What's the word "soul" mean to you? What associations does it bring up? Is the word fraught with baggage... smelling partly of brimstone? Does it have deep connection for you? Is it ineffable and abstract? Is it like a Platonic ideal of a thing, not to be pinned down? Is it boring? Is it a handy fiction?
I'd love to have a conversation about that, to the extent we can in an online journal. Anonymous comments are fine. My hope is to have common referents to continue in another post.
I invite you to make your first comment here, that is to say without reading the previous comments before-hand. Of course feel free to read other comments too, and discuss with others, but after your first comment. :) Thanks!
[Edit to add:
I can say: the breadth of peoples' responses is pretty darn cool.
So, I suggested a dialogue. What now?
It would be one thing if we were in the same room, and could look at each other and be clear that we're going to treat this with the respect it deserved. In that situation, I would say we could just ask each other open, honest questions; questions that don't try to convince the other of our own understanding; but help the other person to articulate their truth for us. And take it from there.
We could try something like that. I'd participate. Why don't we try that?
It might go without saying, but I'll say it anyway: you're welcome to not reply to someone's question, or to reply telling them you won't reply (and that's final; challenges are not OK).
]
I'd love to have a conversation about that, to the extent we can in an online journal. Anonymous comments are fine. My hope is to have common referents to continue in another post.
I invite you to make your first comment here, that is to say without reading the previous comments before-hand. Of course feel free to read other comments too, and discuss with others, but after your first comment. :) Thanks!
[Edit to add:
I can say: the breadth of peoples' responses is pretty darn cool.
So, I suggested a dialogue. What now?
It would be one thing if we were in the same room, and could look at each other and be clear that we're going to treat this with the respect it deserved. In that situation, I would say we could just ask each other open, honest questions; questions that don't try to convince the other of our own understanding; but help the other person to articulate their truth for us. And take it from there.
We could try something like that. I'd participate. Why don't we try that?
It might go without saying, but I'll say it anyway: you're welcome to not reply to someone's question, or to reply telling them you won't reply (and that's final; challenges are not OK).
]
Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 10:26 am (UTC)Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 04:19 pm (UTC)So here's my stab at a justification: In my experience, animals can perceive spiritual things and react to them. In particular we know that pets can bond with people, which I'd call a spiritual thing. But I don't think animals can make choices about their spiritual interactions, they merely have reactions. So I guess they can have conscious interactions meaning they are aware of their interactions, but they can't have... ah-hah!
Conscious was, on reflection, a poor word choice. How about "intentional interactions" meaning they are choosing when and how to interact spiritually.
I don't think they're choosing the kind of spiritual presence they have in the world, be it comforting, exciting, feral, aloof, etc. I think part of having a soul is the ability to make changes to how you are spiritually present--humans can choose to reach out or close off, or have different spiritual impact on the world. Though it's true many folks don't operate with spiritual intentionality, I think anyone could given enough effort and practice. For animals I don't think that possibility exists.
Now, having said all that, what do you think?
Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 04:46 pm (UTC)Or do they merely have reactions in those cases as well?
Asked another way: are you claiming that animals don't have intentional interactions in general, or just that they don't have intentional spiritual interactions (e.g., interactions with humans)?
Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 04:49 pm (UTC)Anyone have more info on that? As to my point, I was talking about spirituality but I'd say that demonstrated intentionality in physical areas would imply the ability to act intentionally in spiritual ones.
Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 05:04 pm (UTC)I'm not quite sure what "short-term" and "long-term" mean here. For example, I've certainly observed my dog sitting still for several minutes while showing signs of eagerness to do something else (e.g., squirming and straining and looking around and sometimes whimpering) in situations where she might eventually be rewarded for sitting still.
Is that an example of sacrificing a short-term desire for a long-term desire?
Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 05:21 pm (UTC)An example of human behavior related to this that I'm not sure I'd see in animals: a decision to give a non-family-member food even when it means you go hungry.
Re: Unsurprisingly technical and lengthy
Date: Friday, 23 July 2010 05:40 pm (UTC)