dewinthemorning | Will My Consciousness Be Repeated in Another Person in the Future? @dewinthemorning | Uploaded March 2014 | Updated October 2024, 9 hours ago.
First answer: Here I give some facts about the structure and the interconnections of neurons in the brain which shows that there can't be another consciousness like yours in the future, in the past, or in the present. Not for nothing it has been said "The human brain is the most complex thing in the universe, as far as we know."
Judson Herrick's book "The Brain of Rats and Man":
archive.org/details/brainsofratsmens00herr
My previous video on hard determinism:
youtube.com/watch?v=TFGJMc69BnM
You should watch also this video on the brain:
youtube.com/watch?v=kMKc8nfPATI&list=FLDOzhJ5voPQ0VpIU-7COsKg
Second answer: The experiences you go through in life makes you you. Nobody else will ever have exactly the same experiences.
A third answer can be given, saying that this person talks like Hegel, whose idealistic philosophy has been thoroughly refuted, starting from when he was still alive, then the Young Hegelians shortly after his death, and finishing soon after that with the philosophy of Karl Marx. The person who asks this question, like Hegel, takes a word, "consciousness", as if it's a thing (when there is a word, there is a thing, lol). Consciousness is different, it's not a thing, to be "repeated"!
First answer: Here I give some facts about the structure and the interconnections of neurons in the brain which shows that there can't be another consciousness like yours in the future, in the past, or in the present. Not for nothing it has been said "The human brain is the most complex thing in the universe, as far as we know."
Judson Herrick's book "The Brain of Rats and Man":
archive.org/details/brainsofratsmens00herr
My previous video on hard determinism:
youtube.com/watch?v=TFGJMc69BnM
You should watch also this video on the brain:
youtube.com/watch?v=kMKc8nfPATI&list=FLDOzhJ5voPQ0VpIU-7COsKg
Second answer: The experiences you go through in life makes you you. Nobody else will ever have exactly the same experiences.
A third answer can be given, saying that this person talks like Hegel, whose idealistic philosophy has been thoroughly refuted, starting from when he was still alive, then the Young Hegelians shortly after his death, and finishing soon after that with the philosophy of Karl Marx. The person who asks this question, like Hegel, takes a word, "consciousness", as if it's a thing (when there is a word, there is a thing, lol). Consciousness is different, it's not a thing, to be "repeated"!