My feeling is that self-awareness, or sense of self, or ego, is continuous, as long as it is continually handed down to others through culture and knowledge. However, it is a subjective framework and creates the illusion of separateness. The body can only be considered to die if you put an intellectual frame around any particular body. Probably about half of "your" body, the cells, die everyday, and we think nothing of it, because we don't identify with the cell. Draw back your frame of reference to all humanity as the body, and the body is quite robust, has lasted for several million years, at least, and might last a few million more. Draw back the intellectual definitions to all life on earth, and we can say that it is practically immortal.All right.. but still I don't see what your posts have directly to do with my original post and its ideas. (If you think they have, I would appreciate a simple explanation that would tie these ideas together..)
Partly I agree with this, though I don't quite see why culture is needed to establish a continuum of self-awareness. I rather think it is an endogenous feature of a nervous system / brain that develops for certain species such as humans.spidergoat said:My feeling is that self-awareness, or sense of self, or ego, is continuous, as long as it is continually handed down to others through culture and knowledge.
Thanks!spidergoat said:BTW jr, welcome to Sciforums!
Yes we are from the same thing. But what does it mean in practice? We are still different from each other, because things are changing, dividing, multiplying, destructing.VitalOne said:So everything , living and non-living emerged from the samething.
Think about it, you don't create your ideas or thoughts, they are just transformations of what was already there.
You misunderstood.Bubblecar said:"Proof of this is the fact that you are alive and self-aware. We are the afterlife of those who have gone before us."
No, those who have gone before were different people. Your "self" is generated by your brain, & each individual's brain is a unique state of dynamic order, represent the sepecific memories, prersonality traits etc of the individual.
Once your brain dies, you, that specific, unique "self", are gone.
But it's at least possible that at some other time & place, that exact same state of order might come into being again. But the probability of that seems to be extremely remote.
jr_ said:You misunderstood.
I'm not saying that our self (ego / I / whatever you want to call it) will survive death. But humans have something in common that we all share. That is the sense of being, sense of "I am"; I can say that I am, you can say it too. It is called self-awareness which we all have. This is what will appear again in the to-be-born individuals, after the death of an individual, such as you and me.
Yes, mainly it is indeed metaphorical, but it also describes in practice what happens in "afterlife" - that is, what happens after the death of an individual.Bubblecar said:OK, jr, but I would interpret that as representing an "afterlife" only in a metaphorical sense.
jr_ said:Yes, mainly it is indeed metaphorical, but it also describes in practice what happens in "afterlife" - that is, what happens after the death of an individual.
If you take my definition of afterlife in strictly metaphorical sense, could you conceive another way to see the term, such that would make any [practical] difference?
We do share the same basic genetic sequence with all other humans, so our perceptions will be bound by the physical structure of our sensory organs. I think we have to separate the idea of self-awareness into two parts. One part is body awareness, which is similar among most humans and the other is ego, or self identification, which I think has changed over time. Identification has not always been with the self. Some historical or primitive cultures identify more with the group, in the sense that, the well-being of the group is more important than that of the individual and takes the place of our modern sense of individual self in the psyche of each member.But humans have something in common that we all share. That is the sense of being, sense of "I am"; I can say that I am, you can say it too.
We are struggling to make sure of the permanence, continuity, and safety of this enduring core, this center and soul of our being which we call "I". ...We do not actually understand that there is no security until we realize that this "I" does not exist.
Alan Watts, The Wisdom of Insecurity
spidergoat said:Man has abandoned the natural intelligence of the body. That is why I say--it is my "doom song"--that the day man experienced that consciousness that made him feel separate and superior to the other animals, at that moment he began sowing the seeds of his own destruction. This warped view of life is slowly pushing the entire thinking towards total annihilation. There is nothing you can do to halt it.