Simon Belmont wrote:Socrates wrote:What law or principle of nature, if there is no afterlife, would prevent evolution of the brain to the point of being able to question our own existence?
The better question is:
What law or principle of nature, if there is no afterlife, would encourage evolution of the brain to the point of being able to question our own existence?
See... what is the evolutionary advantage of consciousness? Of questioning our own existence?
Why do you suppose that conscious ability to question our own existence is not a virtue that makes life more exciting and less mundane, and therefore an evolutionary appealing trait?
Why do you suppose that the conscious ability to question our own existence is not some mental 'appendage' to another higher mental functioning developed to better assure survival, and for which there is little use and within the next 10,000 years of evolution this introspective 'appendage' will be eliminated? Don't those of the opposite sex find the deep thinkers more attractive than the dim-wits, and thus increase the chance for procreation?