It's impossible to see how any proof of an afterlife could be either. — Janus
I know evidence that the conscious mind continues after bodily death is rare and iffy at best. But what type of evidence would be reasonable to convince skeptics that an afterlife probably is a real possibility? — TiredThinker
I do wonder sometimes if mass shooters really believed they would go to hell for their actions, whether they would carry them out. The belief that ‘death is the end’ might be part of the rationale for such massacres, in that the perpetrators believe that when they die there won’t be further consequences. So that belief might be, ironically, consequential. — Wayfarer
Is there individual consciousness after death?' seems like a pretty coherent question — coolazice
If by "individual" what's also meant, indeed presupposed, is embodied, then this question makes no sense whatsoever. (Unless, despite given that death reduces a lived body to a corpse (i.e. supple flesh to rotting meat) there's evidence of 'disembodied consciousness', which, of course, there isn't.) We are each of us, in fact, individuated by our bodies which are always uniquely positioned in and moving through spacetime, incorporating our unique self-experiences in the biochemical continuity of memories, every moment until each body's irreversible brain-death, no? Thus, dead means your you – "self-consciousness" – ceases ... like a candle's flame flickered out or a symphony's final note fallen silent.'Is there individual consciousness after death?' seems like a pretty coherent question. — coolazice
If by "individual" what's also meant, indeed presupposed, is embodied, then this question makes no sense whatsoever. (Unless, despite given that death reduces a lived body to a corpse (i.e. supple flesh to rotting meat) there's evidence of 'disembodied consciousness', which, of course, there isn't.) We are each of us, in fact, individuated by our bodies which are always uniquely positioned in and moving through spacetime, incorporating our unique self-experiences in the biochemical continuity of memories, every moment until each body's irreversible brain-death, no? Thus, dead means your you – "self-consciousness" – ceases ... like a candle's flame flickered out or a symphony's final note fallen silent. — 180 Proof
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