From nothing springs forth my existence. What do you make of existence appearing after death?
I guess in short, is it any more absurd to be born twice than once?
What happens when your code starts running? A process is allocated from memory, a class instantiates, and your program is..."born". It runs its code -- and maybe that code responds to inputs, does calculations....has....feelings....falls in love...or whatever :) Maybe it has the ability to interact with other processes and send messages to these other processes. Maybe it runs independently.
It's blissfully ignorant of the system within which it runs: The BIOS, the hardware, etc. Or maybe not! Maybe it even has the ability to probe its environment, learn about it, report on it (...run experiments on it), etc.
From your program's perspective, it is unique, it has perspective, it has experience.
And at some point, the program terminates. What happens? The code stops running. The memory is returned to the pool. Maybe new programs are launched (with no knowledge of previously-launched programs, unless they've left some sort of permanent record in a database or a file, etc.)
What is the "experience" of the program after it terminates (or before it was allocated from memory). Kind of an absurd question when you frame it that way, right? Programs don't have an experience when they're not executing! They simply don't exist at that abstraction level. But that certainly doesn't mean the computer is gone, or that other programs - that use the exact same memory - won't have similarly rich (or poor) experiences in the environment.
I know this a bit contrived...but maybe it's not? I find this logical and, frankly, it makes sense. We're all allocations from a global memory pool that continues to be recycled so long as the computer is running. And to answer OPs primary question, then: Yes, pre-birth is exactly the same as post-life, but both aren't so bad :)
In the midst there is a comforting fire to warm the hall. Outside, the storms of winter rain and snow are raging. This sparrow flies swiftly in through one window of the hall and out through another. While he is inside, the bird is safe from the winter storms, but after a few moments of comfort, he vanishes from sight into the wintry world from which he came.
So man appears on earth for a little while – but of what went before this life, or what follows, we know nothing.”
-- Bede, 7th c.
Life is a waterfall
We're one in the river and one again after the fall
Swimming through the void, we hear the Word
We lose ourselves, but we find it all
Serj Tankian, 21st c :)
As I see it, there is the experience of reality from a certain frame of reference, from which the experience of "you" that makes up you (body, mind, perceptions, memories, ...) is observed and a story about that "you", an Ego, is inferred. Upon death, the "you" that is observed (incl. memories and the general identity you hold) dies, dissipates, and is transformed. However, how can the experience of reality itself "end"? The absence of "your" existence always passes unnoticed from your frame of reference, because by definition there is no way to observe not existing.
Therefore, to assume there is nothing after death makes no sense IMHO. It logically makes more sense to assume there will be some form of existence after this life, and although we might have no recollection of this life, it seems most optimal to assume and act as if what you do in this life will impact the next somehow, through mechanisms we might be still ignorant of.
http://www.galactanet.com/oneoff/theegg_mod.html
https://qualiacomputing.com/2015/12/17/ontological-qualia-th...
Several traditions have differing concepts about reincarnation or transmigration: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reincarnation
The basic concept is that the soul or spirit (what makes you who you are minus your physical body) is eternal (has always existed and will exist forever) and that you will continue to live various lives or forms of existence.
Some other traditions believe that God created souls / spirits before the earth / universe existed and that physical existence on earth is a step in God's plan for those souls / spirits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-existence
You inconvenienced your Mom before you were born; you might not have noticed but she did. After you die your ability to annoy others drops rapidly.
I think some people call this concept “Eternal Oblivion”:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_oblivion
> is it any more absurd to be born twice than once
It depends if you’re approaching this from a scientific perspective or not.
From a scientific perspective, this isn’t something that we’ve been able to test or document in a controlled way. It’s not clear why some people claim to have vivid recollection or subtle feelings of past lives and others don’t. We also don’t know of any natural mechanism that would cause this to happen. So scientists are stuck on the hypothesis phase as no one to date has been able to construct a repeatable experiment. If no one can design a proper experiment and this hypothesis of multiple lives is unfalsifiable, then some would reference Russell’s Teapot and conclude that it’s not worth pursuing scientifically: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell's_teapot
But if you’re approaching it from a philosophical/religious perspective, then why not? You’re free to believe whatever helps you enjoy life and decrease suffering. You don’t have to justify it to anyone and it only matters if you find it absurd or not.
Given that there is evidence of fetal/prenatal memory, it implies there is pre-birth state, and thus not nothing:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prenatal_memory
Some argue (small) post-birth states are the same as pre-birth states; Jerry Coyne:
> If you are allowed to abort a fetus that has a severe genetic defect, microcephaly, spina bifida, or so on, then why aren’t you able to euthanize that same fetus just after it’s born? I see no substantive difference that would make the former act moral and the latter immoral.
* https://whyevolutionistrue.com/2017/07/13/should-one-be-allo...
* Via: https://evolutionnews.org/2017/08/why-does-this-evolutionary...
Yes, it's much more absurd because once you die, you don't exist anymore, you're lost to entropy forever. Things that appear after you're dead won't be you because your configuration was so rare that it might as well be unique, and more importantly because there isn't a continuous stream of consciousness to experience the pre- and post-death states.
