St Giordano Bruno
Well-Known Member
The soul exists in no location in particular, it is just a product of complex reactivity of 33 elements of the periodic table.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
The soul exists in no location in particular, it is just a product of complex reactivity of 33 elements of the periodic table.
A core belief of many religions is that there exists some sort of spiritual entity in each living person, usually called a "soul".
My question to theists on this board, is where does this soul reside? And what does the soul do, exactly?
A straightforward look at the evidence does not bode well for the existence of the soul. We can eliminate possible locations of the soul by noticing that people still retain their personalities, beliefs, etc., when they lose limbs, or when certain organs are transplanted. Eventually, we are left with the conclusion that the only important location for personality, belief, etc., is the brain.
So it appears that the soul must reside in the brain. However, it does not appear that the brain actually needs a "soul" to function. Indeed, the growing field of neuroscience has identified parts of the brain that are responsible for particular types of cognition, and there is a well-established model (i.e., the firing of interconnected neurons) that explains how such cognition takes place. In fact, such studies have even discovered parts of the brain responsible for moral judgments, and these judgments have been manipulated by such simple techniques as subjecting the relevant brain area to weak magnetic fields.
So, where is the soul, and what does it do?
Didn't Adam's soul exist wherever Adam was located ?
At creation, after receiving the breath of life, Adam became a living soul.
-Gen 2v7.
Adam's soul [himself] was made from the dust [elements] of earth.
So, at death Adam would be a dead soul, or a lifeless soul. -Acts 3v23.
Seems a lot of people like to equate higher consciousness with the soul. With that only sentient being would have souls but certainly wouldn't be just humans, as if humans are so special. I agree with you that anything with life would have a soul but defining spirit as consciousness or life doesn't really leave much use for the words other than to distinguish animate matter from inanimate matter.I look on consciousness and the soul as one in the same thing. To be conscious a creature only needs sense organs to engage them to the outside world. So any creature with sense organs to make them aware of their environment has a soul or sorts. It did not have to wait for the evolution of Homo sapiens for a soul to be injected into it by some supernatural intervention, which I cannot possibly buy no matter how hard I try.
What if a soul is not something that we possess, but something that we are?
you believe the soul dies when the body dies, yet you made bibilical references of god referring to himself as having a soul. If god has a soul and the soul dies, then how do you explain the eternal existence of god. you referred to the concordance definition of a soul. is there two definitions of a soul (human soul and godly soul) or is a soul a soul. if there is only one definition of a soul, then the soul cannot die because god was, is and will always be.
Very good point. Indeed the soul could very well be, and I would say Is that which we Are (Being) and that which we Are becoming. Perhaps the soul is the very essence of being.
Xeper.
/Adramelek\
I found it interesting that at Hebrews [1v3; 9v24] that God is considered a person. The Greek uses the word for 'being' only in connection to God.
-Acts 17v29
Our soul [or life as a soul] is dependent on obedience to God. [Gen 2v4]
Disobedience can lead to: eternal death. -Acts 3v23; Jeremiah 51 vs39,57
the soul is the psyche, an encrustation which forms in life upon the spirit that animates both psyche and body.