Relations (1)

related 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts

The concepts are related through philosophical discourse where the self and soul are often treated as synonymous or co-dependent entities, as seen in the denial of both by scientism [1], their identification within substance dualism [2], and their joint exploration in academic literature regarding Indian ethics [3].

Facts (3)

Sources
Dualism, Physicalism, and Philosophy of Mind - Capturing Christianity capturingchristianity.com Capturing Christianity 2 facts
claimSubstance dualism identifies the subject of experience as the soul, which is the entity that experiences qualia, thereby implying that the self is an immaterial substance.
quoteAlexander Rosenberg states: “if the mind is the brain (and scientism can’t allow that it is anything else)… we have to stop taking our selves seriously… We have to realize that there is no self, soul or enduring agent, no subject of the first-person pronoun, tracking its interior life while it also tracks much of what is going on around us. This self cannot be the whole body, or its brain, and there is no part of either that qualifies for being the self by way of numerical-identity over time. There seems to be only one way we make sense of the person whose identity endures over time and over bodily change. This way is by positing a concrete but non-spatial entity with a point of view somewhere behind the eyes and between the ears in the middle of our heads. Since physics has excluded the existence of anything concrete but nonspatial, and since physics fixes all the facts, we have to give up this last illusion consciousness foists on us.”
Self-Consciousness - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
referenceJonardon Ganeri authored the book 'The Concealed Art of the Soul: Theories of Self and Practices of Truth in Indian Ethics and Epistemology', published by Oxford University Press in 2012.