{"id":173144,"date":"2016-07-29T03:12:45","date_gmt":"2016-07-29T07:12:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/immortality-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/"},"modified":"2016-07-29T03:12:45","modified_gmt":"2016-07-29T07:12:45","slug":"immortality-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/immortality\/immortality-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/","title":{"rendered":"Immortality | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Immortality is the indefinite continuation of a persons    existence, even after death. In common parlance, immortality is    virtually indistinguishable from afterlife, but philosophically    speaking, they are not identical. Afterlife is the continuation    of existence after death, regardless of whether or not that    continuation is indefinite. Immortality implies a never-ending    existence, regardless of whether or not the body dies (as a    matter of fact, some hypothetical medical technologies offer    the prospect of a bodily immortality, but not an afterlife).  <\/p>\n<p>    Immortality has been one of mankinds major concerns, and even    though it has been traditionally mainly confined to religious    traditions, it is also important to philosophy. Although a wide    variety of cultures have believed in some sort of immortality,    such beliefs may be reduced to basically three non-exclusive    models: (1) the survival of the astral body resembling the    physical body; (2) the immortality of the immaterial soul (that    is an incorporeal existence); (3) resurrection of the body (or    re-embodiment, in case the resurrected person does not keep the    same body as at the moment of death). This article examines    philosophical arguments for and against the prospect of    immortality.  <\/p>\n<p>    A substantial part of the discussion on immortality touches    upon the fundamental question in the philosophy of mind: do    souls exist? Dualists believe souls do exist and survive the    death of the body; materialists believe mental activity is    nothing but cerebral activity and thus death brings the total    end of a persons existence. However, some immortalists believe    that, even if immortal souls do not exist, immortality may    still be achieved through resurrection.  <\/p>\n<p>    Discussions on immortality are also intimately related to    discussions of personal identity because any account of    immortality must address how the dead person could be identical    to the original person that once lived. Traditionally,    philosophers have considered three main criteria for personal    identity: the soul criterion , the body criterion and the    psychological criterion.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although empirical science has little to offer here, the field    of parapsychology has attempted to offer empirical evidence in    favor of an afterlife. More recently, secular futurists    envision technologies that may suspend death indefinitely (such    as Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence, and mind    uploading), thus offering a prospect for a sort of bodily    immortality.  <\/p>\n<p>    Discourse on immortality bears a semantic difficulty concerning    the word 'death. We usually define it in physiological terms    as the cessation of biological functions that make life    possible. But, if immortality is the continuation of life even    after death, a contradiction appears to come up (Rosemberg,    1998). For apparently it makes no sense to say that someone has    died and yet survived death. To be immortal is, precisely, not    to suffer death. Thus, whoever dies, stops existing; nobody may    exist after death, precisely because death means the end of    existence.  <\/p>\n<p>    For convenience, however, we may agree that death simply    means the decomposition of the body, but not necessarily the    end of a persons existence, as assumed in most    dictionary definitions. In such a manner, a person may die in    as much as their body no longer exists (or, to be more precise,    no longer holds vital signs: pulse, brain activity, and so    forth), but may continue to exist, either in an incorporeal    state, with an ethereal body, or with some other physical body.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some people may think of immortality in vague and general    terms, such as the continuity of a persons deeds and memories    among their friends and relatives. Thus, baseball player Babe    Ruth is immortal in a very vague sense: he is well remembered    among his fans. But, philosophically speaking, immortality    implies the continuation of personal identity. Babe Ruth may be    immortal in the sense that he is well remembered, but unless    there is someone that may legitimately claim I am Babe Ruth,    we shall presume Babe Ruth no longer exists and hence, is not    immortal.  <\/p>\n<p>    Despite the immense variety of beliefs on immortality, they may    be reduced to three basic models: the survival of the astral    body, the immaterial soul and resurrection (Flew, 2000). These    models are not necessarily mutually exclusive; in fact, most    religions have adhered to a combination of them.  <\/p>\n<p>    Much primitive religious thought conceives that human beings    are made up of two body substances: a physical body,    susceptible of being touched, smelt, heard and seen; and an    astral body made of some sort of mysterious ethereal substance.    Unlike the physical body, the astral body has no solidity (it    can go through walls, for example.) and hence, it cannot be    touched, but it can be seen. Its appearance is similar to the    physical body, except perhaps its color tonalities are lighter    and its figure is fuzzier.  <\/p>\n<p>    Upon death, the astral body detaches itself from the physical    body, and mourns in some region within time and space. Thus,    even if the physical body decomposes, the astral body survives.    This is the type of immortality most commonly presented in    films and literature (for example, Hamlets ghost).    Traditionally, philosophers and theologians have not privileged    this model of immortality, as there appears to be two    insurmountable difficulties: 1) if the astral body does exist,    it should be seen depart from the physical body at the moment    of death; yet there is no evidence that accounts for it; 2)    ghosts usually appear with clothes; this would imply that, not    only are there astral bodies, but also astral clothes  a claim    simply too extravagant to be taken seriously (Edwards, 1997:    21).  <\/p>\n<p>    The model of the immortality of the soul is similar to the    astral body model, in as much as it considers that human    beings are made up of two substances. But, unlike the astral    body model, this model conceives that the substance that    survives the death of the body is not a body of some other    sort, but rather, an immaterial soul. In as much as    the soul is immaterial, it has no extension, and thus, it    cannot be perceived through the senses. A few philosophers,    such as Henry James, have come to believe that for something to    exist, it must occupy space (although not necessarily physical    space), and hence, souls are located somewhere in space (Henry,    2007). Up until the twentieth century, the majority of    philosophers believed that persons are souls, and that human    beings are made up of two substances (soul and body). A good    portion of philosophers believed that the body is mortal and    the soul is immortal. Ever since Descartes in the seventeenth    century, most philosophers have considered that the soul is    identical to the mind, and, whenever a person dies, their    mental contents survive in an incorporeal state.  <\/p>\n<p>    Eastern religions (for example, Hinduism and Buddhism) and some    ancient philosophers (for example, Pythagoras and Plato)    believed that immortal souls abandon the body upon death, may    exist temporarily in an incorporeal state, and may eventually    adhere to a new body at the time of birth (in some traditions,    at the time of fertilization). This is the doctrine of    reincarnation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Whereas most Greek philosophers believed that immortality    implies solely the survival of the soul, the three great    monotheistic religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam)    consider that immortality is achieved through the resurrection of the body at the time of the    Final Judgment. The very same bodies that once constituted    persons shall rise again, in order to be judged by God. None of    these great faiths has a definite position on the existence of    an immortal soul. Therefore, traditionally, Jews, Christians    and Muslims have believed that, at the time of death, the soul    detaches from the body and continues on to exist in an    intermediate incorporeal state until the moment of    resurrection. Some others, however, believe that there is no    intermediate state: with death, the person ceases to exist, and    in a sense, resumes existence at the time of resurrection.  <\/p>\n<p>    As we shall see, some philosophers and theologians have    postulated the possibility that, upon resurrection, persons do    not rise with the very same bodies with which they once lived    (rather, resurrected persons would be constituted by a    replica). This version of the doctrine of the resurrection    would be better referred to as re-embodiment: the person    dies, but, as it were, is re-embodied.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most religions adhere to the belief in immortality on the basis    of faith. In other words, they provide no proof of the survival    of the person after the death of the body; actually, their    belief in immortality appeals to some sort of divine revelation    that, allegedly, does not require rationalization.  <\/p>\n<p>    Natural theology, however, attempts    to provide rational proofs of Gods existence. Some    philosophers have argued that, if we can rationally prove that    God exists, then we may infer that we are immortal. For, God,    being omnibenevolent, cares about us, and thus would not allow    the annihilation of our existence; and being just, would bring    about a Final Judgement (Swinburne, 1997). Thus, the    traditional arguments in favor of the existence of God    (ontological, cosmological, teleological) would indirectly    prove our immortality. However, these traditional arguments    have been notoriously criticized, and some arguments    against the existence of God have also been raised    (such as the problem of evil) (Martin, 1992; Smith, 1999).  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, some philosophers have indeed tried to    rationalize the doctrine of immortality, and have come up with    a few pragmatic arguments in its favor.  <\/p>\n<p>    Blaise Pascal proposed a famous argument in favor of the belief    in the existence of God, but it may well be extended to the    belief in immortality (Pascal, 2005). The so-called Pascals Wager argument goes roughly as    follows: if we are to decide to believe whether God exists or    not, it is wiser to believe that God does exist. If we rightly    believe that God exists, , we gain eternal bliss; if God does    not exist, we lose nothing, in as much as there is no Final    Judgment to account for our error. On the other hand, if we    rightly believe God does not exist, we gain nothing, in as much    as there is no Final Judgment to reward our belief. But, if we    wrongly believe that God does not exist, we lose eternal bliss,    and are therefore damned to everlasting Hell. By a calculation    of risks and benefits, we should conclude that it is better to    believe in Gods existence. This argument is easily extensible    to the belief in immortality: it is better to believe that    there is a life after death, because if in fact there is a life    after death, we shall be rewarded for our faith, and yet lose    nothing if we are wrong; on the other hand, if we do not    believe in a life after death, and we are wrong, we will be    punished by God, and if we are right, there will not be a Final    Judgment to reward our belief.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although this argument has remained popular among some    believers, philosophers have identified too many problems in it    (Martin, 1992). Pascals Wager does not take into account the    risk of believing in a false god (What if Baal were the real    God, instead of the Christian God?), or the risk of believing    in the wrong model of immortality (what if God rewarded belief    in reincarnation, and punished belief in resurrection?). The    argument also assumes that we are able to choose our beliefs,    something most philosophers think very doubtful.  <\/p>\n<p>    Other philosophers have appealed to other pragmatic benefits of    the belief in immortality. Immanuel Kant famously rejected in    his Critique of Pure Reason the traditional arguments    in favor of the existence of God; but in his Critique of    Practical Reason he put forth a so-called moral    argument. The argument goes roughly as follows: belief in God    and immortality is a prerequisite for moral action; if people    do not believe there is a Final Judgment administered by God to    account for deeds, there will be no motivation to be good. In    Kants opinion, human beings seek happiness. But in order for    happiness to coincide with moral action, the belief in an    afterlife is necessary, because moral action does not guarantee    happiness. Thus, the only way that a person may be moral and    yet preserve happiness, is by believing that there will be an    afterlife justice that will square morality with happiness.    Perhaps Kants argument is more eloquently expressed in Ivan    Karamazovs (a character from Dostoevskys The Brothers    Karamazov) famous phrase: If there is no God, then    everything is permitted... if there is no immortality, there is    no virtue.  <\/p>\n<p>    The so-called moral argument has been subject to some    criticism. Many philosophers have argued that it is indeed    possible to construe secular ethics, where appeal to God is    unnecessary to justify morality. The question why be moral?    may be answered by appealing to morality itself, to the need    for cooperation, or simply, to ones own pleasure (Singer,    1995; Martin, 1992). A vigilant God does not seem to be a prime    need in order for man to be good. If these philosophers are    right, the lack of belief in immortality would not bring about    the collapse of morality. Some contemporary philosophers,    however, align with Kant and believe that secular morality is    shallow, as it does not satisfactorily account for acts of    sacrifice that go against self-interest; in their view, the    only way to account for such acts is by appealing to a Divine    Judge (Mavrodes, 1995).  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet another pragmatic argument in favor of the belief in    immortality appeals to the need to find meaning in life.    