
Are these animals just lumps of matter or is there something more to them? Is it only people that are not lumps of matter?
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Kind of like how theological constructs are sometimes metaphorically referred to as biblical, I suppose.JehovahsWitness wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 1:52 amMetephorically speaking it'is sometimes refered to as the life of the whole.
Yes this is true and hard to avoid. We can only define things in terms of other things and so fundamental things are hard to define simply because they cannot be reduced to other things.Kylie wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 8:46 pmThe terms still seem rather vaguely defined to me.Inquirer wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 11:41 amYes they are good lads, great companions, not large, about 19lbs or so.
Well I never said "soul" and that's because that word does not mean what many think it means. The terms for "soul" and "spirit" are different. God is never spoken of as having a "soul" for example.
The term "soul" refers more to our physical existence, material bodies it seems.
But "spirit" is what gives us our mind, our will, our ability to do good or bad, it is not material, not governed by laws of nature, still much of this is indeed a deep mystery.
Sure some regard people as animals, some classify things in such a way that people can be regarded as animals but it all depends on the classification system. Since only people keep other organisms as pets and only people cook and only people play chess and only people write and only people play musical instruments and only people torture other organisms for amusement then - based on these criteria - people are not animals they are unique and unmatched. It's not terribly complex.Tcg wrote: ↑Sat Jun 18, 2022 5:50 am [Replying to Inquirer in post #1]
Humans are animals so if humans have spirit, animals have spirit. It's not terribly complex. Of course, if the concept is absurd, it is absurd even if some pretend that humans aren't animals.
Tcg
So then, just to make sure I've got your position correct, the soul is just the physical body as well as the thoughts. In the analogy, it is the computer and the programs that are running on it. The spirit is nothing more than the electricity that powers it all. Correct?JehovahsWitness wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 2:05 am
Yes that is correct.
Think of the organisim like a computer. The electricity doesn't carry any information or trace of the computer ... all that is in the computer itself which is made of hardware (the metal/ plastic and glass screen you can see and touch) and software (the program written in code and stored and expressed through the hardware).
Yes, that is exactly it. You brain stores your memory, your mind and personality is complex but it all comes down to what is possible when your "software" your programming is powered up.
There are limits to the analogy of course: a computer is limited and can essentially only do what the programmer put in it while you (when powered up) become a self-generating, imaginative, autonimous free-willed organism. It is a testimony to the Creator that each organisme, when powered beccomes a unique exceptional living intelligent being which in the case of humans, reflects the personality of the Divine One.
But like a computer, when the hardware and software is destroyed nothing of the person survives.
So your animation is saying it has to be a LIVING body is soul (the physical body) and spirit (the stuff that keeps it alive).JehovahsWitness wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 2:12 am
Yes the SOUL strictly speaking has to be ALIVE to qualify as such.
I was simplyfying it to the point I thought you could understand. People are so wrapped up in this immortal invisible soul nonsense (no offense) they find it mentally challenging, even shocking, to seperate the word to its basic meaning : a LIVING breathing organsim.
Since the SPIRIT (the energy source) is what MAKES a body live, strictly speaking without the life force you don't have a soul you have a corpse.
SO you are asking me to accept the existence of spirits on faith?Inquirer wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 2:53 pmYes this is true and hard to avoid. We can only define things in terms of other things and so fundamental things are hard to define simply because they cannot be reduced to other things.Kylie wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 8:46 pmThe terms still seem rather vaguely defined to me.Inquirer wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 11:41 amYes they are good lads, great companions, not large, about 19lbs or so.
Well I never said "soul" and that's because that word does not mean what many think it means. The terms for "soul" and "spirit" are different. God is never spoken of as having a "soul" for example.
The term "soul" refers more to our physical existence, material bodies it seems.
But "spirit" is what gives us our mind, our will, our ability to do good or bad, it is not material, not governed by laws of nature, still much of this is indeed a deep mystery.
Defining "spirit" is hard when spirit underpins all else, that is to say if everything else is defined by spirit then its hard to define spirit.
Yes. That is what the bible says. The spirit (ruah) is never spoken if as carrying the thoughts and personality of the person after death.Kylie wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 5:29 pm
So then, just to make sure I've got your position correct, the soul is just the physical body as well as the thoughts. In the analogy, it is the computer and the programs that are running on it. The spirit is nothing more than the electricity that powers it all. Correct?
I just want to make sure that we are on the same page here.
Once again, "biblically" is used here to metaphorically mean the doctrine of Jehovah's Witnesses rather than what the Bible literally says. 1 Samuel 28 is a story about the spirit of Samuel talking to Saul after it was summoned from beyond the grave. That's why the Witness translators of the NWT added scare quotes to the biblical use of Samuel's name. What the Bible actually says is theologically uncomfortable for their doctrine if Samuel continued to exist in some form after death.JehovahsWitness wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 1:28 amBiblically at death, a person ceases to exist, with no part of them (the person) surviving.
NRSV:Then “Samuel” said to Saul: “Why have you disturbed me by having me brought up?” Saul replied: “I am in great trouble. The Phi·lis′tines are fighting against me, and God has departed from me and no longer answers me, either through the prophets or in dreams; so that is why I am calling on you to let me know what I should do.”
Then Samuel said to Saul, “Why have you disturbed me by bringing me up?” Saul answered, “I am in great distress, for the Philistines are warring against me, and God has turned away from me and answers me no more, either by prophets or by dreams; so I have summoned you to tell me what I should do.”