Evidence of Consciousness Surviving the Body Sorry for the slow reply, Sam, poor organisation on my part.
Ultimately Sam, no matter which way you look at this issue the answer always must be "maybe". While there is much fascinating anecdotal evidence for an afterlife, it's still only anecdotal. — G
The word anecdotal carries with it the idea of not being reliable, i.e., a story that may or may not be true. However, can we use the word anecdotal when describing millions of stories of the same experience? The answer would depend, but depend on what? It depends on whether the story is consistent, whether the stories come from a variety of sources (different cultures, age groups, different religions, different world views, occurring under a variety of circumstances, whether the stories can be backed up with primary sources, i.e., people who also were there, etc), this would put a higher premium on the stories. Under these circumstance on could say that we have good testimonial evidence. In fact, under these circumstance one could easily argue that this is exactly what it means to have good testimonial evidence. One shouldn't rule out the evidence simply because it doesn't fit a certain narrative or world view. — Sam26
Certainly anecdotal evidence is considered the weakest type in science or in courtroom but, as you suggest, if many witnesses provide similar evidence then credibility improves markedly. Yes, something interesting is definitely going on that's worth investigating, given the profundity of the end-of-life situation.
My reservations come from the gap between our perceptions and actual reality, noumena, which means that our common physiological characteristics may result in common end-of-life mental and emotional effects.
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Consistency is the most important part of these testimonials, and as I've mentioned before there is enough consistency coupled with enough objective verification to assume that there is something much more than just hallucinations taking place. — Sam26
I agree that NDEs are not just hallucinations or dream. In a hallucination or dream, our perceptions are inconsequential to our ensuing physical (if not, mental) reality. In an NDE, when the senses have shut down, the external physical reality is basically over and thus becomes almost completely inconsequential. At that point, subjective reality is everything; there is nothing else, no input, no external future.
How long does this subjective reality last and how long is it perceived to last? With time dilation, the few minutes it takes for the brain to die could conceivably result in increasing time dilation that might even feel like eternity.
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... given the extraordinary changes that occur in us between womb and grave, it's rather difficult to see continuity. Wipe our memories and we effectively become someone else. Where did the original "you" - who is now effectively dead or dormant - go? Where is it during deep sleep? — Greta
Good question, since there is no doubt that our memories play a large part in who we are as persons, and continuity of not only our memories, but also our experiences are extremely important in maintaining the continuity of who we are as individuals.
From my own studies of thousands of these testimonials it is clear that not only do we keep the continuity of our memories, but the stories that people have of encountering their deceased relatives is that the relatives also keep the continuity of their memories and their experiences. In fact, if anything is the case, more of our memories return when having the out-of-body experience. — Sam26
Just checking the objective (out there) situation, there is physical continuity from before life, to life, to after life which could theoretically be traced back forensically, understood and even reproduced with sufficiently advanced knowledge and technology - hence the various simulation hypotheses. While the memory of everything that has ever happened is still embedded in the fabric of evolving reality (or at least that which hasn't fallen into a black hole), access and organisation of it would seem another matter.