Sea Breeze, regarding you saying "This is the same argument you just made' I said such in an effort to clarify to you my idea to you.
In answer to your question of "Why
are you having such a hard time accepting that people are constructed
with a soul, spirit and body?" that should be obvious to you if you
recall what I said about myself in number of posts. I was raised a JW
and became very active as a baptized JW for about 25 years. During that
time I firmly believed in the WT teaching (based upon verses quoted by
them from multiple translations of the Bible) and based upon scientific
knowledge (learned through the WT's quotes of scientific literature and
directly outside of the WT in some science books and Humanistic books I
read) that no human ever had an immoral spirit or immortal soul. I
accepted the reasoning presented in the WT's literature that the
biblical verses which speak of a spirit inside of living human bodies
refers to the biblical idea of a "life force energy" which keeps humans
alive until the force ceases to operate within the body. That is idea is
consistent with what science teaches keeps biological beings alive,
except that more modern science instead speaks of biochemical processes
rather than mysterious spirit-like "life force".
In fact the WT's teachings that humans do not have an inherently
immortal spirit/soul, that there is thus no eternal hell torment, and
that God is not a Trinity were what I thought were some of most well
proven teachings of theirs (and for years I knew of no other Christian
religion which taught those) and that my concluding such is largely why
decided the JW religion was the one true religion and why I thus became
baptized as a JW. Though I later stopped believing in much of the
religion those teachings of the WT/JW still stuck with me well into my
future atheism and are still very rational to me even if I
see that some Bible verses might contradict those teachings. Though I
now think that some Bible verses (such as John 1:1) say that Jesus is
some sense God and even in sense Yahweh, that possible teaching of the
Bible is still very irrational and very illogical to me! Furthermore it
contradicts many verses in the OT and the people of the Jewish religion
agree with me in that. As the Shema says, "the Lord our God is one" and
as the Hebrew Bible says "Yahweh our Elohim (God) is one Yahweh"!