Perhaps Miguel de Unamunos Del sentimiento trgico de la    vida is the most emblematic philosophical treatise    advocating this argument: in Unamunos opinion, belief in    immortality is irrational, but nevertheless necessary to avoid    desperation in the face of lifes absurdity. Only by believing    that our lives will have an ever-lasting effect, do we find    motivation to continue to live. If, on the contrary, we believe    that everything will ultimately come to an end and nothing will    survive, it becomes pointless to carry on any activity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Of course, not all philosophers would agree. Some philosophers    would argue that, on the contrary, the awareness that life is    temporal and finite makes living more meaningful, in    as much as we better appreciate opportunities (Heidegger,    1978). Bernard Williams has argued that, should life continue    indefinitely, it would be terribly boring, and therefore,    pointless (Williams, 1976). Some philosophers, however, counter    that some activities may be endlessly repeated without ever    becoming boring; furthermore, a good God would ensure that we    never become bored in Heaven (Fischer, 2009).  <\/p>\n<p>    Death strikes fear and anguish in many of us, and some    philosophers argue that the belief in immortality is a much    needed resource to cope with that fear. But, Epicurus famously    argued that it is not rational to fear death, for two main    reasons: 1) in as much as death is the extinction of    consciousness, we are not aware of our condition (if death is,    I am not; if I am, death is not); 2) in the same manner that    we do not worry about the time that has passed before we were    born, we should not worry about the time that will pass after    we die (Rist, 1972).  <\/p>\n<p>    At any rate, pragmatic arguments in favor of the belief in    immortality are also critiqued on the grounds that the    pragmatic benefits of a belief bear no implications on its    truth. In other words, the fact that a belief is beneficial    does not make it true. In the analytic tradition, philosophers    have long argued for and against the pragmatic theory of truth,    and depending on how this theory is valued, it will offer a    greater or lesser plausibility to the arguments presented    above.  <\/p>\n<p>    Plato was the first philosopher to    argue, not merely in favor of the convenience of accepting the    belief in immortality, but for the truth of the belief itself.    His Phaedo is a dramatic representation of Socrates    final discussion with his disciples, just before drinking the    hemlock. Socrates shows no sign of fear or concern, for he is    certain that he will survive the death of his body. He presents    three main arguments to support his position, and some of these    arguments are still in use today.  <\/p>\n<p>    First, Socrates appeals to cycles and opposites. He believes    that everything has an opposite that is implied by it.    And, as in cycles, things not only come from opposites, but    also go towards opposites. Thus, when something is hot, it was    previously cold; or when we are awake, we were previously    asleep; but when we are asleep, we shall be awake once again.    In the same manner, life and death are opposites in a cycle.    Being alive is opposite to being dead. And, in as much as death    comes from life, life must come from death. We come from death,    and we go towards death. But, again, in as much as death comes    from life, it will also go towards life. Thus, we had a life    before being born, and we shall have a life after we die.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most philosophers have not been persuaded by this argument. It    is very doubtful that everything has an opposite (What is the    opposite of a computer?) And, even if everything had an    opposite, it is doubtful that everything comes from its    opposite, or even that everything goes towards its opposite.  <\/p>\n<p>    Socrates also appeals to the theory of reminiscence, the view    that learning is really a process of remembering knowledge    from past lives. The soul must already exist before the birth    of the body, because we seem to know things that were not    available to us. Consider the knowledge of equality. If we    compare two sticks and we realize they are not equal, we form a    judgment on the basis of a previous knowledge of equality as    a form. That knowledge must come from previous lives.    Therefore, this is an argument in favor of the transmigration    of souls (that is, reincarnation or metempsychosis).  <\/p>\n<p>    Some philosophers would dispute the existence of the Platonic    forms, upon which this argument rests. And, the existence of    innate ideas does not require the appeal to previous lives.    Perhaps we are hard-wired by our brains to believe certain    things; thus, we may know things that were not available to us    previously.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet another of Socrates arguments appeals to the affinity    between the soul and the forms. In Platos understanding, forms    are perfect, immaterial and eternal. And, in as much as the    forms are intelligible, but not sensible, only the soul can    apprehend them. In order to apprehend something, the thing    apprehending must have the same nature as the thing    apprehended. The soul, then, shares the attributes of the    forms: it is immaterial and eternal, and hence, immortal.  <\/p>\n<p>    Again, the existence of the Platonic forms should not be taken    for granted, and for this reason, this is not a compelling    argument. Furthermore, it is doubtful that the thing    apprehending must have the same nature as the thing    apprehended: a criminologist need not be a criminal in order to    apprehend the nature of crime.  <\/p>\n<p>    Platos arguments take for granted that souls exist; he only    attempts to prove that they are immortal. But, a major area of    discussion in the philosophy of mind is the existence of the    soul. One of the doctrines that hold that the soul does exist    is called dualism; its name comes    from the fact that it postulates that human beings are made up    of two substances: body and soul. Arguments in favor of dualism    are indirectly arguments in favor of immortality, or at least    in favor of the possibility of survival of death. For, if the    soul exists, it is an immaterial substance. And, in as much as    it is an immaterial substance, it is not subject to the    decomposition of material things; hence, it is immortal.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most dualists agree that the soul is identical to the mind, yet    different from the brain or its functions. Some dualists    believe the mind may be some sort of emergent property of the    brain: it depends on the brain, but it is not identical to the    brain or its processes. This position is often labeled    property dualism, but here we are concerned with substance    dualism, that is, the doctrine that holds that the mind is a    separate substance (and not merely a separate property) from    the body, and therefore, may survive the death of the body    (Swinburne, 1997).  <\/p>\n<p>    Ren Descartes is usually considered    the father of dualism, as he presents some very ingenuous    arguments in favor of the existence of the soul as a separate    substance (Descartes, 1980). In perhaps his most celebrated    argument, Descartes invites a thought experiment: imagine you    exist, but not your body. You wake up in the morning, but as    you approach the mirror, you do not see yourself there. You try    to reach your face with your hand, but it is thin air. You try    to scream, but no sound comes out. And so on.  <\/p>\n<p>    Now, Descartes believes that it is indeed possible to imagine    such a scenario. But, if one can imagine the existence of a    person without the existence of the body, then persons are not    constituted by their bodies, and hence, mind and body are two    different substances. If the mind were identical to the body,    it would be impossible to imagine the existence of the mind    without imagining at the same time the existence of the body.  <\/p>\n<p>    This argument has been subject to much scrutiny. Dualists    certainly believe it is a valid one, but it is not without its    critics. Descartes seems to assume that everything that is    imaginable is possible. Indeed, many philosophers have long    agreed that imagination is a good guide as to what is possible    (Hume, 2010). But, this criterion is disputed. Imagination    seems to be a psychological process, and thus not strictly a    logical process. Therefore, perhaps we can imagine scenarios    that are not really possible. Consider the Barber Paradox. At    first, it seems possible that, in a town, a man shaves only    those persons that shave themselves. We may perhaps imagine    such a situation, but logically there cannot be such a    situation, as Bertrand Russell showed. The lesson to be learned    is that imagination might not be a good guide to possibility.    And, although Descartes appears to have no trouble imagining an    incorporeal mind, such a scenario might not be possible.    However, dualists may argue that there is no neat difference    between a psychological and a logical process, as logic seems    to be itself a psychological process.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes presents another argument. As Leibniz would later    formalize in the Principle of Identity of Indiscernibles, two    entities can be considered identical, if and only if, they    exhaustively share the same attributes. Descartes exploits this    principle, and attempts to find a property of the mind not    shared by the body (or vice versa), in order to argue that they    are not identical, and hence, are separate substances.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes states: There is a great difference between a mind    and a body, because the body, by its very nature, is something    divisible, whereas the mind is plainly indivisible. . . insofar    as I am only a thing that thinks, I cannot distinguish any    parts in me. . . . Although the whole mind seems to be united    to the whole body, nevertheless, were a foot or an arm or any    other bodily part amputated, I know that nothing would be taken    away from the mind (Descartes, 1980: 97).  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes believed, then, that mind and body cannot be the same    substance. Descartes put forth another similar argument: the    body has extension in space, and as such, it can be attributed    physical properties. We may ask, for instance, what the weight    of a hand is, or what the longitude of a leg is. But the mind    has no extension, and therefore, it has no physical properties.    It makes no sense to ask what the color of the desire to eat    strawberries is, or what the weight of Communist ideology is.    If the body has extension, and the mind has no extension, then    the mind can be considered a separate substance.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet another of Descartes arguments appeals to some difference    between mind and body. Descartes famously contemplated the    possibility that an evil demon might be deceiving him about the    world. Perhaps the world is not real. In as much as that    possibility exists, Descartes believed that one may be doubt    the existence of ones own body. But, Descartes argued that one    cannot doubt the existence of ones own mind. For, if one    doubts, one is thinking; and if one thinks, then it can be    taken for certain that ones mind exists. Hence Descartes    famous phrase: cogito ergo sum, I think, therefore,    I exist. Now, if one may doubt the existence of ones body, but    cannot doubt the existence of ones mind, then mind and body    are different substances. For, again, they do not share    exhaustively the same attributes.  <\/p>\n<p>    These arguments are not without critics. Indeed, Leibnizs    Principle of Indiscernibles would lead us to think that, in as    much as mind and body do not exhaustively share the same    properties, they cannot be the same substance. But, in some    contexts, it seems possible that A and B may be identical, even    if that does not imply that everything predicated of A can be    predicated of B.  <\/p>\n<p>    Consider, for example, a masked man that robs a bank. If we    were to ask a witness whether or not the masked man robbed the    bank, the witness will answer yes!. But, if we were to ask    the witness whether his father robbed the bank, he may answer    no. That, however, does not imply that the witness father is    not the bank robber: perhaps the masked man was the witness    father, and the witness was not aware of it. This is the    so-called Masked Man Fallacy.  <\/p>\n<p>    This case forces us to reconsider Leibnizs Law: A is identical    to B, not if everything predicated of A is predicated of B, but    rather, when A and B share exhaustively the same properties.    And, what people believe about substances are not properties.    To be an object of doubt is not, strictly speaking, a property,    but rather, an intentional relation. And, in our case, to be    able to doubt the bodys existence, but not the minds    existence, does not imply that mind and body are not the same    substance.  <\/p>\n<p>    In more recent times, Descartes strategy has been used by    other dualist philosophers to account for the difference    between mind and body. Some philosophers argue that the mind is    private, whereas the body is not. Any person may know the state    of my body, but no person, including even possibly myself, can    truly know the state of my mind.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some philosophers point intentionality as another difference    between mind and body. The mind has intentionality, whereas the    body does not. Thoughts are about something, whereas    body parts are not. In as much as thoughts have intentionality,    they may also have truth values. Not all thoughts, of course,    are true or false, but at least those thoughts that pretend to    represent the world, may be. On the other hand, physical states    do not have truth values: neurons activating in the brain are    neither true, nor false.  <\/p>\n<p>    Again, these arguments exploit the differences between mind and    body. But, very much as with Descartes arguments, it is not    absolutely clear that they avoid the Masked Man Fallacy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Opponents of dualism not only reject their arguments; they also    highlight conceptual and empirical problems with this doctrine.    Most opponents of dualism are materialists: they believe that    mental stuff is really identical to the brain, or at the most,    an epiphenomenon of the brain. Materialism limits the prospects    for immortality: if the mind is not a separate substance from    the brain, then at the time of the brains death, the mind also    becomes extinct, and hence, the person does not survive death.    Materialism need not undermine all expectations of immortality    (see resurrection below), but it does undermine the immortality    of the soul.  <\/p>\n<p>    The main difficulty with dualism is the so-called interaction    problem. If the mind is an immaterial substance, how can it    interact with material substances? The desire to move my hand    allegedly moves my hand, but how exactly does that occur? There    seems to be an inconsistency with the minds immateriality:    some of the time, the mind is immaterial and is not affected by    material states, at other times, the mind manages to be in    contact with the body and cause its movement. Daniel Dennett    has ridiculed this inconsistency by appealing to the    comic-strip character Casper. This friendly ghost is immaterial    because he is able to go through walls. But, all of a sudden,    he is also able to catch a ball. The same inconsistency appears    with dualism: in its interaction with the body, sometimes the    mind does not interact with the body, sometimes it does    (Dennett, 1992).Dualists have offered some solutions to this    problem. Occasionalists hold that God directly causes material    events. Thus, mind and body never interact. Likewise,    parallelists hold that mental and physical events are    coordinated by God so that they appear to cause each other, but    in fact, they do not. These alternatives are in fact rejected    by most contemporary philosophers.