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Epicurus's thoughts on death were:

-Death is the cessation of sensation
-Good and evil only make sense in terms of sensation
Therefore: Death is neither good nor evil

My (sort of related) question about death:

I was wondering if it's possible to rationally believe in a soul after death, but that after death there is still a complete cessation of sensation?

1.) One with a soul must have the ability to remain some level of consciousness after physical death.

2.) Consciousness does not require the ability to feel sensation ("Floating Man experiment" by Avicenna).

3.) Therefore: having a soul requires no sensation after death (but does not require a lack of sensation after death).

4.) In order to be "alive", sensation is required. Since the afterlife is "life after death", the afterlife requires sensation.

Then can you rationally believe in the soul (that some level of consciousness after physical death exists), but not in the afterlife (something which requires sensation)?

An idea: Does it depend on whether or not we pick a case in which one is or is not feeling sensation and holding consciousness at the same time?

Note: The question Does idealism allow for thought without any sensory input? Is discussing the validity of statement 2, not addressing my overall question. I would also argue that due to the "Floating Man experiment" by Avicenna, statement 2 has been fairly well proven.

Joachim
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  • I am asking if it is rational to believe that "you" is not just your body, that you have a soul; while believing at the same time that there is no life whatsoever after death. – Tobias Ethercroft Nov 16 '18 at 01:26
  • If you think that the soul dies with the body? Is There a name for that viewpoint? – Tobias Ethercroft Nov 16 '18 at 18:31
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    Most reincarnation beliefs presuppose a soul and no afterlife -- at least no afterlife other than another life. One of the most straightforward of these, Buddhism, actively seeks the cessation of sensation in 'nothingness', achieved by dying without attachments. So this is rational enough that it is the core of some of our more rationalistic religions. –  Dec 16 '18 at 05:37
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    @jobermark - Not 'nothingness' (praise the Lord) but no-thing-ness. Often described as 'Being, Consciousness, Bliss'. 'Nothingness' would be what materialists look forward to. This view requires no 'souls'. . –  Dec 16 '18 at 11:39
  • If the afterlife is similar to an out-of-body experience or a lucid dream-state, one can say that there is perception of a different kind: the ability to see and hear the pure energy of specific forms. Also the ability for your own individual energetic form to consciously 'travel' or move around. And to think, and to observe. And to socialize or interact with other beings. Without the body, there is no pain or death. But the senses of sight and hearing remain, somehow. I'm not sure about scent or taste, but I suspect they survive somehow, as does touch, warmth, coolness (in some fashion). – Bread Dec 16 '18 at 13:20
  • @Tobias_Ethercroft (Substance) monism, or, at least, a 'subcategory' of it? – Joachim Dec 16 '18 at 18:06
  • Buddhists definitely do not believe that final nirvana is consciousness! which sutra or sastra are your referring to @PeterJ –  Dec 16 '18 at 21:22
  • non abiding and final nirvana, often called bliss eternity purity and self (do they have a standard order?), is conventionally thought as the termination of the skandhas, which include consciousness (of bodily contact and so on). if you equate consciosuness with the buddha self then sure, but surely that would be a heresy in buddhism @PeterJ ? –  Dec 16 '18 at 21:54
  • i'm guessing you've misunderstood consciousness only, yogacara buddhism, as meaning that nirvana is consciousness. you could ask on the buddhist stackexchange if that's right. ps i think of the skandhas as defining the body –  Dec 16 '18 at 22:00
  • I think perhaps were using 'consciousness' in different ways. I'd add in the proviso that Nirvana is no different from Samsara and both are conceptual distinctions –  Dec 17 '18 at 12:13
  • PS - Wiki is quite good on this and gives the various meaning of Nirvana in current use. –  Dec 17 '18 at 13:06
  • I think the question allows for the kind of 'death beyond death' that these worldviews espouse. Whether you want to picture complete cessation from information as bliss or nonexistence, it is not an afterlife of the sort the OP seems to object to. Arguing out orthodoxies, when we haven't even chosen a given tradition is a waste of time. –  Dec 17 '18 at 22:36
  • @jobermark - Good point. –  Dec 19 '18 at 13:16
  • But sensation of incoming death is possible. – rus9384 Jan 18 '19 at 20:53
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    Also, the idea that soul dies with body is the original one. Both in PIE and semitic languages it means "breathe". So, you die and don't breathe, no soul after that therefore. (The word "soul" itself is not derived from PIE, but appeared later) – rus9384 Jan 19 '19 at 07:20