Blaiddwen wrote:But to say that this tree has no soul or spirit (IMO) is to be mistaken, this beings "presence" attests to the contrary.
I don't think 'presence' necessitates 'soul', to believe this is to have unconsciously swallowed a Christian style dualism, which separates matter and spirit, making for a rather chopped up world which we can see only half of. The tree is obviously a very good 'tree person', (very good at being a tree that is), and you and the tree obviously have a good and respectful relationship, a relationship which an Animist sees as between
persons, not between
souls.
I actually have a big problem with the words soul and spirit, because I don't want the emphasis in our relationships to be with parts of beings which we can't see and have no proof about. I am more interested in how we relate to other beings in the here and now. Positing the existence of a soul or even the lack of a soul, or the worst of all worlds where some people/beings have souls and others don't, has been used to justify some very poor relating in the past, both among human people and in our relationships with other-than-human-people.
Bundled with and implicit in the words soul and spirit are all sorts of other ideas about other worlds, afterlives, God, judgement and so on. I don't have to believe in any of that to be 'spiritual' (there's that word again, perhaps I should substitute a musical metaphor like 'harmonious'). I don't need any of that stuff to relate to other persons in a respectful and kind way, even to those persons I have to eat.
I see that we have a choice between three worlds to live in:
acknowledge that we cause pain and harm to other beings/persons through our living (and especially our eating), and embrace the pain, sorrow and responsibility that we feel as a result. Seek to do minimum harm and keep a conscious and compassionate connection to those beings we have to kill,
or
use beliefs about the presence or absence of souls to justify a world-view where we somehow have the right to exploit other beings, or can somehow maintain a clear conscience by telling ourselves that we haven't really destroyed this other person, because some part of them lives on,
or
choose to live in a depersonalised world where by rejecting souls and spirits in the name of science we also reject personhood, because deep down we still see the world in a Christian dualistic way and can't separate the categories of 'person' and 'soul'. We are then free to exploit and destroy what we have chosen to see as a mechanical clockwork world, but of course we have become just clockwork beings ourselves.
Personally I choose to live in a world full of persons (who may or may not have souls, I don't care) who I can have relationships with. I choose to acknowledge that I have no right to cause suffering to other persons, but that I am here and so have to eat and live and that's just how it is. As a compassionate being I seek to minimise the harm I cause, this too is in my nature, and it is part of respectful relationship with the world. I am happy to become food myself when the time comes, and in the meantime choose to feel both the sorrow and joy implicit in a world full of life and death, and not deny either. I choose to embrace the physical world and have my relationships with what is, rather than what could be or might be.