Is the area/space in front of it the same (state) as the area behind the monitor?
With respect to "is there a monitor in this place" they are not that different.
But in front of the monitor is obviously different from behind the monitor. Whatever the monitor shows is only visible from the front. Likewise, what you did in your life, what you leave behind is only accessible after (admittedly also during) your life, but not before your birth.
Does the monitor project those things out of nothing? It won't work by magic, there is no creatio ex nihilo at work. Instead it has input connectors for power and display on the back. When viewed from the front it is easy to forget them, but they are mandatory to see anything. These connectors are like your pre-birth, your parents, your family history, their manners, their culture, the broader circumstances of your birth and life-to-come. These pre-birth things are the inputs that get transformed by you in your life into the things you project into your after-life.
I think the mystery of existence is part of what makes it special. And somehow, though it’s a kind of comfort to imagine that there is nothing in the great beyond, I sympathize with those who would hope for the best but plan for the worst.
There definitely is consciousness before birth. Check out the book: "Handbook of Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology", a Springer textbook.
I'll give you a quote:
> The NYU authors discovered that the offspring of women who were in their second month of pregnancy during the height of the Arab-Israeli war in June of 1967 (the “Six-Day War”) displayed a significantly higher incidence of schizophrenia over the following 21–33 years. The study also showed that the pattern was gender specific, affecting females more than males. It’s a very striking confirmation of something that has been suspected for quite some time,” said Malaspina. “The placenta is very sensitive to stress hormones in the mother,” explains Malaspina, “these hormones were probably amplified during the time of the war.”
You can be traumatized, and experience lifelong effects from that trauma if unresolved, before you're born!
There are also strong links between prenatal trauma and attachment/bonding issues; there's a whole chapter on that in the textbook.
Springer book: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-41716-1
I guess in short, is it any more absurd to eat a particular banana twice than to eat it once?
Yes. Yes it is more absurd.
When an ova is fertilized, the mother's cpus get to work on the program (DNA) soon creating an embryo. This is aided by cpus in the embryo DNA too. This process requires a lot of energy. After some period of time the embryos brain is sufficiently developed and has sufficient input channels to develop sensory awareness and some self awareness. But self awareness is not fully formed until sometime after birth.
All notions of "self" come from the workings of the brain. This too requires a lot of energy. When the brain is no longer supplied with energy, it shuts down and "self" no longer exists.
If pre-birth and post-death are both a nothing state, then the question is meaningless. (As is the existence between birth and death, for that matter.)
The only way for the question to have meaning is for pre-birth and/or post-death to be not nothing.
The atoms in your body and near it seem to conspire to keep this illusion of consciousness alive for a while, but then at some point the whole thing falls apart for some reason, and the illusion of consciousness disappears.
That illusion of consciousness corresponds for any given day to the particular arrangement of atoms in your body and near it (so that, if you had a machine which could exactly replicate the arrangement of atoms that constitute your self, then, you'd be able to completely clone yourself, a sort of second birth, if you will).
Anyways, call me a materialist.
I think our personality and memories didn't prexist our birth, and they don't exist anymore once we die. However, I think we are something more than our body, memories, personality and mind. The analogy that makes most sense to me is the idea that the universe is a kind of actor, and people are characters it's playing. The universe takes the form of people, with memories and so on, and it will do so again after my body dies. So I don't think there's 'nothing' on either side of life.
Perhaps somebody can better word this if they have similar views. My skills at writing are too limited here.
Your particular identity is a mode or process by which one local part of the universe experiences itself in a certain way (through your eyes, as it were). When you die, countless other lives and existences will continue to be modes through which the universe experiences itself, but not through the same identity.
This was captured by Carl Sagan, who said: "The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff. We are a way for the universe to know itself."
Here's one about "nothing":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkB-phz_2cA
> What is Nothing? What if nothing ever existed? Scientists claim that the universe came from nothing. But what's the nature of nothing? That's where the confusion lies. Featuring interviews with Richard Swinburne, Simon Blackburn, Robert Spitzer, Peter van Inwagen, Steven Weinberg, John Leslie, Timothy O'Connor, Victor Stenger, John Hawthorne, and Peter Forrest.
Personally I think consciousness is an emergent property only under certain narrow circumstances. Death is defined as exactly those circumstances ceasing to be. I think it's the same before as after: "nothing".
A popular genre of anime involves high school students dying by chance and being reborn in fantasy world's where they can have the fun of living out RPG type adventures.
The problem is there isn't a shred of evidence for people being reborn. It seems like wishful thinking or just a fun fantasy.
― Ernest Hemingway
No one remembers the names of those yet to be born. The frame of reference matters a great deal here.
The only exception is the middle part looks like some kind of existence, but dreams have the same appearance.
Corollary: as far as we are concerned, we are immortal.
>Better Never to Have Been: The Harm Of Coming Into Existence
Has some interesting thoughts on that perspective
[1] These are fairly high doses. Take appropriate medical and psychological precautions before participating in such ceremonies.