L
Lisa
Specialist
- May 9, 2018
- 304
Have you ever seen a spirit? Had a communication from one? An nde? Anything that gives you a feeling that the afterlife exists? If so please share.
Are you saying that the very nature of evolution deems the continuity of life impossible? Isn't that backwards? Even if brains didn't survive death in the past or present, the fact that they evolve continuously would mean that in the future they would. But that's just going with your theory that our brains are what would continue to exist and not consciousness as it's own entity. It's our consciousness that continues. Not our brains.Considering the evolutive history of our brains, that's 100% impossible
It's our consciousness that continues. Not our brains.
Consciousness cannot be supported without a brain. It's an epiphenomenon that arises from interaction of billions of simultaneously firing neurons. You can notice how frail and flickering it is after somebody gets brain ischemia or a stroke: the personality of those people derails, they turn into somebody that they're not supposed to be at all.
Also, memories and perceptions can be altered enormously with simple transcranial magnetic stimulation, Imagine what would happen to them when synapses don't work at all.
FYI, there's a nice read about this subject
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21128311.800-a-brief-history-of-the-brain/
So that's it then. When we die there is nothing and it was like before we were born.Consciousness cannot be supported without a brain. It's an epiphenomenon that arises from interaction of billions of simultaneously firing neurons. You can notice how frail and flickering it is after somebody gets brain ischemia or a stroke: the personality of those people derails, they turn into somebody that they're not supposed to be at all.
Also, memories and perceptions can be altered enormously with simple transcranial magnetic stimulation, Imagine what would happen to them when synapses don't work at all.
FYI, there's a nice read about this subject
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21128311.800-a-brief-history-of-the-brain/
When we die there is nothing and it was like before we were born.
That pretty much sums it up.
I am fine with this to be honest.
Me too. I try to see things as they are -- plus when they're supported by evidence (in this specific case, the phylogenesis of our brain) -- we can't do anything else than accept that we're not different from the other lifeforms that populate our planet, and we aren't as special as we think.
The problem is most of it is anecdotal
She also said she was babysitting during a blizzard one time and all of a sudden some guy walked in and sat down and watched the blank tv for a while then left and disappeared.
As you know lack of evidence doesnt justify a conclusion. So neither of us can come out of this saying we're right or wrong unless you die and come back with some sort of proof. Any source can be biased.. that's why when they try to convince you of something in an article they usually start off with some spin off of the words 'scientist say'. There were advertisements in the fifties where 'doctors say' smoking a certain brand of cigarettes were good and look how far we've come.
I am not the right person to answer, as I hallucinate things even with medication. I used to think there was some sort of meaning until I realized what it was.
Anyways, thinking there is nothing after death used to work for me as an antidote to suicide, making me take more time to reflect. In the end, I feel forced to believe I don't know what happens when we die, because if I start to believe there is nothing after death I am don't think I can kill myself, it's like you are losing your only opportunity, one you are not seeing, like cryogenics or stuff like that. That's why I sort of reject people with those extreme atheist perceptions.
One thing is to say "may be", another thing is to be sure of something. I prefer not to be sure of death, whatever it ends up being.
Our perceptions are the most unreliable thing ever. they're not a reasonable proof for anything.
Just a bit of hypotension can make you see black spots everywhere, I wouldn't trust my judgement without some kind of instrumentation to back up my claims
If it was just me seeing it then maybe I could shrug it off but it's pretty hard to discount it as a faulty perception if two other people witnessed it as well.
Ever heard of mass hysteria?
Yup. Ever heard of testimonial evidence?
Your closemindedness astounds me. Y
Actually I just ask for solid proof before making extraordinary claims, but I'm not in the mood to argue.