Identity, individuality

... but at the level of truth, you are nothing more than a collection of molecules.
But that's not a scientific fact, that's a scientific premise, and in scientific (and Advaita) discourse it has its adherents and its adversaries.

You have nailed your flag to that particular mast, but you offer no compelling reason (nor could you, nor should I ask you to) why others should necessarily agree.
 
From a vert weak position vis-a-vis Advaita, I took this off a search engine:
"Advaita teaches that our true identity (Atman) is not this limited persona, but pure, universal consciousness (Brahman) ... "

From the somewhat stronger Catholic position, I would say 'yes' to that statement, along the lines of the ability of individual consciousness that becomes so open and transparent to universal consciousness that, to use a well-worn analogy, the 'uncreated light' of the universal shines in and through the countenance of the individual, without the loss of individuality as something that transcends but undergirds the perceived persona.

I find a great metaphysical insight in the Rastarfari "I and I" – the scholar E. E. Cashmore said: "I and I is an expression to totalise the concept of oneness... When he's addressing a brethren as himself, he says "I am I" — as being the oneness of two persons. So God is within all of us and we're one people in fact... "I and I" means that God is in all humanity. The bond of Ras Tafari is the bond of God, of human." (Cashmore, Rastaman: The Rastafarian Movement in England, 1st ed., 1979, London: George Allen & Unwin. p.67 – language rendered gender neutral by myself).
 
But that's not a scientific fact, that's a scientific premise, and in scientific (and Advaita) discourse it has its adherents and its adversaries.

You have nailed your flag to that particular mast, but you offer no compelling reason (nor could you, nor should I ask you to) why others should necessarily agree.
That is a scientific fact. If we are more than molecules, then I would like to hear your evidence.
Adversaries do not matter. Not everyone would have the same belief. I accept that.
 
From a vert weak position vis-a-vis Advaita, I took this off a search engine:
"Advaita teaches that our true identity (Atman) is not this limited persona, but pure, universal consciousness (Brahman) ... "

So God is within all of us and we're one people in fact... "I and I" means that God is in all humanity.
That is an incorrect definition if you ask me. There is no universal consciousness.
By having God, the oneness is lost.
 
We live in a world which has two aspects, 1. perceived and 2. true.
At the perceived level you are an individual but at the level of truth, you are nothing more than a collection of molecules.
In Advaita philosophy of Hinduism, the first aspect is known as 'pragmatic truth' (Vyavaharika Satya) and the second aspect is known as 'absolute truth' (Paramarthika Satya). Both are true at their respective levels.
I disagree with these claims.

1. Perception doesn't matter to the fact of selves. Perception in experience without bias is a looking glass into the nature and evidence of selves.

2. This idea that we are a collection of molecules is mere appearance. There are non physical realities like character qualities such as honesty, and mental realities such as ideas and understandings, knowledge and ways of knowing. These things have a dimension of existence.
 
That is a scientific fact. If we are more than molecules, then I would like to hear your evidence.
That we are a collection of molecules is a fact.

That "we are nothing more than that" is scientifically disputed, as that 'fact' cannot explain the problem of consciousness, and scientists and philosophers have offered alternative perspectives, philosophical propositions based on the interpretation of the available data.

While materialism aligns with scientific success in explaining demonstrable natural processes, it remains an interpretive framework. Scientific facts are derived from evidence, but the conclusion that only matter exists is a philosophical inference drawn from that evidence, not a fact itself.
 
That we are a collection of molecules is a fact.

That "we are nothing more than that" is scientifically disputed, as that 'fact' cannot explain the problem of consciousness, and scientists and philosophers have offered alternative perspectives, philosophical propositions based on the interpretation of the available data.

While materialism aligns with scientific success in explaining demonstrable natural processes, it remains an interpretive framework. Scientific facts are derived from evidence, but the conclusion that only matter exists is a philosophical inference drawn from that evidence, not a fact itself.
Whatever happens in brain is caused by the molecules which exist there. That includes consciousness also.
Matter is just a form of energy. Matter is a mirage. What remains are the four fundamental interactions.
That is the limit of our knowledge.
 
Whatever happens in brain is caused by the molecules which exist there. That includes consciousness also.
Matter is just a form of energy. Matter is a mirage. What remains are the four fundamental interactions.
That is the limit of our knowledge.
It might be the limit of our scientific knowledge..
..but knowledge itself, is not limited to what you think it should be.

I don't know of anybody who has a degree in every academic area. ;)
Some people have a broader range than others.
 
My belief, Advaita (non-duality) is exactly the same as science.
There is no dichotomy.
I am curious. Is your belief in Advaita coming from intellectual basis? or experiential ? Because the brain does not, by default, tend to perceive this reality as nondual. And consciousness itself could be a fundamental interaction of this reality. The brain may just be a finite organ for filtering it as I believe some have said.
 
Whatever happens in brain is caused by the molecules which exist there. That includes consciousness also.
Matter is just a form of energy. Matter is a mirage. What remains are the four fundamental interactions.
That is the limit of our knowledge.
That is not the limit of our knowledge. Our knowledge has a much wider scope of domains. Your brain has interpreted what it experienced and selected boundaries for what it defines as knowledge. Admittedly, that is fine by me because I think certainty of knowledge can only come from experience. And that affects where we cast our nets for info. Sadly, the closemindedness of scientism is now taught as the sole truth to our youth in modern schools and they are turned away at many points from the path of questioning it.

Things like NDEs and nondual being are dismissed as 'not real'. Have you read any of William James work? Or Iain McGilchrist? They are key scientists in psychology and neurology who researched and discovered aspects of the world that science cannot define empirically and didn't dismiss it automatically despite that but explored further. If you haven't checked out James' Varieties of Religious Experience or McGilChrist's The Matter With Things, you may find it more mind opening.
 
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