So, I am interested in other people's thoughts on the question of what becomes of consciousness at death? — Jack Cummins
if I had been taller and better looking, — Jack Cummins
↪Jack Cummins Like a sugar cube in tea, it dissolves, and rather quickly. The trick, it seems to me, lies in not minding too much the dissolution. After all, one may ask what there isn't, after, and be hard pressed to answer. Consciousness? And what exactly is that when it's not at home? — tim wood
Perhaps you could tell me more about parallel universes as a possibility beyond the mortality of the physical body. — Jack Cummins
You suggest that at some point we wake up. This is not an established, so perhaps you could expand your point of view in a bit further detail. — Jack Cummins
Are you saying that life and death are given to us within cycles of learning? I keep an open mind to this possibility, but with an awareness that there is a lack scientific credibility to back up this view,
although it may be the case that scientists cannot grasp and put such a perspective under a microscope or within the structure of experiment. In other words, I would love to believe thhat you are suggesting is true, but there is a danger in accepting the possibility because it appeals to many of us. — Jack Cummins
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.