gruntlabor
Well-known Member
- Location
 - Last Frontier, Age 83
 
I don't see the human body ever being immortale, or our consciousness being harvested and transferred to another vessel.
I don't see the human body ever being immortale, or our consciousness being harvested and transferred to another vessel.
Especially if all of your family members are long since dead.Who’d want to live to 300 years old ?![]()
Right now there is technology that will transfer the consciousness of a dying person into an AI, essentially preserving that person forever.
If only we look inside ourselves --all the answers are there! After all, we --I mean our particles, ARE a part of the universe.... you all already have what you are looking for, and for all intents and purposes that includes immortality. Yes, the body dies and returns to dust, dust to dust, but don't you know you are more than that? Don't you feel it, in your heart, and in your bones?
You have an essence within you, hidden behind and beneath your persona, that which you think you are, what some call the ego or self-identity. This is the true you, and it has a mission, and a purpose, and a fate, which is to go through whatever it must, and for however long it must, in order to experience and know itself. It is the very process of creation itself, and it is unfolding before you right now, and for all eternity.
Call it the trick of finding what you didn’t lose. Or of always arriving at the place you never left. Existing’s tricky, but to live is a gift.
I just read that our bodies are composed mostly of water and just a few pounds of the almost embarrassingly common and inexpensive minerals and chemicals found on Earth. In other words, water and dirt.If only we look inside ourselves --all the answers are there! After all, we --I mean our particles, ARE a part of the universe.
I meant to add the words "in the works" after technology! This capability is not a matter of if, but when. How often have we seen things that used to be considered science fiction become science fact. You're right about the complexity. The technology won't be available to all and what rights would the "immortal" but not really human, have?Would I like immortality? Well, it's not like I want to die, so yeah, I'd like to be immortal.
However, that comes with caveats. Be immortal in my body of today? Hell no. My body at 21? Hell yes.
Then we have simple biology. The human body is so complex, it's difficult to imagine anything other than a robotic future. We're so fragile, and systems in our body so reliant on other systems. Then you have viruses, bacteria's, predatory animals, and all the ways we've invented to kill ourselves (planes, cars, electricity, and so on.) I can't see the human body being possible of immortality, not unless some super biological healing tool was found.
I think if you dig into this you'll find it's very fanciful, and not possible today. I expect we can recreate a map of the brain cells and neurons, and the connection between them, but I'm not sure how a simple electromagnetic map would translate to remembering specifics, such as a dogs name. If they could do as you suggest, the treatment for diseases like Alzheimer's would be very different, imo. We simply don't have all the answers about how memory works right now, and we lack the tools to look inside our brains.
Still, in a scientific fiction, I can see something more akin to Robocop. In this movie, the brain and spine is transferred from a man to a robotic interface. Eventually, that could be a way forward. We'd be less susceptible to disease and the changing weather conditions. As our planet becomes less friendly to humans, a robotic future would flourish.
I do believe we will one day move beyond our solar system and inhabit other worlds. We have about 7 billion years of evolution to go before the Sun decides to snack on Earth. Think of the pace of change today, and then that rate over 7 billion years! So, while I believe humans will some day go beyond Earth, I don't think it'll be in our current form. I think it'll be more robotic.
It's a complex problem!
I meant to add the words "in the works" after technology! This capability is not a matter of if, but when. How often have we seen things that used to be considered science fiction become science fact. You're right about the complexity. The technology won't be available to all and what rights would the "immortal" but not really human, have?
...I would like to give that a shot, might turn out to be interesting.Who’d want to live to 300 years old ?![]()
How what? He says just believe in him, that gives you eternal life.Jesus said to Martha, " I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in Me will live even if he dies, and everyone who lives and believes in Me will never die.
that summed it up rather neatly actually - this is the meaning of life? and then we wanna ask yes but how??
You have an essence within you, hidden behind and beneath your persona, that which you think you are, what some call the ego or self-identity.
The most meagre and non-committal hypothesis is that of Hume. “Mankind,” he says, “are nothing but a bundle or collection of different perceptions, which succeed each other with an inconceivable rapidity and are in a perpetual flux and movement.”
An almost identical answer is given by the Buddhists, whose doctrine of anatta is the denial of any permanent soul, existing behind the flux of experience and the various psycho-physical skandhas (closely corresponding to Hume’s “bundles”), which constitute the more enduring elements of personality.
Hume and the Buddhists give a sufficiently realistic description of selfness in action; but they fail to explain how or why the bundles ever became bundles. Did their constituent atoms of experience come together of their own accord? And, if so, why, or by what means, and within what kind of a non-spatial universe?
To give a plausible answer to these questions in terms of anatta is so difficult that we are forced to abandon the doctrine in favour of the notion that, behind the flux and within the bundles, there exists some kind of permanent soul, by which experience is organized and which in turn makes use of that organized experience to become a particular and unique personality.
This is the view of the orthodox Hinduism, from which Buddhist thought parted company, and of almost all European thought from before the time of Aristotle to the present day. But whereas most contemporary thinkers make an attempt to describe human nature in terms of a dichotomy of interacting psyche and physique, or an inseparable wholeness of these two elements within particular embodied selves, all the exponents of the Perennial Philosophy make, in one form or another, the affirmation that man is a kind of trinity composed of body, psyche and spirit. Selfness or personality is a product of the first two elements. The third element … is akin to, or even identical with, the divine Spirit that is the Ground of all being. Man’s final end, the purpose of his existence, is to love, know and be united with the immanent and transcendent Godhead.
The Gospels are not as synoptic as people make them out to be. They all have their own agenda, and the first, ascribed to Mark, has the transfiguration exactly in the middle of the Gospel. From then on, Jesus descends, not just the mountain but into arrest and crucifixion. Essentially, this is a perfect example of a tragedy in Greek tradition. It also figures because the history of thought shows how each time someone brings along a new paradigm, someone in authority doesn't like it, and very often, that person ends up incarcerated or killed.Further in all 3 synoptic gospels, apostles witnessed its reality during the Transfiguration.
I think that the broader sense of what I was saying is clear enough.who said love wasn't immortal?
Read Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. It is not a future I would welcome.Do you think humans will ever become immortal through enhancements from technology? I do think so. Maybe people will live to be several hundred years old or just last forever. Vaccines will be perfected to prevent disease and if our bodies and minds don't wear out anything is possible. What do you think about this? Do you see it as a possibility for the future of human kind? What's your take on this.
I get the feeling that we are, in some ways, in the middle of it.Read Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. It is not a future I would welcome.