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胡卓恺
This passage highlights a widespread cross-cultural intuition tied to dualism: most people (across time, regions, and religions) believe humans can survive bodily destruction. Though cultural details vary—some imagine souls going to Heaven/Hell, others to reincarnation, and some to spirit worlds—all share the core idea: the "self" is distinct from the physical body. The body (a temporary, destructible physical thing) can perish, while the non-physical self persists. This belief aligns with earlier points about common-sense dualism: it mirrors intuitions like "multiple personalities in one body" or exorcism beliefs (where a separate entity controls a body). Even in modern contexts (e.g., U.S. surveys), this view remains prevalent, reflecting how deeply mind-body separation is embedded in global cultural and intuitive thinking

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