Sam26
Why think the experiences are veridical as opposed to dreams? — Bartricks
Sam26
Question: What about consciousness proves, no, suggests, its survival/continuation post death? — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. — Sagan standard
Sam26
The interesting philosophical issue is the language around what it is that might survive death, especially how it could be identified with the deceased individual. The notion of soul is problematic. — Banno
Sam26
Agent Smith
Address specifically how I've lowered the bar. Don't just make statements without good reasons. Where specifically did the inductive argument fail? Did I not provide enough numbers, variety of NDEs, corroboration, consistency, etc? All your comment does is show that you don't follow the argument. — Sam26
Sam26
Agent Smith
The argument, if you read it, doesn't include the idea of past lives, it concludes that consciousness survives the death of the body. Past lives is a side issue that has some evidence (based on what has happened in many NDEs), but it's has nothing to do with the thrust of my main argument. So, again, you're not following the argument, or you haven't read it closely enough. — Sam26
Sam26
Bartricks
Philosophim
Bartricks
180 Proof
:100:The problem with all of the testimonials is the brain wasn't fully dead. — Philosophim
Sam26
The problem with all of the testimonials is the brain wasn't fully dead. Just because you are not conscious or responsive, does not mean you are not collecting smells, sounds, and even visuals if your eyes are opened by a doctor or your lids fail. — Philosophim
TiredThinker
Agent Smith
That would be your argument, not mine. I do believe that there is evidence for past lives based on NDEs and DMT experiences, but this would entail a different argument. — Sam26
TiredThinker
TiredThinker
TiredThinker
TiredThinker
TiredThinker
TiredThinker
bongo fury
Which will you choose then? Let us see... Your reason is no more shocked in choosing one rather than the other since you must of necessity choose. This is one point settled. But your self-respect? Let us weigh the gain and the loss in wagering that we live again. If you gain, you gain nothing, an eternity of smug self-satisfaction, in the company of equally repellent souls; if you lose, you lose everything, as you wasted your chance to live authentically and perceive reality. Wager, then, without hesitation, that we don't. — Pascal's Other Wager
Bartricks
sime
TiredThinker
TiredThinker
Bartricks
TiredThinker
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