XPost: alt.religion.christian   
   From: none@none.non   
      
   On Sep 29, 2025, James wrote   
   (Message-ID:):   
      
   > On Sun, 28 Sep 2025 18:33:00 -0700, None wrote:   
   >   
   > > On Sep 28, 2025, James wrote   
   > > (Message-ID:):   
   > >   
   > > > An AI's response to what a soul is.   
   > >   
   > > Where does AI end and your comments begin?   
   >   
   > Look for the quotation marks.   
      
   If that be the case then the only thing quoted nothing you wrote is to be   
   trusted here, since you used quotation marks around your question, unless you   
   are an AI entity and many other quotation marks around various words.   
      
   So how about being more definitive?   
      
   To me the bulk of your text was generated by the mantra of the JW’s dogma.   
   >   
   >   
   > > What is the Greek word for soul that the Hebrews used to translate from   
   > > ancient Hebrew to Greek?   
   > Psyche.   
      
   ψυχή psuchē, this is the greek word for soul translated 300 years   
   before Christ came to earth.   
   Which, BTW you misspelled throughout your post.   
      
   Are you now joining the ranks of AI Rosie to determine what the word of the   
   Lord means?   
   >   
   >   
   > > >   
   > > >   
   > > > From a Google search page, I asked an AI what the Bible says a "soul"   
   > > > is. This was its answer:   
   > > >   
   > > > "What does the Bible say a "soul" is?   
   > > >   
   > > > Thinking   
   > > > Kicking off 11 searches   
   > > > Looking at 232 sites   
   > > > Getting info from Shopping   
   > > > Shopping   
   > > > Putting it all together   
   > > > The Bible describes the "soul" (Hebrew:   
   > > > nephesh, Greek: psyche) as the entire living being, not a separate,   
   > > > immortal part of a person. The concept of a soul that is inherently   
   > > > immortal and survives the body's death is rooted in Greek philosophy,   
   > > > not biblical teaching."   
   > > >   
   > > > Old Testament: Nephesh (??????)   
   > > > In the Old Testament, the Hebrew word nephesh is frequently translated   
   > > > as "soul" but refers to the life force or a living creature itself. It   
   > > > describes the whole person and can also mean "life," "person," or   
   > > > "creature".   
   > > >   
   > > > A living creature: Genesis 2:7 says that when God breathed "the   
   > > > breath of life" into man, "man became a living soul (nephesh)". This   
   > > > does not mean Adam received a soul but that he became a complete,   
   > > > living individual. The same term is used for animals in Genesis   
   > > > 1:21...   
   > > >   
   > > > New Testament: Psyche (????)   
   > > > The New Testament uses the Greek word psyche, which carries a similar   
   > > > meaning to the Hebrew nephesh. While it sometimes contrasts the soul   
   > > > with the body, its meaning is determined by the context.   
   > > >   
   > > > The total person or a life: It is often used as a synonym for   
   > > > "life" or "person." For example, the disciples were counted as "three   
   > > > thousand souls" (Acts 2:41), meaning three thousand people..."   
   > > >   
   > > > Yes, the IMMORTAL soul comes from Greek influence of Aristotle and   
   others.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
|