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anonymous October 8 2009, 18:21:02 UTC
This is heavy stuff they have you dealing with. Are you doing just the philosophy of it all or is the extent of popular or non-theological thinking on this also useful? There was an article in Viator a while back about where the Anglo-Saxons thought consciousness resided that might be interesting to you, it's only short and I wrote about it here way way back. On the other hand I guess you don't really need any more to read as such.

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ext_79993 October 8 2009, 18:21:55 UTC
Dammit, forgot to log in. That was me, obviously.

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k_navit October 28 2009, 13:08:03 UTC
Thank you! This is quite helpful, yes! One of things I"m interested in is how the learned and vernacular conceptions sometimes collide, or at least produce interesting things. For instance, the soul's address to the body has the soul accusing the body of succumbing to the flesh, and repeatedly castigates the body for its failure to think things through. I know I may be giving the poet too much credit from one perspective, but it's a research question right now, anyway. Sorry for the inarticulate, I'm not fully caffeinated yet.

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