Why didn't this body become born without my consciousness. Why didn't I remain as nothing when this body came into being. — Yohan
Imagine your consciousness disassociating with your body, so that you can observe your body from a distance. — Yohan
There would be no separated being if the time of the One could fall into the time of the other. This is what was expressed, always negatively, by the idea of the eternity of the soul: the dead one's refusal to fall into the time of the other, the personal time free from common time. If the common time were to absorb the time of the "I" death would be the end. But if refusal to be purely and simply integrated into history would indicate the continuation of life after death or its preexistence prior to its beginning in terms of the time of the survivor, then commencement and end would in no wise have marked a separation that could be characterized as radical and a dimension that would be interiority. For this would still be to insert the interiority into the time of history, as though perenniality throughout a time common to the plurality—the totality—dominated the fact of separation. — Emmanuel Levinas, in Totality and Infinity
But can we actually imagine consciousness coming out of something else, or consciousness not existing?Imagine you are an extension of the combination of your mom and dad's DNA. Imagine no soul, or spirit. — Per Chance
Yeah I agree.Just because you can imagine your consciousness being separate from your body doesn't mean that this really can be the case. — SophistiCat
This sounds like the notions of Essence vs Existence. A unicorn has an essence - it is defined - but does not have existence; although it could. If it begins to exist, then existence is added to the essence. On the other hand, a meaningless notion like a "triangle-that-is-not-a-triangle" has neither essence nor existence, and cannot ever have existence.Could we call non-being a sort of being at rest?
If so, something must have "pushed" me into activity, into a "being".
This implies that "non-being" is actually a sort of proto-being. — Yohan
This sounds correct. For even an essence without existence is not nothing, and is therefore a being, when a being is defined as "that which is not nothing".Absolutely nothing should remain absolutely nothing, forever..... unless this "nothing" is not truly nothing. — Yohan
It would seem I was associated in some way with this body before it came into existence. Or else it would have been born without me. — Yohan
The question is, why is this body associated at all with my self? — Yohan
Why did this body generate my consciousness. — Yohan
Things at rest tend to stay at rest
Could we call non-being a sort of being at rest? — Yohan
You should be careful with "=" signs. It means "identical", which is not the case here. Pre-existence has non-existence as a property, but is not identical with it. Pre-existence implies a thing will exist eventually. Non-existence does not imply that. With that, point 3 does not follow from points 1 and 2. Consider this other example:1. Pre-existence = non-existence
2. Post-existence = non-existence
3. Pre-existence = post-existence — Yohan
Why from nothing? Why not from your parents?But if I truly didn't exist before, yet now I do, then I came into being from nothing... — Yohan
If my status could change from pre-existence to existence, then necessarily my status could also change from post-existence to existence(post-non-existence) as well. — Yohan
If that isn't the case, then you have to demonstrate that pre-existence and post-existence in some way hold unique ontological statuses to mere non-existence. — Yohan
But if I truly didn't exist before, yet now I do, then I came into being from nothing... — Yohan
My current conclusion is, all things exist except impossibilities.
So what can exist, does exist. — Yohan
Non-existence is an irrational status. — Yohan
But appearance is not directly related to existence. (...) We already know many things exist which do not appear to us. — Yohan
point — Samuel Lacrampe
You should be careful with "=" signs. It means "identical", which is not the case here. Pre-existence has non-existence as a property, but is not identical with it. Pre-existence implies a thing will exist eventually. Non-existence does not imply that. With that, point 3 does not follow from points 1 and 2. Consider this other example: — Samuel Lacrampe
I agree that that is wrong, but I think what I said is more like saying 3. A unicorn and a phoenix are exactly the same while NOT existing.1. A unicorn has non-existence,
2. A phoenix has non-existence, therefore
3. A unicorn is a phoenix. — Samuel Lacrampe
Imagine your consciousness disassociating with your body, so that you can observe your body from a distance. From this point of view, "your" body is entirely not self.
The question is, why is this body associated at all with my self?
Why didn't this body become born without my consciousness. Why didn't I remain as nothing when this body came into being.
It would seem I was associated in some way with this body before it came into existence. Or else it would have been born without me. — Yohan
Look with care, and you might notice that you assume your conclusion, around about were you imagine your self as seperate from your body. — Banno
It would seem I was associated in some way with this body before it came into existence. Or else it would have been born without me.
— Yohan
Yeah - only in the sense that it was Yohan who did not yet exit. — Banno
So you are saying if you exist again, then you didn't really cease existing prior.So no need of the arrow of time? There is no content expectation from pre-existence to existence, but if from post-existence to existence holds, then there should be content expected from the former to the latter. Post-existence implies an existence already done, then to return to it should bring the content with it. If there is no such implication, and the return from post- has no content, how can it be said it is a return at all? — Mww
Tautologies are only worthless if they are obvious.Which is it....all things or possible things? All things except impossibilities, or all things that can exist, which is the same as all possible things that exist, do exist? If all possible things actually exist, they are not merely possible. In which case, the proposition is the same as all things that exist, exist, a mere worthless tautology, true by meaning alone and having absolutely no particular knowledge derivable from it. — Mww
How is switching from non-existence to existence any different from switching between nothing and something?But if I truly didn't exist before, yet now I do, then I came into being from nothing...
— Yohan
The one does not necessarily follow from the other. While true you didn’t exist at one time, and did at another, doesn’t mean you came from nothing. Granting that the mechanics of standard reproduction gives the body, and if no mind is possible without the body, it follows that the possibility of mind is given from the certainty of the body. One would be forced to show how mind absolutely cannot arise from body, or, show how body is insufficient for mind to arise from it, to disallow that it does, which only then makes room for coming into being of mind from nothing. — Mww
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