Most of us would describe ourselves as having a body, a mind and a soul (or spirit), as though these are not the same thing. The soul in particular is understood as being separate, not only from the mind and its thoughts, but from the realm of the physical world, and even physics itself.
We talk freely, around the world, of reincarnation; of out-of-body experiences; of heaven and hell, whatever form they may take, in our imagination; of immortality; of consciousness; of Atman…
We have countless expressions and ideas for what exactly makes us “us”, as distinct from that which we can see or feel. The idea of “self” even transcends, for most, our own life circumstances and experiences, as though there is a “true self” to be discovered, or fed, or aligned with, while we bumble about in our bodies and minds here on Earth. We measure the soul’s arc of time by a different yardstick: it is far longer than that of our (current) life, if not infinite. But however we measure it, the quality and essence of our “beingness” — our soul — is almost always distinguished from what is tangible or measurable.
Scientifically, those of us who have lived long enough aren’t even us, anymore, on a cellular level. Our cells are constantly dying and rebirthing—a form of miniature reincarnation. Colon cells last just four days; skin cells 2–3 weeks; blood vessels, just 5 days; and skeletal muscles a full 15 years, before they, too, are replaced. Brain cells, like those in the central core of the eye’s lenses, seem to be among the only parts of us that don’t die; or at least, when they do, they aren’t replaced.
Before long, most of us isn’t us, but some faithful reproduction—a simulacrum. This is important, as we’ll revisit later.
So if countless humans — most, if not all, of us — believe in the soul’s existence as the nucleus of our “immortal self”, is it not possible that in some near or far future societal construct we can place — or find — ourselves inside of a non-human, or simulated, host?
Said another way, is it possible for us to evolve beyond needing our bodies, and into some kind of post-corporeal container?
If the soul is neither the body nor mind, how is our ability to decouple them not a foregone (theoretical) conclusion? Or, is the soul 100% dependent on a flesh-and-blood, vulnerable, and longevity-challenged host to exist?
If it is, doesn’t the notion of our soul’s dependency on a body and mind render the idea of post-mortem existence—the stage between death and rebirth—moot? Either “we”—by which I mean the soul that most of us believe to be the true “us”—can live outside of a body, or we cannot.
More problematically, why would an eternal being need or even want a severely limited consciousness, no less, as its host?
If we truly believe a sentient being created us in his/her/its/their image(s), then our answer is probably yes, we need a body and a mind for a soul to occupy. Why this would be the case, I don’t know. And the idea about what happens to us when we shed our body, and before we pick up a new one, remains unanswered, and frankly contradicts the basic premise.
Regardless, for the time being we remain utterly stuck in the dark, far not only from the inscrutability of an omniscient and omnipotent super-being, but ignorant of our own immortal selves, as well.
On the other hand, if we believe we evolved in a Darwinian sense, and that “God” or “the gods” either doesn’t/don’t exist, or that these are just proxy terms to describe physics, the life force, or the miracle of the unknowable, then the question remains:
Can we exist outside of our bodies and minds, not only between our deaths and rebirths, but post-rebirth? As in, here on Earth?
Many religions contemplate rebirth in another vessel, like a mouse or an insect, or the dog that shows up on our doorstep one day, looking at us funny through eyes that remind us of someone we knew, and who is no longer with us.
A quick Wikipedia search returns 151 films made on the subject of reincarnation. This topic is clearly not only the mainstay of religion, but of Hollywood and Bollywood, as well.
In fact thanatology — the study of death in all of its dimensions — has consumed an outsized portion of our human activity, at the ironic expense of our own “here and now”.
So: to return to my question, and to put it in the context of our terrestrial host planet: can we survive our ongoing and increasingly efficient destruction of our physical environment — the Earth, and everything we currently require of it to sustain us — by transferring our souls into a less vulnerable host that requires no food, no sleep, no air to breathe—nothing but the sun’s or wind’s energy? Alternatively, can we somehow retrain or trick our souls into being reborn into a silicon chip or carbon fiber pseudo-person, instead of a cat, or insect, or another human newborn?
Is it not possible that at some near- or less-than-near future point, we will be able to point to, measure and even capture the soul — like that “Proton Pack” from Ghostbusters?