this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2024
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no it did answer it, the answer is "no".
the easiest one is brain damage or drugs altering your consciousness...
if your mind can be permanently damaged or significantly altered via brain changes, then it's in your brain.
but there's a lot of other reasons the "soul" myth doesn't make sense.
Really? I'd be very interested in seeing a peer reviewed article in Nature in which someone reputable claims to have disproven the existence of the soul (especially without making a bunch of other ontological assumptions first). Can you point me to one?
As far as I can tell, the existence of a soul, like the existence of God, is inherently a non-scientific proposition--i.e., it is not falsifiable. But correct me if I'm wrong.
It is primarily not falsifiable, because there is no clear definition of a soul. But something not being falsifiable or provable also means that it has no impact on reality. If it had an impact, we could measure that impact to prove that it's there.
pretty sure both of those concepts have only remained 'unfalsifiable' via the immense power of shifting the goalposts whenever the evidence disproves them until they become so removed from reality as to be essentially meaningless.
It hasn't answered it because it simply isn't within the scope of science to be able to answer it. As has been pointed out elsewhere, you can't point to any peer reviewed papers listing the evidence against a soul.
At best you can play the "no evidence" card, which underlines my point that science cannot prove/disprove it because it's out of scope.