In a message dated 11/18/2000 12:11:21 AM Eastern Standard Time,
namacdonald@stthomas.edu writes:
<< One problem with that argument- you're not the book, and we have never
experienced dissolution (in our present forms, anyway), so we cannot take
this argument any further. The most significant issues in life cannot be
resolved through objective, empirical arguments- they can only be resolved
through experiencing them from within.
I am not my brain. I am not the data within it. The I is the I that is not
I. It makes sense when you start to meditate on it...
-Nicq >>
Look, when I had an operation (an easy one) I believe the anesthesiologist
gave me atropine ( i guess) and the world didn't disappear, but Popped* back
to reality. For that time, I ceased to be, or so it seems to me. No memory,
recollection, no hallucinations--just a discontinuity. I don't remember going
under, only the visual shift of position indicated that anything had
happened from the instant before. I am not sure that human consciousness can
exist except on something that behaves exactly like a human body, including
the brain and nervous system. Hopefully there will be computers and networks
and even some kind of omega point or substrate that exists; that we can be
reconstituted on.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Mon May 28 2001 - 09:50:25 MDT