Why Materialism Is Baloney and Analytic Idealism Explained. For part 1 click below: • Bernardo Kastrup and A...
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@AsifKhan-bv3iu28 күн бұрын
Fantastic presentation.
@patrickdelarosa77434 ай бұрын
One of the greatest minds of our time, thank you Bernardo 🙏
@JavierBonillaC4 ай бұрын
In Albert Camus' novel "The Stranger," Meursault's response to his cellmate about wanting to remember this life if there was an afterlife underscores the idea that memories are essential to personal identity. Without memory, any new existence is effectively a new person, which is equivalent to death. Camus suggests that it's our memories that give our lives meaning and continuity. Bernardo Kastrup's theories propose that individual consciousnesses are parts of a universal consciousness, and personal memories might persist in some form after death. However, if these memories are not accessible to the individual, it still feels like the end of personal identity. Without the ability to remember, the essence of who we are is lost. What are your thoughts on this perspective? Does losing memory equate to losing one's identity?