Well, it’s not as bad as it sounds, anyway. It’s forced relocation, not murder-murder.
How do you know what they believed? Mordern Judaism is very vague about the afterlife—the declassified material just mumbles something to the effect of “after the Singularity hits, the righteous will be thawed and live in transhuman utopia”, and the advanced manual can’t decide if it likes reincarnation or not. Do we have sources from back when?
Well, it’s not as bad as it sounds, anyway. It’s forced relocation, not murder-murder.
As I said, that’s debatable; most humans historically believed that’s what “death” consisted of, after all.
That’s not to say it’s wrong. Just debatable.
Modern Judaism is very vague about the afterlife—the declassified material just mumbles something to the effect of “after the Singularity hits, the righteous will be thawed and live in transhuman utopia”, and the advanced manual can’t decide if it likes reincarnation or not.
Eh?
Do we have sources from back when?
Google “sheol”. It’s usually translated as “hell” or “the grave” these days, to give the impression of continuity.
You sure? They believed in a gloomy underworld-style afterlife in those days.
Well, it’s not as bad as it sounds, anyway. It’s forced relocation, not murder-murder.
How do you know what they believed? Mordern Judaism is very vague about the afterlife—the declassified material just mumbles something to the effect of “after the Singularity hits, the righteous will be thawed and live in transhuman utopia”, and the advanced manual can’t decide if it likes reincarnation or not. Do we have sources from back when?
As I said, that’s debatable; most humans historically believed that’s what “death” consisted of, after all.
That’s not to say it’s wrong. Just debatable.
Eh?
Google “sheol”. It’s usually translated as “hell” or “the grave” these days, to give the impression of continuity.
There’s something to be said against equating transhumanism with religious concepts, but the world to come is an exact parallel.
I don’t know much about Kabbalah because I’m worried it’ll fry my brain, but Gilgul is a thing.
I always interpreted sheol as just the literal grave, but apparently it refers to an actual world. Thanks.
Well, it is if you expect SAIs to be able to reconstruct anyone, anyway. But thanks for clarifying.
Huh. You learn something new every day.