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Replying to Diogenes in post #10]
Regarding the fact we have an emotional or psychic reflex to believe our consciousness will continue, I see that impulse as an argument against the idea of gods and an afterlife; i.e. the feeling that life will continue is an argument against the idea that gods, ghosts, and consciousness continuing after the body is destroyed. Our need to believe explains why we believe. It does not justify rational belief.
I want to take care to ensure I do fall into the fallacy trap of sweeping statements
while acknowledging that there is emotion involved – per the Human Experience this Ghost that I am, is experiencing…but it is not what propels my understanding about the possibility that it is a natural aspect of Nature to go through and continue on with...
I also want to reaffirm that I consider the testimony of those who reports their NDE’s OOBE’s and Astral Travelling experiences as evidence and that I understand how subjective experiences of that nature can influence how a personality perceives their self in relation to said experiences.
As mentioned, I see no theory or explanation of how gods and ghosts exist. I've never heard of one. No one has ever even suggested the barest framework upon which to build such a theory... unless you stoop to using those frequent and vacuous claims of "cosmic energy" and "mystery."
Just as we can understand (in general) how AI can appear to reproduce (or improve upon) the product of human consciousness, we can understand how conscious emerges from the trillions of interactions between the billions of neurons of the human brain.
But we have no theory to explain how such organic consciousness continues after the destruction of those neurons.
I argue that any theory on the nature of existence, would be as complex as any other, and impossible to stipulate in one answering post.
I have a theory and have been sharing the theory on the board.
Simply put, the theory is based on the premise that Supernaturalism is the root of the problem and if we discard it from the table of discussion, we can talk about the immaterial mind as being Natural, whether the mind be that of a ghost or a god. The immaterial mind exists within a material universe. There is nothing “supernatural” to observe therein.
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If atheism was defined as "lacking belief in anything supernatural", I would be an atheist.
Even the process of how this post was formed was complex, the details of which are not apparent in the post itself.