Wonde_Alice_rland
Greenlighter
I've been in contemplation over the last few years on the relationship of the self to the possibility of an afterlife. I will first ask the question I am seeking an answer to, then I will explain where I currently stand on the topic. So, the question: What do you consider to be the self (ie. what makes you, you)? AND: If there is some sort of afterlife, which definition of the self experiences it?
My thoughts: Many people regard the self (whether they are this articulate or not), more specifically themselves, as the continued experience that the physical brain goes through as it passes through time in the body it is in. However I find that if one ponders the prospect of similarity, that the previous definition of self does not withstand criticism. I would not say that 6-year-old Alice is the same as 20-year-old Alice. So if I ask "what is Alice?" I personally cannot give two different answers (since 6YoA is not the same as 20YoA, giving these as answers would be two different answers). I would say that every instant our brain changes, however minutely, we are a different self. As support to this claim, something could not both change and be the same.
Now, what about an afterlife? If afterlife is similar to the Judeo-Christian theory, does the last conscious personality inhabiting the brain take over in the afterlife? But if that is only one of trillions of selves, then shouldn't every self have its own afterlife? Since those selves have passed and are gone, wouldn't they be in the afterlife now? Of course that means that both the self that ate a waffle at age 10 and the self that twisted its ankle at age 13 are in afterlife doing whatever they do. So trillions upon trillions of selves would just be existing in the afterlife.
I'm afraid this is where I must end, as I myself am puzzled after this point.
As always, thank you very much, your response is appreciated.
My thoughts: Many people regard the self (whether they are this articulate or not), more specifically themselves, as the continued experience that the physical brain goes through as it passes through time in the body it is in. However I find that if one ponders the prospect of similarity, that the previous definition of self does not withstand criticism. I would not say that 6-year-old Alice is the same as 20-year-old Alice. So if I ask "what is Alice?" I personally cannot give two different answers (since 6YoA is not the same as 20YoA, giving these as answers would be two different answers). I would say that every instant our brain changes, however minutely, we are a different self. As support to this claim, something could not both change and be the same.
Now, what about an afterlife? If afterlife is similar to the Judeo-Christian theory, does the last conscious personality inhabiting the brain take over in the afterlife? But if that is only one of trillions of selves, then shouldn't every self have its own afterlife? Since those selves have passed and are gone, wouldn't they be in the afterlife now? Of course that means that both the self that ate a waffle at age 10 and the self that twisted its ankle at age 13 are in afterlife doing whatever they do. So trillions upon trillions of selves would just be existing in the afterlife.
I'm afraid this is where I must end, as I myself am puzzled after this point.
As always, thank you very much, your response is appreciated.