heavycola wrote:So it's only a strawman if you're a catholic? I'm assuming the OP isn't.
Body and soul are united in life and seperated in death.
And anyway - what's this then?
i was being arsey for the sake of it. The catholic church's misogyny is probably a subject for another thread. Wouldn't harm them to change 'man' to 'humans' or 'humankind'' though would it?
The OP started out with "In all religions, there is a soul or spirit outside of your body. It doesn't exist. It is all physical." The argument here is a straw man, granted in more ways than one, several sects of Judaism didn't believe in the soul or any form of life after death. By making straw man definitions and them proceeding to burn the straw you haven't really proven anything.
As for the notion that the soul is united and then seperated, frankly I haven't a clue. I can speculate, play interesting "what if" scenarios with the fascinating nature of infinity where depending on how one raches the two numbers as a limit, zero times infinity can be any number you want it to be.
Human is probably the better word these days, although I still think it's an insult used by aliens and computers against us. Yet "man" has had a tradition of non gender usage and that's still the first definition in Webster's Unabridged.
1 a : a member of the human race : a human being : PERSON -- usually used of males except in general or indefinite applications with collective adjectives or in the plural <every man must now do his duty> <all men, both male and female -- David Hume died 1776>