AB,
It looks like we will have to differ from what we believe can drive the unique human attributes of free thought, creativity, imagination, faith, love, compassion, thirst for knowledge ..... in addition to their dreadful capacity to commit evil.
These things aren’t “unique” to our species at all. Even a cursory review of the behaviours of chimps, elephants, dolphins, crows and magpies and many other species will tell you that. Elephants for example will show every sign of grieving when a member of the herd dies – they return often to the body, they shed tears, they even try to bury the corpse. In short, like us they
emote.
These fairly primitive behaviour patterns can easily be replicated by use of hard unconscious logic of the type used in, for example, computerised chess players. Human attributes require the conscious awareness and free will of the human soul.
That’s both utter nonsense (computer software is a long way from replicating the behavioural complexity of many species) and logically broken – even if software could one day work its way up the species it can “replicate”, there’s no inherent reason for it not to be able to do so for our species too.
And as I have pointed out before, all these examples of apparently sophisticated animal behaviour are common to each of the species, indicating programmed behaviour dictated by their physical genes.
Of course they’re not – geographically diverse “killer” whale pods for example will exhibit very different hunting strategies. They’re not “programmed” at all – they’ve
learned and
adapted to develop new and sophisticated behaviours.
Nowhere in the animal kingdom will you find the sheer diversity of behaviour and variety of personality, even within family groups, as you would expect from the spirit of each human soul freed from the shackles of deterministic control.
Seriously? Imagine for a moment that there were no people, but all the other species remained. Do you think a (not very thoughtful) chimp would be saying, “look at all those other creatures – they’re way behind me in terms of creativity etc. After all, all a goldfish can do is swim around whereas I’m
special – really special! Look, I can make tools, use language, do all sorts of fancy stuff. That must mean then that I have a “soul” to do all the clever bits as I can’t for one moment imagine how else that works.”
And there’s your problem. The difference between us and the chimps is just the comparatively greater layers of complexity we’ve evolved, just as the difference between the chimp and the goldfish is the comparatively greater layers of complexity that he’s evolved. That chimps make hammers and anvils and we make satellites doesn’t mean there’s some mystical magic ingredient that differentiates us – it just means that we’re a bit further along the path of complexity. Conceptually, you and I are in other words little more than chimps in shoes.
Thinking otherwise is just retro-fitting an answer – “soul” – into an explanatory gap you’ve had to create for yourself to validate your religious beliefs. It’s a top down post rationalisation however much you kid yourself that it’s actually a bottom up explanation for an observed phenomenon.