Satori
Destructosaur
Originally posted by metalmancpa
I am in tune with the "reality" of my short life span, but why should I believe and 100% trust what "knowledge" I have gathered?
You shouldn't, you should just go with whatever reason dictates to you is the most likely scenario.
What's wrong with casting a big question mark in all that we know without it affecting what I do everyday?
As long as it doesn't impact the way you live your life or your decision making, I don't see any harm in that at all. I only take issue with those who dedicate their lives to this sort of thing without ANY solid reasons for doing so because it can cloud's one's ability to think straight (and it does, for most people). We live in the here and now and that's what requires our attention/consideration, not some supposed afterlife which most likely does not exist.
It may get way to complex to understand - but being able to comprehend that these complexities exist, and not having them ruin your life, is part of living. I don't let any thoughts of afterlife keep me alive - but I also won't sit back and say "It's all crap" to a theory I truly don't understand.
But according to every bit of evidence and plain old common sense we have, it does appear to be all crap, and this is further demonstrated by the fact that humans have the distinct propensity to manufacture various forms of mythology which all seem to play on one's instinctual fear of death and desire for immortality (and these are the origins of these afterlife theories). Also, such theories also come packaged with a whole lot of nonsense, such as the innane presumptions that humans are completely distinct from all other life forms, that the universe is here for our sole benefit, and even that nonsense about their being a "god" character who created humans so that it would have someone to kiss it's ass (how incredibly short-sighted is that????). If the afterlife theories came on their own they may be worthy of consideration (if only they had a shread of logic or evidence to support them - which they do not), but they are always packaged with a load of other ridiculous nonsense which is obviously just ancient superstition and folklore fabricated by barbaric morons (ie. Christianity).
Something I've said many times, when we truly don't know something, it's best to simply admit we don't know and at the same time go with what is most reasonable, practical, likely, and which the most evidence supports. For example, if your wife is pregnant chances are the baby is going to survive (evidence supports this conclusion) so it's best to prepare for the new arrival, even though we don't know for sure if the baby will live we plan for the most likely outcome. The same can be said of the sun rising in the morning, it may not, indeed each night when we close our eyes it just may be the end of the world if an asteroid hits or something, but we still brush our teeth and lay out our clothes in preparation for the next day which may not come. In these uncertainties, we are going with what is most likely, so I can't figure out why it's so hard to do this when it comes to the afterlife question.
Consciousness is a function of the physical brain, and this can be shown by the fact that if someone suffers some sort of brain injury they can become a completely different person. I once read of a brain injury person who never liked sweets or classical music at all, then after the injury he couldn't get enough of these things, and some things he did like he now thinks are a waste of time. Since human consciousness is clearly a product of the physical brain (something we can accept as cold fact), it cannot exist independently of the brain, and *presuming* that it can is a lot like presuming that nuclear fusion (like in stars) can exist independently of hydrogen/helium/etc. It cannot, fusion is a product of condensed gas. Until we have a good reason for thinking something is true, we must conclude and act like it is not, otherwise we are living in a fantasy (I realize this doesn't apply to you MM, I'm just stating it for the benefit of others).
I'm reminded of something someone said here a long time ago, it went something like: "I hate my life and this world and the sooner I die the better because the next life will be so much better than this one." What the hell kinda reasoning is that? This poor kid is squandering his one shot at life in hopes of another which we have no good reason to conclude will come, and it's sad, very very sad.
For anyone who is deluded by a given religion: If "god" really wanted you to live your life in preparation for an afterlife it would have given you a good reason for doing so, but it has not, all you are going on is the word of barbaric, foolish, and corrupt humans who (not coincidentily) obtain weath and power through the propogation of folklore.
Reason should *always* prevail, any other type of thinking is potentially dangerous (and I would suggest leads to intellectual self-sodomization and unhappiness).
muwahaha,
Satori