I feel like even within the same religions there is a large discrepancy between peoples views on afterlife and I'd love to hear some thoughts. — TheDarkElf
I'll debate anyone who wants to, on the subject of whether there is evidence that consciousness survives death. I'll debate them formally in the debate thread with a moderator. — Sam26
For example, despite numerous reports of ball lightening and its seemingly inexplicable behavior, the sightings were dismissed as the delusions of incompetent or lying observers-- until physicists investigating nuclear fusion possibilities developed mathematical theories describing plasmas. Their theories clearly applied to ball lightening. Suddenly, people who reported ball lightening were not written off. — Greylorn Ell
"Retain" how - without a body (i.e. CNS which has irreversibly decomposed)?If you retain sufficient consciousness that you no longer need a body to support it ... — Greylorn Ell
... like triangles without sides? or walking without legs? or breathing air without lungs? or ???... and can learn to see without eyes, and ...
Any corroborable public evidence you can cite that indicates that "telepathy" is a thing and not just ... woo?... to communicate via telepathy ...
If "you" are dead, then "you" and "your" and "options" cease (i.e. don't obtain).... you may have the option to remain in your "soul-level" disincorporated state while learning enough to be of useful service.
Great googly moogly! :scream: Do tell: produce, or point to this, (more-than-anecdotal) "evidence".Evidence for independent consciousness abounds, but — Greylorn Ell
The problem seems to be, as I've mentioned before in other threads, is that people seem to think that unless science proves X, then we can't know X. My claim is based on knowledge acquired in other ways. For example, I don't need science to tell me that the orange juice I drank this morning is sweet, I've tasted it, or that there is an oak tree in my back yard, I've seen it. And there are other ways that we come to have knowledge, for instance, much of what we know is based on testimonial evidence. While it is true that testimonial evidence can be very unreliable, it can also be very strong. I've put forth my argument in the thread https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/1980/evidence-of-consciousness-surviving-the-body/p18 — Sam26
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