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some dualists, however, may reply that the fact that we cannot    fully explain how body and soul interact, does not imply that    interaction does not take place. We know many things happen in    the universe, although we do not know how they happen.    Richard Swinburne, for instance, argues as follows: That    bodily events cause brain events and that these cause pains,    images, and beliefs (where their subjects have privileged    access to the latter and not the former), is one of the most    obvious phenomena of human experience. If we cannot explain how    that occurs, we should not try to pretend that it does not    occur. We should just acknowledge that human beings are not    omniscient, and cannot understand everything (Swinburne, 1997,    xii).  <\/p>\n<p>    On the other hand, Dualism postulates the existence of an    incorporeal mind, but it is not clear that this is a coherent    concept. In the opinion of most dualists, the incorporeal mind    does perceive. But, it is not clear how the mind can perceive    without sensory organs. Descartes seemed to have no problems in    imagining an incorporeal existence, in his thought experiment.    However, John Hospers, for instance, believes that such a    scenario is simply not imaginable:  <\/p>\n<p>    You see with eyes? No, you have no eyes, since you    have no body. But let that pass for a moment; you have    experiences similar to what you would have if you had    eyes to see with. But how can you look toward the foot of the    bed or toward the mirror? Isnt looking an activity that    requires having a body? How can you look in one direction or    another if you have no head to turn? And this isnt all; we    said that you cant touch your body because there is no body    there; how did you discover this?... Your body seems to be    involved in every activity we try to describe even though we    have tried to imagine existing without it. (Hospers, 1997: 280)  <\/p>\n<p>    Furthermore, even if an incorporeal existence were in fact    possible, it could be terribly lonely. For, without a body,    could it be possible to communicate with other minds. In Paul    Edwards words: so far from living on in paradise, a person    deprived of his body and thus of all sense organs would, quite    aside from many other gruesome deprivations, be in a state of    desolate loneliness and eventually come to prefer    annihilation. (Edwards, 1997:48). However, consider that, even    in the absence of a body, great pleasures may be attained. We    may live in a situation the material world is an illusion (in    fact, idealists inspired in Berkley lean towards such a    position), and yet, enjoy existence. For, even without a body,    we may enjoy sensual pleasures that, although not real,    certainly feel real. However, the problems with    dualism do not end there. If souls are immaterial and have no    spatial extension, how can they be separate from other souls?    Separation implies extension. Yet, if the soul has no    extension, it is not at all clear how one soul can be    distinguished from another. Perhaps souls can be distinguished    based on their contents, but then again, how could we    distinguish two souls with exactly the same contents? Some    contemporary dualists have responded thus: in as much as souls    interact with bodies, they have a spatial relationships to    bodies, and in a sense, can be individuated.  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps the most serious objection to dualism, and a    substantial argument in favor of materialism, is the minds    correlation with the brain. Recent developments in neuroscience    increasingly confirm that mental states depend upon brain    states. Neurologists have been able to identify certain regions    of the brain associated with specific mental dispositions. And,    in as much as there appears to be a strong correlation between    mind and brain, it seems that the mind may be reducible to the    brain, and would therefore not be a separate substance.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the last recent decades, neuroscience has accumulated data    that confirm that cerebral damage has a great influence on the    mental constitution of persons. Phineas Gages case is    well-known in this respect: Gage had been a responsible and    kind railroad worker, but had an accident that resulted in    damage to the frontal lobes of his brain. Ever since, Gage    turned into an aggressive, irresponsible person, unrecognizable    by his peers (Damasio, 2006).  <\/p>\n<p>    Departing from Gages case, scientists have inferred that    frontal regions of the brain strongly determine personality.    And, if mental contents can be severely damaged by brain    injuries, it does not seem right to postulate that the mind is    an immaterial substance. If, as dualism postulates, Gage had an    immortal immaterial soul, why didnt his soul remain intact    after his brain injury?  <\/p>\n<p>    A similar difficulty arises when we consider degenerative    neurological diseases, such as Alzheimers disease. As it is    widely known, this disease progressively eradicates the mental    contents of patients, until patients lose memory almost    completely. If most memories eventually disappear, what remains    of the soul? When a patient afflicted with Alzheimer dies, what    is it that survives, if precisely, most of his memories have    already been lost? Of course, correlation is not    identity, and the fact that the brain is empirically correlated    with the mind does not imply that the mind is the    brain. But, many contemporary philosophers of mind adhere to    the so-called identity theory: mental states are the exact    same thing as the firing of specific neurons.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dualists may respond by claiming that the brain is solely an    instrument of the soul. If the brain does not work properly,    the soul will not work properly, but brain damage does not    imply a degeneration of the soul. Consider, for example, a    violinist. If the violin does not play accurately, the    violinist will not perform well. But, that does not imply that    the violinist has lost their talent. In the same manner, a    person may have a deficient brain, and yet, retain her soul    intact. However, Occams Razor requires the more parsimonious    alternative: in which case, unless there is any compelling    evidence in its favor, there is no need to assume the existence    of a soul that uses the brain as its instrument.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dualists may also suggest that the mind is not identical to the    soul. In fact, whereas many philosophers tend to consider the    soul and mind identical, various religions consider that a    person is actually made up of by three substances: body, mind    and soul. In such a view, even if the mind degenerates, the    soul remains. However, it would be far from clear what the soul    exactly could be, if it is not identical to the mind.  <\/p>\n<p>    Any philosophical discussion on immortality touches upon a    fundamental issue concerning personspersonal identity. If we hope to survive    death, we would want to be sure that the person that continues    to exist after death is the same person that existed before    death. And, for religions that postulate a Final Judgment, this    is a crucial matter: if God wants to apply justice, the person    rewarded or punished in the afterlife must be the very    same person whose deeds determine the outcome.  <\/p>\n<p>    The question of personal identity refers to the criterion upon    which a person remains the same (that is, numerical identity)    throughout time. Traditionally, philosophers have discussed    three main criteria: soul, body and psychological continuity.  <\/p>\n<p>    According to the soul criterion for personal identity, persons    remains the same throughout time, if and only if, they retain    their soul (Swinburne, 2004). Philosophers who adhere to this    criterion usually do not think the soul is identical to the    mind. The soul criterion is favored by very few philosophers,    as it faces a huge difficulty: if the soul is an immaterial    non-apprehensible substance (precisely, in as much as it is not    identical to the mind), how can we be sure that a person    continues to be the same? We simply do not know if, in the    middle of the night, our neighbors soul has transferred into    another body. Even if our neighbors body and mental contents    remain the same, we can never know if his soul is the same.    Under this criterion, it appears that there is simply no way to    make sure someone is always the same person.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, there is a considerable argument in favor of the soul    criterion. To pursue such an argument, Richard Swinburne    proposes the following thought experiment: suppose Johns brain    is successfully split in two, and as a result, we get two    persons; one with the left hemisphere of Johns brain, the    other with the right hemisphere. Now, which one is John? Both    have a part of Johns brain, and both conserve part of Johns    mental contents. So, one of them must presumably be John,    but which one? Unlike the body and the mind, the soul is    neither divisible nor duplicable. Thus, although we do not know    which would be John, we do know that only one of the two    persons is John. And it would be the person that preserves    Johns souls, even if we have no way of identifying it. In such    a manner, although we know about Johns body and mind, we are    not able to discern who is John; therefore, Johns identity is    not his mind or his body, but rather, his soul (Swinburne,    2010: 68).  <\/p>\n<p>    Common sense informs that persons are their bodies (in fact,    that is how we recognize people ) but, although many    philosophers would dispute this, ordinary people seem    generally to adhere to such a view). Thus, under this    criterion, a person continues to be the same, if, and only if,    they conserve the same body. Of course, the body alters, and    eventually, all of its cells are replaced. This evokes the    ancient philosophical riddle known as the Ship of Theseus: the    planks of Theseus ship were gradually replaced, until none of    the originals remained. Is it still the same ship? There has    been much discussion on this, but most philosophers agree that,    in the case of the human body, the total replacement of atoms    and the slight alteration of form do not alter the numerical    identity of the human body.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, the body criterion soon runs into difficulties.    Imagine two patients, Brown and Robinson, who undergo surgery    simultaneously. Accidentally, their brains are swapped in    placed in the wrong body. Thus, Browns brain is placed in    Robinsons body. Let us call this person Brownson. Naturally,    in as much as he has Browns brain, he will have Browns    memories, mental contents, and so forth. Now, who is Brownson?    Is he Robinson with Browns brain; or is he Brown with    Robinsons body? Most people would think the latter (Shoemaker,    2003). After all, the brain is the seat of consciousness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Thus, it would appear that the body criterion must give way to    the brain criterion: a person continues to be the same, if and    only if, she conserves the same brain. But, again, we run into    difficulties. What if the brain undergoes fission, and each    half is placed in a new body? (Parfit, 1984). As a result, we    would have two persons pretending to be the original person,    but, because of the principle of transitivity, we know that    both of them cannot be the original person. And, it seems    arbitrary that one of them should be the original person, and    not the other (although, as we have seen, Swinburne bites the    bullet, and considers that, indeed, only one would be the    original person). This difficulty invites the consideration of    other criteria for personal identity.  <\/p>\n<p>    John Locke famously asked what we would think if a prince one    day woke up in a cobblers body, and the cobbler in a princes    body (Locke, 2009). Although the cobblers peers would    recognize him as the cobbler, he would have the memories of the    prince. Now, if before that event, the prince committed a    crime, who should be punished? Should it be the man in the    palace, who remembers being a cobbler; or should it be the man    in the workshop, who remembers being a prince, including his    memory of the crime?  <\/p>\n<p>    It seems that the man in the workshop should be punished for    the princes crime, because, even if that is not the princes    original body, that person is the prince, in as much    as he conserves his memories. Locke, therefore, believed that a    person continues to be the same, if and only if, she conserves    psychological continuity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although it appears to be an improvement with regards to the    previous two criteria, the psychological criterion also faces    some problems. Suppose someone claims today to be Guy Fawkes,    and conserves intact very vividly and accurately the memories    of the seventeenth century conspirator (Williams, 1976). By the    psychological criterion, such a person would indeed be Guy    Fawkes. But, what if, simultaneously, another person also    claims to be Guy Fawkes, even with the same degree of accuracy?    Obviously, both persons cannot be Guy Fawkes. Again, it would    seem arbitrary to conclude that one person is Guy Fawkes, yet    the other person isnt. It seems more plausible that    neither person is Guy Fawkes, and therefore, that    psychological continuity is not a good criterion for personal    identity.  <\/p>\n<p>    In virtue of the difficulties with the above criteria, some    philosophers have argued that, in a sense, persons do not    exist. Or, to be more precise, the self does not endure    changes. In David Humes words, a person is 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 (Hume, 2010: 178). This is the    so-called bundle theory of the self.  <\/p>\n<p>    As a corollary, Derek Parfit argues that, when considering    survival, personal identity is not what truly matters (Parfit,    1984). What does matter is psychological continuity. Parfit    asks us to consider this example.  <\/p>\n<p>    Suppose that you enter a cubicle in which, when you press a    button, a scanner records the states of all the cells in your    brain and body, destroying both while doing so. This    information is then transmitted at the speed of light to some    other planet, where a replicator produces a perfect organic    copy of you. Since the brain of your replica is exactly like    yours, it will seem to remember living your life up to the    moment when you pressed the button, its character will be just    like yours, it will be every other way psychologically    continuous with you. (Parfit, 1997: 311)  <\/p>\n<p>    Now, under the psychological criterion, such a replica will in    fact be you. But, what if the machine does not destroy the    original body, or makes more than one replica? In such a case,    there will be two persons claiming to be you. As we have seen,    this is a major problem for the psychological criterion. But,    Parfit argues that, even if the person replicated is not the    same person that entered the cubicle, it is psychologically    continuous. And, that is what is indeed relevant.  <\/p>\n<p>    Parfits position has an important implication for discussions    of immortality. According to this view, a person in the    afterlife is not the same person that lived before.    But, that should not concern us. We should be concerned about    the prospect that, in the afterlife, there will at least be one    person that is psychologically continuous with us.  <\/p>\n<p>    As we have seen, the doctrine of resurrection postulates that    on Judgment Day the bodies of every person who ever lived shall    rise again, in order to be judged by God. Unlike the doctrine    of the immortality of the soul, the doctrine of resurrection    has not been traditionally defended with philosophical    arguments. Most of its adherents accept it on the basis of    faith. Some Christians, however, consider that the resurrection    of Jesus can be historically demonstrated (Habermas, 2002;    Craig, 2008). And, so the argument goes, if it can be proven    that God resurrected Jesus from the dead, then we can expect    that God will do the same with every human being who has ever    lived.  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, the doctrine of resurrection runs into some    philosophical problems derived from considerations on personal    identity; that is, how is the person resurrected identical to    the person that once lived? If we were to accept dualism and    the soul criterion for personal identity, then there is not    much of a problem: upon the moment of death, soul and body    split, the soul remains incorporeal until the moment of    resurrection, and the soul becomes attached to the new    resurrected body. In as much as a person is the same, if and    only if, she conserves the same soul, then we may legitimately    claim that the resurrected person is identical to the person    that once lived.  <\/p>\n<p>    But, if we reject dualism, or the soul criterion for personal    identity, then we must face some difficulties. According to the    most popular one conception of resurrection, we shall be raised    with the same bodies with which we once lived. Suppose    that the resurrected body is in fact made of the very same    cells that made up the original body, and also, the resurrected    body has the same form as the original body. Are they    identical?  <\/p>\n<p>    Peter Van Inwagen thinks not (Van Inwagen, 1997). If, for    example, an original manuscript written by Augustine is    destroyed, and then, God miraculously recreates a manuscript    with the same atoms that made up Augustines original    manuscript, we should not consider it the very same manuscript.    It seems that, between Augustines original manuscript, and the    manuscript recreated by God, there is no spatio-temporal    continuity. And, if such continuity is lacking, then we cannot    legitimately claim that the recreated object is the same    original object. For the same reason, it appears that the    resurrected body cannot be identical to the original body. At    most, the resurrected body would be a replica.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, our intuitions are not absolutely clear. Consider, for    example, the following case: a bicycle is exhibited in a store,    and a customer buys it. In order to take it home, the customer    dismantles the bicycle, puts its pieces in a box, takes it    home, and once there, reassembles the pieces. Is it the same    bicycle? It certainly seems so, even if there is no    spatio-temporal continuity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, there is room to doubt that the resurrected body    would be made up of the original bodys same atoms. We know    that matter recycles itself, and that due to metabolism, the    atoms that once constituted the human body of a person may    later constitute the body of another person. How could God    resurrect bodies that shared the same atoms? Consider the case    of cannibalism, as ridiculed by Voltaire:  <\/p>\n<p>    A soldier from Brittany goes into Canada; there, by a very    common chance, he finds himself short of food, and is forced to    eat an Iroquis whom he killed the day before. The Iroquis had    fed on Jesuits for two or three months; a great part of his    body had become Jesuit. Here, then, the body of a soldier is    composed of Iroquis, of Jesuits, and of all that he had eaten    before. How is each to take again precisely what belongs to    him? And which part belongs to each? (Voltaire, 1997: 147)  <\/p>\n<p>    However, perhaps, in the resurrection, God neednt resurrect    the body. If we accept the body criterion for personal    identity, then, indeed, the resurrected body must be the same    original body. But, if we accept the psychological criterion,    perhaps God only needs to recreate a person psychologically    continuous with the original person, regardless of whether or    not that person has the same body. John Hick believes this is    how God could indeed proceed (Hick, 1994).  <\/p>\n<p>    Hick invites a thought experiment. Suppose a man disappears in    London, and suddenly someone with his same looks and    personality appears in New York. It seems reasonable to    consider that the person that disappeared in London is the same    person that appeared in New York. Now, suppose that a man dies    in London, and suddenly appears in New York with the same looks    and personality. Hick believes that, even if the cadaver is in    London, we would be justified to claim that the person that    appears in New York is the same person that died in London.    Hicks implication is that body continuity is not needed for    personal identity; only psychologically continuity is    necessary.  <\/p>\n<p>    And, Hick considers that, in the same manner, if a person dies,    and someone in the resurrection world appears with the same    character traits, memories, and so forth, then we should    conclude that such a person in the resurrected world is    identical to the person who previously died. Hick admits the    resurrected body would be a replica, but as long as the    resurrected is psychologically continuous with the original    person, then it is identical to the original person.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet, in as much as Hicks model depends upon a psychological    criterion for personal identity, it runs into the same problems    that we have reviewed when considering the psychological    criterion. It seems doubtful that a replica would be identical    to the original person, because more than one replica could be    recreated. And, if there is more than one replica, then they    would all claim to be the original person, but obviously, they    cannot all be the original person. Hick postulates that we can    trust that God would only recreate exactly one    replica, but it is not clear how that would solve the problem.    For, the mere possibility that God could make more than one    replica is enough to conclude that a replica would not be the    original person.  <\/p>\n<p>    Peter Van Inwagen has offered a somewhat extravagant solution    to these problems: Perhaps at the moment of each mans death,    God removes his corpse and replaces it with a simulacrum which    is what is burned or rots. Or perhaps God is not quite so    wholesale as this: perhaps He removes for safekeeping only    the core person  the brain and central nervous system  or    even some special part of it (Van Inwagen, 1997: 246). This    would seem to solve the problem of spatio-temporal continuity.    