TiredThinker         
         
Amity         
         
Enrique         
         
Banno         
         These first two sentences of the article sent me off looking for statistics...From time to time I ask my students how they feel about life after death. A solid majority say they believe in it, in keeping with most Americans (82% in a recent Gallup poll).

TiredThinker         
         
Noble Dust         
         
Noble Dust         
         
TiredThinker         
         
javi2541997         
         But ultimately, it's not a pointless question to ask what's next since quality of life isn't promised to anyone. And philosophy is the subject that must be open to all things. — TiredThinker
Amity         
         Don't linger on the word "near." — TiredThinker
I only linger on the subject because I suffer from chronic pain that makes most days useless
[ ... ]
But ultimately, it's not a pointless question to ask what's next since quality of life isn't promised to anyone. And philosophy is the subject that must be open to all things. — TiredThinker
javi2541997         
         Find out what life is, then the answer will be obvious. — ArielAssante
Sam26         
         
Alkis Piskas         
         OK, we know about the "fuss" that the subject of NDE has produced and continues to produce. In reading this article, a question came to my mind: Well, NDE is still "Near Death Experience". What we actually need is an ADE, i.e., "After Death Experience". That would consist a much stronger if not ultimate evidence about life after death. But I don't think this is likely to happen ...Does this make any compelling arguments that NDEs represent continued cognition after the physical brain isn't active? — TiredThinker
Bartricks         
         
TiredThinker         
         
TiredThinker         
         
Bartricks         
         
TiredThinker         
         
Tom Storm         
         Find out what life is, then the answer will be obvious. — ArielAssante
TiredThinker         
         
Sam26         
         I read your post previously, or at least the first 10 pages. It seemed to go in circles after that. I really need more than sheer number of testimonials of the experience. I need information gained from the experience that can't be gotten by a person unmoving and stuck in the room. Like for example I heard such a story of a person who had an out of body experiences and claimed to see a sneaker on the roof of the hospital, and strangely enough that was true. I like to hear more like that. — TiredThinker
Agent Smith         
         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.