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MCS,MBA(IT), Pursuing PHD
Devry University
Sep-2004 - Aug-2010
Assistant Financial Analyst
NatSteel Holdings Pte Ltd
Aug-2007 - Jul-2017
As you learned in Chapter 4, Socrates believed that death involved the departure of the soul from the body. He believed also that the soul continued to exist in a disembodied state. Like most ancient Greek philosophers, Socrates could not imagine how we could be alive without a soul. For the Greeks, the soul is what animated the body. Modern science, on the other hand, no longer talks about body and soul. Unlike the ancient Greeks, modern science understands thought as related to the brain. What is your own notion of "the soul?" Why do you suppose you hold that position? What evidence can you offer that the position is plausible?
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