The body would never cease to exist, it would only be stored    somewhere else until the moment of resurrection, and therefore,    it would conserve spatio-temporal continuity. However, such an    alternative seems to presuppose a deceitful God (He would make    us believe the corpse that rots is the original one, when in    fact, it is not), and would thus contradict the divine    attribute of benevolence (a good God would not lie), a major    tenet of monotheistic religions that defend the doctrine of    resurrection.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some Christian philosophers are aware of all these    difficulties, and have sought a more radical solution: there is    no criterion for personal identity over time. Such a view is    not far from the bundle theory, in the sense that it is    difficult to precise how a person remains the same over time.    This position is known as anti-criterialism, that is, there    is no intelligible criterion for personal identity; Trenton    Merricks (1998) is its foremost proponent. By doing away with    criteria for personal identity, anti-criterialists purport to    show that objections to resurrection based on difficulties of    personal identity have little weight, precisely because we    should not be concerned about criteria for personal identity.  <\/p>\n<p>    The discipline of parapsychology purports to prove that there    is scientific evidence for the afterlife; or at least, that    there is scientific evidence for the existence of paranormal    abilities that would imply that the mind is not a material    substance. Originally founded by J.B.S. Rhine in the 1950s,    parapsychology has fallen out of favor among contemporary    neuroscientists, although some universities still support    parapsychology departments.  <\/p>\n<p>    Parapsychologists usually claim there is a good deal of    evidence in favor of the doctrine of reincarnation. Two pieces    of alleged evidence are especially meaningful: (1) past-life    regressions; (2) cases of children who apparently remember past    lives.  <\/p>\n<p>    Under hypnosis, some patients frequently have regressions and    remember events from their childhood. But, some patients have    gone even further and, allegedly, have vivid memories of past    lives. A few parapsychologists take these as so-called    past-life regressions as evidence for reincarnation    (Sclotterbeck, 2003).  <\/p>\n<p>    However, past-life regressions may be cases of    cryptomnesia, that is, hidden memories. A person may    have a memory, and yet not recognize it as such. A well-known    case is illustrative: an American woman in the 1950s was    hypnotized, and claimed to be Bridey Murphy, an Irishwoman of    the 19th century. Under hypnosis, the woman offered    a fairly good description of 19th century Ireland,    although she had never been in Ireland. However, it was later    discovered that, as a child, she had an Irish neighbor. Most    likely, she had hidden memories of that neighbor, and under    hypnosis, assumed the personality of a 20th century    Irish woman.  <\/p>\n<p>    It must also be kept in mind that hypnosis is a state of high    suggestibility. The person that conducts the hypnosis may    easily induce false memories on the person hypnotized; hence,    alleged memories that come up in hypnosis are not trustworthy    at all.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some children have claimed to remember past lives.    Parapsychologist Ian Stevenson collected more than a thousand    of such cases (Stevenson, 2001). And, in a good portion of    those cases, children know things about the deceased person    that, allegedly, they could not have known otherwise.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, Stevensons work has been severely critiqued for its    methodological flaws. In most cases, the childs family had    already made contact with the deceaseds family before    Stevensons arrival; thus, the child could pick up information    and give the impression that he knows more than what he could    have known. Paul Edwards has also accused Stevenson of asking    leading questions towards his own preconceptions (Edwards,    1997: 14).  <\/p>\n<p>    Moreover, reincarnation runs into conceptual problems of its    own. If you do not remember past lives, then it seems that you    cannot legitimately claim that you are the same person whose    life you do not remember. However, a few philosophers claim    this is not a good objection at all, as you do not remember    being a very young child, and yet can still surely claim to be    the same person as that child (Ducasse, 1997: 199).  <\/p>\n<p>    Population growth also seems to be a problem for reincarnation:    according to defenders of reincarnation, souls migrate from one    body to another. This, in a sense, presupposes that the    number of souls remains stable, as no new souls are created,    they only migrate from body to body. Yet, the number of bodies    has consistently increased ever since the dawn of mankind.    Where, one may ask, were all souls before new bodies came to    exist? (Edwards, 1997: 14). Actually, this objection is not so    formidable: perhaps souls exist in a disembodied form as they    wait for new bodies to come up (DSouza, 2009: 57).  <\/p>\n<p>    During the heyday of Spiritualism (the religious movement that    sought to make contact with the dead), some mediums gained    prominence for their reputed abilities to contact the dead.    These mediums were of two kinds: physical mediums invoked    spirits that, allegedly, produced physical phenomena (for    example, lifting tables); and mental mediums whose bodies,    allegedly, were temporarily possessed by the spirits.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most physical mediums were exposed as frauds by trained    magicians. Mental mediums, however, presented more of a    challenge for skeptics. During their alleged possession by a    deceased persons spirit, mediums would provide information    about the deceased person that, apparently, could not have    possibly known. William James was    impressed by one such medium, Leonora Piper, and although he    remained somewhat skeptical, he finally endorsed the view that    Piper in fact made contact with the dead.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some parapsychologists credit the legitimacy of mental    mediumship (Almeder, 1992). However, most scholars believe that    mental mediums work through the technique of cold reading:    they ask friends and relatives of a deceased person questions    at a fast pace, and infer from their body language and other    indicators, information about the deceased person (Gardner,    2003).  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the rest here: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.iep.utm.edu\/immortal\/\" title=\"Immortality | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy\">Immortality | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Immortality is the indefinite continuation of a persons existence, even after death. In common parlance, immortality is virtually indistinguishable from afterlife, but philosophically speaking, they are not identical. Afterlife is the continuation of existence after death, regardless of whether or not that continuation is indefinite <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/immortality\/immortality-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187740],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-173144","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-immortality"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/173144"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=173144"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/173144\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=173144"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=173144"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=173144"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}