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36 answers

no

2006-06-08 10:56:54 · answer #1 · answered by bev k 3 · 0 1

According to 'witnesses' and executioners in France's hey day of the guillotine, the severed head was able to respond by blinking to questions for up to 30 seconds, therefore I would assume if this was carried out during sleep in the REM phase then technically you would still be able to dream if only for half a minute. Thereafter no-one knows. Thoughts and images are stored but are not as far as I'm aware a solid entity but an energy, does this energy dissipate or transfer or move on? Don't know.

2006-06-11 05:03:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think sleep is a form of dying. When you die, your spirit leaves your body. Your energy, your life force, whatever you want to call it. So you could be dreaming, and pass on. This is a very hard question to answer since there has not been many that have come back from the dead after falling to sleep.... wouldn't it be a great place if we only knew what it is like to die; but one day we'll all know, but won't come back to tell others.

2006-06-08 11:02:39 · answer #3 · answered by strawberrysudha 2 · 0 0

Personally, I don't think that we do keep dreaming beyond a minute or so. I really like the response from RedRobin on this question.

You might want to check out the Near Death Experience Research Foundation website: www.nderf.org

2006-06-11 19:32:58 · answer #4 · answered by eximgal 1 · 0 0

i am gonna tell u something that could be strange:
the human -really- dies when he is sleeping,i wanna tell u also that we have 4 levels of sleeping,when u reach the 4th level (deep sleep) we can say that the spirit goes out of the body,your spirit comes back to you before waking up directly,so u can die but you can see dreams (now you are partially died)

2006-06-08 13:02:05 · answer #5 · answered by Kevin 5 · 0 0

I imagine it would be like someone pulled the plug on the TV screen you were watching, the pictures in your dream would just disappear, at the moment the brain died.

2006-06-08 21:41:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Unless you die suddenly, for example from severe trauma (physical injury) death is a process.
Different cells die at different rates. I think your liver is the last thing to die. After Anne Boleyn was beheaded, her mouth carried on moving and her eyes followed movement for some time.
Brain cells die from the outside in, so I suppose the answer could be yes. But you wouldn't be able to tell us anyway.

2006-06-08 11:06:11 · answer #7 · answered by sarah c 7 · 0 0

The solar rose and set formerly you and that i've got been born and we weren't attentive to it. Now we are the two alive and are attentive to the solar increasing and putting. as quickly as we our lives are over, the know-how we've of those issues is going away additionally. So it form of sounds such as you are attempting to verify what your know-how is or how is it that your know-how stops and starts with dreaming and waking. Am I top or would desire to you make sparkling your question?

2016-09-28 05:02:37 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No. Dreams are a series of images, ideas, emotions, and sensations occurring involuntarily in the mind during certain stages of sleep. They are created in your brain, but when you die your brain stops working so your brain can no longer create dreams.

2006-06-08 10:58:33 · answer #9 · answered by Still Doll << 4 · 0 0

hi patrick
the life after death much more wonderful and greater then
our dreams. so it is like dream come true.
you can say there won't be any discontinuity in the dream because just before death you are able to see the angels who come to recieve you for next journey.thi sis what i have heard

2006-06-08 11:00:58 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Doesn't you brain control your dreams? When you brain dies so does your dreams. Or if you belive in an afterlife, you would keep on dreaming.

2006-06-08 10:57:14 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous 2 · 0 0

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