Some Thoughts on Human Existence "The idea of life extending beyond death is the realm of philosophy, religion, and fantasy. Not science." Philosophim.
Thank you, Philosophim. We may actually be saying the same thing - i.e. science can confirm that the machine has stopped functioning - i.e. death has occurred. What is beyond death, if anything (and I am not proposing or denying anything, I simply don't know) is merely speculation.
I don't deny that I like to believe there is the possibility of something after life (functioning) has ceased; thus the suggestion that when my father was passing away, yet at least his body was still functioning to some very limited degree (he was in a coma); I felt that he was still 'present'. After his body had ceased functioning, my impression was that he was gone. His mortal remains were there, but the essence (the unspecified, perhaps unspecifiable thing) that I would describe as my father was no longer there.
If the material is the only part of this reality that is 'real', then I was simply in a delusional state caused by the emotions, the grief I was experiencing due to the ceasing of functioning of this physical thing I referred to as my father. However, and on a digression, if one looks at the maths involved in astrophysics, it implies that what we take to be the 'real world' - the world in which physical items exist in with height, width and length; plus time - is simply a delusion experienced by the two dimensional creatures that live in this existence. And, that is the result of the practical and testable aspects of a process that we refer to as the scientific method - i.e. science.
Why do I make this comment? Because I think if we limit ourselves to only what has been proposed by those whom work as 'scientists' - use the scientific method to test and speculate on what the results indicate - we may be missing out on a much richer domain of existence. I don't want to be limited by science. I do value science, and I value much of the technology that scientific research has enabled to subsequently be invented. However, when we get down to concepts of what is 'right and wrong', how does one live a 'good life' (read the works of Plato and Aristotle), and other such untestable non-physical things; science has nothing to give us. Equally, if there is a existence after the ceasing of functioning of the physical form, science is not in a position to be able to speculate.
My suggestion is to encourage everyone to live as fulfilling and rich a life as you can while in this physical existence, and don't hold too tightly to any construct that we can not possibly actually 'know' while in this life. I would definitely support people being as liberal minded and tolerant as they can be. Still, this is merely a concept that I hope is beneficial to all, and which I can not possibly know whether it is 'morally' right or wrong. Again, morals are probably outside the scope of what science can speculate on.
Regards, Andrew