soul' of man, it is who we are. This is the observable/scientific truth.