Ahh. I was thinking that “irreducible” implied “indivisible”.
Do religious people think that the soul is irreducible? Even if you can’t reduce it to atoms, maybe you could argue that it reduces to component memories, emotions and so forth.
The only religious belief I’m familiar with that’d be relevant is the doctrine of transsubstantiation, which holds that a wafer that goes through the communion process still has the form of a wafer, but it has the substance of Jesus’ body. (Likewise, wine becomes wine-like Jesus blood). The distinction between shape, quantity, taste, feel, etc. on one hand and substance on the other seems like it’s actually in line with what I said above, but I’m not enough of a theologian to say for sure.
Ahh. I was thinking that “irreducible” implied “indivisible”.
Do religious people think that the soul is irreducible? Even if you can’t reduce it to atoms, maybe you could argue that it reduces to component memories, emotions and so forth.
The only religious belief I’m familiar with that’d be relevant is the doctrine of transsubstantiation, which holds that a wafer that goes through the communion process still has the form of a wafer, but it has the substance of Jesus’ body. (Likewise, wine becomes wine-like Jesus blood). The distinction between shape, quantity, taste, feel, etc. on one hand and substance on the other seems like it’s actually in line with what I said above, but I’m not enough of a theologian to say for sure.
Well, IIRC Dante Alighieri did, mentioning inattentional blindness as evidence of that.