If one was to sell his soul, would noble intentions make it more valuable?
>>18384632
Why?
What makes a soul valuable?
Would souls that are more incorruptible and less wanting of selling themselves not be more valuable in that they are harder to get, thus there must be more temptation and offers in way? Would a soul of someone who wants to sell it without much thought be less valuable?
>>18384627
It depends who's buying. That's the thing about souls--everyone has a different value system for them. If you think about it a certain way, the value system you place on souls determines the content and qualities of your own. Does this help?
7.4 billion in the world today. The market is flooded. Noble or not, your soul isn't worth shit.
Also, you're asking this on 4chan. Odds of having a good soul is 0.
>>18384627
The road to Hell is paved with good intentions, as the saying goes. But no, souls aren't real, it's just part of the brain.
Your soul may be full of noble intentions, but when you think "how much would they pay me for my noble intentions", the noble intentions themselves cease to exist.
>>18384649
As a hypothetical example, if a person values souls in a zero-sum way, so that the total value of everyone's souls together is equal to zero, then their soul probably has approximately no value to themselves. For a person who values polarity, that soul is now probably more highly valued than someone's whose soul does not value everyone's together in a zero-sum way, whose soul in turn is more highly valued to someone who values polarity less than the processes of arriving at non-zero-sum value totals which have a reduced chance of arriving at exact polarized values as the total number of souls increases.
The probability of a non-zero sum value system arriving at an exactly polarized value total is approximately equal to (xx+x)/(2x*2^x) where x is the total number of souls when the probability of a soul being more or less valuable is itself of exactly polarized probability.
This ends the hypothetical. Does this make sense?
>>18384730
Therefore, all souls, when they are sold, are worth nothing.
>>18384733
It does.
But you don't ponder variables in soul value, just a polarity between positive value and indifference, in classic abrahamic polarity, you have good and bad souls, and you also have indifference as zero.
>>18384761
That's an interesting perspective. Personally, I disagree, but I enjoy trading knowledge about our different value systems.
>>18384768
I'm animistic, my soul value system it's a complicated mess.
I was thinking about making a graphic for it, so I'll post it once I'm done drawing it.
It has high souls, low spirits, and all kinds of wacky things, my ancestors had way to much free time.
>>18384627
No, the soul serves as an invaluable asset, so any sale thereof stands out as ignoble.