I suppose it means "to be without being" a being.What would it mean to be without being? — Tom Storm
I suppose one wouldn"t be "human" any longer ... like a butterfly is no longer a caterpillar after chrysalis.What would we do without all the physicalisms that make up human identity?
I suppose "our consciousness" is merely a drop in the ocean of being.How would our consciousness, with is shaped by being embodied, adjust to a new nonphysical realm, I wonder?
I suppose "afterlife" might be a physical phase-state (of higher dimensions?) that physical scientists have not discovered yet. :smirk:Is the afterlife non-physical or is it just physical somewhere else?
Speculatively, as a pandeist ... — 180 Proof
...this is the basis of pandeism: the deity annihilates itself by becoming the universe in order to experience not being the deity.
I think pandeus is unimaginable.What do you imagine were some of the attributes of this deity? — Tom Storm
No (à la: Spinoza's substance or Epicurus' void or Laozi's dao).Did it have anything approaching a 'personality'?
A metaphysical entity.Or is it more of a metaphoric entity?
I have to say I think Epicurus' argument against an afterlife in the most literal sense convinces me. — Moliere
I don't have memories of before I was born, and so why would I continue to have memories after my meat is gone? — Moliere
There is so much conflict about what an afterlife may consist of within various traditions and a lot may be projections of fear or fantasies of bliss, especially in the division between heaven and hell. Ideas may be based on near death experiences and other altered states of consciousness, which may have been inspiration for 'The Tibetan Book of the Dead', and similar texts. — Jack Cummins
The biggest problem is that it is so speculative, with no real clear evidence, which is why so many people do not believe in an afterlife at all — Jack Cummins
One book which I read a couple of years ago was Frank Tipler's ' The Physics of Immortality'. In this, the author argued that a resurrection could be simulated, through means of a computerised artificial intelligence. — Jack Cummins
It drew upon Teilhard de Chardin's idea of the 'omega point', as signifying both God and eternal life. There is some ambiguity in the book as to whether such a resurrection would involve an actual computer or not, with 'God' almost being the absolute 'computer'. — Jack Cummins
However; the author, in spite of his arguments says that he isn't really convinced of the actual reality of an afterlife in simulated form. He also suggests that the 'resurrection' would probably be very different from that imagined by many religious believers. — Jack Cummins
It seems like it was all about thinking of physics and the nature of possibilities. — Jack Cummins
update – For coherence sake, maybe this "afterlife" only happens to those who have outlived at least one parent and have died childless.Death sends one back to relive one's father's life or mother's life until he or she dies sending one back again to father's or mother's father or mother (one's grandfather or grandmother) reliving again and dying again ... back and back through hundreds and thousands of generations ... to witness those 'inner lives' like lucid dreams yet unable to change anything ... perhaps eventually (mercifully?) losing oneself in the torrential flood of ancestral memories ... finally(?) reliving the life of one's species' common ancestor and then having to choose (for that primordial creature) whether to breed offspring and die or not to breed offspring and live forever.
In fact, eternal life is not really associated with “years” at all, as it is independent of time. Eternal life can function outside of and beyond time, as well as within time. — sime
For this reason, eternal life can be thought of as something that Christians experience now. Believers don’t have to “wait” for eternal life, because it’s not something that starts when they die. Rather, eternal life begins the moment a person exercises faith in Christ. It is our current possession. John 3:36 says, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life.” Note that the believer “has” (present tense) this life (the verb is present tense in the Greek, too). We find similar present-tense constructions in John 5:24 and John 6:47. The focus of eternal life is not on our future, but on our current standing in Christ. " — sime
In which case the so-called "after-life" of his Christianity is a misnomer, in that it's conditions of verification aren't considered to transcend the present. — sime
Why is it not relevant? Your OP is speculating on fantasy, isn't it? — 180 Proof
As far as I can tell, there's no more reason "we should expect" this than e.g. my 'reliving ancestral lives' scenario. I thought I was responding to your speculative fantasy with my own. I'd replied previously (here ) to @Tom Storm's more philosophically interesting questions about the "afterlife" which maybe you've missed.we should expect an afterlife that plays closer to our ideals than the aforementioned bottomless pit of fire - or an arbitrary eternity in heaven. — ToothyMaw
That would kind of defeat the purpose of having an afterlife I think if one stops being oneself upon dying. — ToothyMaw
Fair enough. Though reading through your post again I can say I'm not sure I understand your chain of reasoning. — Moliere
It seems to me we can either evaluate the proposition "There is an afterlife" as true or false, or we cannot evaluate it as true or false. — Moliere
the fear of death is an adequate explanation for why people bring up the notion of an afterlife. — Moliere
you mean you don't want to just hear my opinion on the matter? — Moliere
"commonalities" — 180 Proof
The only "commonalities" I can discern in the many prevailing "afterlife" scenarios is that they are completely unwarranted substance dualities — 180 Proof
anthropic idealized immortality schemes – wishful thinking (i.e. too good to be true)! — 180 Proof
belief in "the hereafter" tends to devalue here & now both morally (e.g. theodicy, martyrdom) and politically — 180 Proof
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