(2021-07-24, 03:20 PM)Typoz Wrote: Yeah, I don't trust the Turing test, I think it's obsolete. When you say "get inside another person's head and actually experience their stream of consciousness" that was what I had in mind in my suggestions of meditation/drugs/ NDE, all of which potentially include that sort of mind-meld - at least possibly. There's also dreaming. The possibilities go on and on. Though I respect your point of view, I personally don't accept the "impossibility" as a complete answer, it expresses a limited view rather than all possible views. With due respect of course.
I remember as a small child being either falsely accused of something, or harshly judged over it, and I understood then that if the person could share my thoughts and experiences they would be accepting rather than judgemental. Which is exactly what is found in NDE accounts. I must have recalled that from before I was born, I think.
Presumably the soul condition in the afterlife is one in which communication with other souls naturally involves some sort of mind-to-mind communion coming about as part of that spiritual realm's nature. Something along the lines of a powerful telepathic link. Of course there would have to be some sort of protocol or procedure to protect privacy if a soul wants its inner self to be private.
But in this physical world such sensing and communication is exceedingly rare and difficult to achieve, at least it seems to me. I agree it's not impossible, but it is very hard to accomplish - probably not intended as part of the conditions of Earth life, which include being essentially trapped and isolated in individual physical animal bodies and being forced to mostly rely on the physical senses. Common sense and intuition have historically been the normal means of determining if another being is conscious, and worked very well until recently with the advent of high technology AI systems, certain sophisticated philosophical speculations and questions, and a general (amongst the educated class) analytical materialistic naturalistic way of thinking.