Are there any core principles of the mind that means it HAS to exist?
"Shes my soul mate" "He has no soul" .. just seems very vague and abstract and to me.. meaningless.
Initially you would be the same but in a different body but you would adapt to your new body and eventually change the way you are, just like when people move to a different country or what not.. they may change who they are; to a certain degree. People would treat you different and that would eventually change your behavior and who you are. Your body cells die and replace themselves all the time anyway so when you die you're in a completely different body to when you was born, the brain cells don't change. I guess the input would be different in a new body but the processing of that input would be the same.jesslem wrote:Imagine that you had undergone a brain transplant. Would you still be yourself in another body or would cease to be?
No idea what a soul is so its hard to answer. How do you answer if an abstract thing stays with you in an actual brain, that has to be a hard, if not impossible, question to answer unless you have a solid definition of what a soul is.jesslem wrote:Would you agree that your soul, whatever it may be, would go with you?
Again, I dunno how you can argue either way.. a soul dying is an abstract (and mostly meaningless to me) event whereas a transplant of your actual brain would be a very real event.jesslem wrote:Would you say that your soul had died in the transplant? Does the death of your soul in this case equate to death in the traditional sense?

