So, perhaps, as a disembodied consciousness, I selected the life I’m experiencing now. Next time around, I could experience Abraham Lincoln’s life, Elvis Presley’s life, or anyone else’s life. Anyone disembodied consciousness can experience any portion of any life. — Art48
Maybe the only choice one ever makes is made at death (bardo?) either to relive one's life – travel again along one's worldline – or oblivion — 180 Proof
It depends on whose perspective. If ours, then it's gone. We are all traveling on the same speed of light. We are all changing and carrying with us just the memories of the past. If you used to live at A street 20 years ago, and you left that place, then your past will only exist in memory.I wonder if the past, in any sense, still exists. Or is the past utterly gone? — Art48
As a disembodied consciousness, can I somehow reenter the stream of time and re-experience my life? Can I experience the lives of other people? Might I be able to experience all or part of someone’s life, much like watching a movie? (except I’d be experiencing a 3D movie and also experience the person’s inner thoughts and feelings whose life it was.) — Art48
However, if we can choose which life (or which portion of a life) we experience, then we do have free will—we are free to select in advance what we shall experience — Art48
Someone who experiences a horrible life is akin to someone who chooses to watch a horror movie. — Art48
And the flaw is in taking a concept (in this case, reincarnation) out of its native context.There's a conceptual flaw in all this speculation. — Banno
The Hindus have no problem with any of that. They explain that it is the soul that gets reincarnated; that thoughts, feelings, the body are not the self.The problem here is the same as that for reincarnation: what is it that is reincarnated?
/.../
If you returned to an earlier time, it would not be as an observer, but as that participant; nothing would or could be different.
The philosophical problem for reincarnation - and for the re-embodiment of the OP - is explaining the individuation of the self.
I choose extinction. :wink: — Tom Storm
So some impersonal entity, not me (i.e. not mine-ness), "gets reincarnated"? If that's the case, then I need not care about "the soul" and live as I like (maybe finding a purely immanent, this-worldly basis by which to survive and thrive in the here and now). :fire:... it is the soul that gets reincarnated; that thoughts, feelings, the body are not the self. — baker
I think the concepts of "soul" and "disembodied consciousness" are similar, if not exactly the same. Choosing to live a life is choosing to experience all that life's physical, emotional, and mental sensations. So, we are in a 3D movie where 3 refers to physical, emotional, and mental sensations. I think that idea is similar to the idea that we are living in a matrix.... it is the soul that gets reincarnated; that thoughts, feelings, the body are not the self. — baker
Yes, this is one possibility. Observers in another time dimension could see our past, but not us in the same time dimension.such that you relive your life after you've first lived it, wouldn't that require another time dimension? — Count Timothy von Icarus
The fundamental question, I believe, is of personal identity. One view is that our physical, emotional, and mental sensations being temporary, don't constitute me in the deepest sense. Rather, the more permanent consciousness which is aware of the sensations constitutes my personal identity. Under this view, I (my awareness) would be re-experiencing the current life I'm experiencing.What I'm getting at is similar to the difference between watching a documentary and being a part of that documentary. I think that ambiguity may be built in to your speculation. The difference is in who is doing the "watching". If you go back and re-live a part of your life, will you be you, now, re-experiencing that life? If so, you are not re-experiencing, so much as watching from the outside. — Banno
More broadly, we understand - more or less - what being oneself is in the normal circumstances of growing old, forgetting, being injured and so on. But remove the body and the context in which all this makes sense drops out as well. In philosophical terms, the language game has been over-extended to the point where it needs to be radically rebuilt; we no longer have the capacity to find our way about.
So we make stuff up.
But there is nothing that makes the stuff we make up right or wrong. — Banno
I would have thought you're all sufficiently informed about the reincarnation doctrine ...So some impersonal entity, not me (i.e. not mine-ness), "gets reincarnated"? — 180 Proof
Not from scratch, though. A person born and raised into a religion that teaches reincarnation will have internalized it even before their critical cognitive faculties have developed. So such a person doesn't actually "make stuff up". Such a person conceives of themselves according to the doctrine of reincarnation: that who they really are is an eternal soul who inhabits a body, and that this body, the thoughts and feelings they have are not who the person really is, nor do they see themselves defined by their possessions, socio-economic status, tribal affiliation etc.So we make stuff up. — Banno
What if I imagine myself — Joshs
Your default notions of who you really are are not your own, but inherited from the society/culture you grew up in. So you cannot define your starting point, as that has been done by others already — baker
At some "personal defining juncture" however you choose to define yourself anew, possibly in contradistinction with your old, inherited idea of "who you really are", that new definition is still going to be in relation to your old one. So it seems that one cannot actually chose one's identity. — baker
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