Sunflowers wrote: ↑Sun Feb 23, 2020 5:15 am
PhilRisk wrote: ↑Sat Feb 22, 2020 6:32 am
All your examples use physical dividable entities. You even speak of materializing. These examples are irrelevant if you state that the soul is completely different than bodies. Therefore, your examples are not convincing.
Why should I apply physical conservation or analogous principles to minds, if they are so utterly different?
One further point, if I grant you a sort of conservation principle. Your physical examples only need physical conservation principles, which in a analogous form would only give rise to a very weak notion of immortality of the mind. The mind as a simple might still be there, but could loose or change all its content. This is a kind of immortality not worth talking about from the perspective of practical reason.
I don't understand what you're saying.
You started out by saying that you wanted to challenge my claim that simple things are indestructible. To do that you would need to maintain that things can vanish - that something can become nothing.
I have pointed out that such a claim is wildly counter-intuitive.
This claim - 'something cannot become nothing' - is far better supported by reason than this claim - 'something can become nothing'.
Once more, it is irrational to favour a weaker premise over a stronger one.
You claim "simple things are indestructible". I will give a physical example for a simple thing vanishing. From physical theory it is possible, that the universe can collapse in a reverse big bang. The universe is a simple thing. Therefore, from physical theory the vanishing of a simple thing is possible.
Your examples to back up the claim, that it is counter-intuitive are all physical examples of compounds. It is rather incoherent to use such examples, to prove your point. You did not establish, that is counter-intuitive for minds and it is not even irrational for physical simple things as I have stated. I don't think it is counter-intuitive that mind, even if they were simple thing, would be immortal. In the literature and other media spirits, which I would conceive as simple, vanish quite often. Therefore, it is not counter-intuitive for many people.
And as I have stated above it is reasonable to believe minds come into existence. Than by analogy, it is reasonable and not counter-intuitive, that they can vanish. They come from nothing, they go to nothing, if one follows your simple-mind theory. Why do you believe in the asymmetry? Or do you believe that minds are eternal? Then the question is clear, what what the content was before the mind.
This leads to my second point. There is no reason to believe, that minds are immortal in a meaningful way. The contents of our minds are not simple, as thoughts can be articulated. Therefore, the contents can be destroyed even by your premises. The content of minds is already destroyed when people get old or sick and is acquired? (Descartes thinks otherwise for concepts, but not for beliefs, otherwise it his argumentation would be nonsense). Even if your argument is sound. There is no reason, to expect immortality of the content of mind. This is why I mentioned Locke, because identity in substance does not warranty identity in person in his position.