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2006-10-04 09:01:43 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

3 answers

THE BELIEF OF AFTERLIFE.

Most cultures past and present, have contained some belief in an afterlife. Such beliefs are usually manifested in a religion, as they pertain to phenomena beyond the ordinary experience of the natural world. Through the ages, various evidence has been advanced in attempts to demonstrate the reality of an afterlife, but nothing has ever been proven about either the existence or nature of an afterlife so the topic remains highly speculative.

Types of evidence that are offered include:

* Testimony of individuals who claim experiential knowledge of facets of afterlife
o by having died and then been sent back to this life (near-death experiences)
o by having visited the afterlife during a period of unconsciousness (out-of-body experiences)
o by having seen the afterlife during a revelatory vision
o by a unique personal gift of remembering an afterlife (before-life) existence (See Reincarnation, Tulku etc.)
o by having communicated with (or received a message from) someone who has died (Mediumship or electronic voice phenomena)
* Testimony of individuals who are thought to have special insights into the afterlife
o holy ones
o miracle workers
o spectacular converts
* Claimed testimony of visitors from the afterlife
o God
o Angels
o Spirits
o Demons
* Human intuitions of goodness thought to emanate from the afterlife
* Rational philosophical or theological arguments
o The immortal nature of the soul
o The natural desire for immortality

Formal characterizations of the afterlife have elaborated these testimonies in innumerable ways. These traditions may be broadly distinguished by how they answer questions such as:

* What happens at the moment of death?
* Is the afterlife a normal life, or a different type of existence?
* Are afterlife conditions a consequence of good and bad actions during life?
o If so, what are these rewards and punishments? Who is assigned to which fate?
* Is the afterlife eternal?
* Is the afterlife unchanging or ever-changing?
* Is it possible to reincarnate as a human or another form of life?
* If there is an afterlife, then is there a "prelife" (life before birth)?

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Afterlife as an individual or collective existence

Belief in an afterlife usually entails the belief that something survives the body when death occurs, such as an immaterial soul or spirit. Philosophers have long debated whether the soul or mind has an immaterial or incorruptible quality; see, for example, the Mind-body problem. Some pantheistic systems have seen the afterlife as a process of (re-)assimilation into a cosmic spirit.[citation needed]

While the major monotheistic religions of the world (Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and their offshoots) almost universally preach some form of mind-body dualism, many Eastern "religions", such as the many branches of Buddhism and Taoism do not contain any such claims, and may in fact preach ideologies that are opposed to it. Zen Buddhism in particular is famous for koans and parables that are meant to teach that the nature of consciousness is transient and/or illusory, with some schools going so far as to say that even the concept of a "self" is fundamentally flawed.[citation needed]
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Afterlife as reward or punishment

Many religious traditions have held that the afterlife will resolve justice by assigning rewards and punishments to people according to how they lived their lives. This belief can be found throughout the ancient world, especially in Greek and Roman religion, as well as in various Asian religions. To the extent that the afterlife is a form of justice, it is usually restricted to humans, as other animals are not held responsible for their actions.

The afterlife played an important role in Egyptian religion. The believer had to act well and know the rituals explained in the Egyptian Book of the Dead. If the corpse had been properly embalmed and entombed in a mastaba, the defunct would relive in the Fields of Yalu and accompany the Sun god on its daily ride. If, during the psychomachia, the souls of the defunct were found faulty, the demon Ammit would eat them.

In the monotheistic traditions of Judaism (see Jewish views of the afterlife), most sects of Christianity, and Islam, human souls spend eternity in a place of happiness or torment, such as heaven, hell, or limbo.

Most Christians deny that entry into Heaven can be properly earned, rather it is a gift that is solely God's to give through his unmerited grace. This belief follows the theology of St. Paul: For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast. The Augustinian, Thomist, Lutheran, and Calvinist theological traditions all emphasize the necessity of God's undeserved grace for salvation, and reject so-called Pelagianism, which would make man earn salvation through good works. Not all Christian sects accept this doctrine, leading many controversies on grace and free will, and the idea of predestination.

In the informal folk beliefs of many Christians, the souls of virtuous people ascend to Heaven and are converted into angels. More formal Christian theology makes a sharp distinction between angels, who were created by God before the creation of humanity, and saints, who are virtuous people who have received immortality from the grace of God.

In view of the eternity of afterlife, some consider regular life as relatively unimportant, except for determining one's fate in the afterlife.[1] Life is just a provisional situation, and the metaphor of a tent as provisional housing facility is used as quoted below:

For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.(2 Corinthians 5:1)

Some sects, such as the Universalists, believe in universalism which holds that all will eventually be rewarded regardless of what they have done or believed.

Jehovah's Witnesses interpret Ecclesiastes 9:5 as precluding an afterlife:

For the living know that they shall die: but the dead know not any thing, neither have they any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten.

They believe that following Armageddon a resurrection in the flesh[2] to an Edenic Earth[3] will be the reward for resisting the tendency to sin and that eternal death (non-existence) is the punishment for sin lacking repentance.[4][5]

During the European Enlightenment, many deist freethinkers held that belief in an afterlife with reward and punishment was a necessity of reason and good moral order.
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Afterlife as reincarnation

Another afterlife concept which is found among Hindus, Rosicrucians, Spiritists, and Wiccans is reincarnation, as evolving humans life after life in the physical world, that is, acquiring a superior grade of consciousness and altruism by means of successive reincarnations. This succession is conceived to lead toward an eventual liberation or spiritual rebirth as spiritual beings. However, some practioners of eastern religions follow a different concept called metempsychosis which purposes that human beings can transmigrate into animals, vegetables or even minerals[citation needed]. One consequence of the Hindu and Spiritist beliefs is that our current lives are also an afterlife. According to those beliefs events in our current life are consequences of actions taken in previous lives, or Karma.

Buddhist, however, views that rebirth takes place without a self (similar to soul) and that the process of rebirth is simply a continuation of the previous life. The process of being reborn as any other being is based on your karma. And from a Buddhist prespective, the current life is actually a continuation of the pastlife.

Rosicrucians [6], in the same way of of those who have had near-death experiences, speak of a life review period occurring immediately after death and before entering the afterlife's planes of existence (before the silver cord is broken), followed by a judgment, more akin to a Final Review or End Report over one's life [7].

Some Neopagans believe in personal reincarnation, whereas some believe that the energy of one's soul reintegrates with a continuum of such energy which is recycled into other living things as they are born.[citation needed]Sikhs also believe in reincarnation. They believe that the soul belongs to the spiritual universe which has its origins in God. It is like a see-saw, the amount of good done in life will store up blessings, thus uniting with God. A soul may need to live many lives before it is one with God.
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Afterlife in modern science
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Modern scientific psychology and cognitive science explain human behavior solely as a phenomenon of the physical brain, and either does not require or rules out the presence of a non-brain "soul" or "spirit" that might be expected to continue a separate existence after the death of the brain. Evolutionary psychology attempts to explain the structure and processes of the brain in the context of biological evolution. The nature of consciousness and sentience itself is a subject of ongoing debate. One new aspect of the debate is the possibility of creating an artificial intelligence, raising new questions about what it means to be alive, conscious, dead, and resurrected.

Some conceptions of the afterlife are not overtly religious. Certain scientific fields developed in the 20th and 21st centuries, that were previously either unknown or purely theoretical, support interesting speculation and questions regarding the afterlife.

Is consciousness a sole result of the specific configuration of matter of a living brain, or do some forms of consciousness or experience remain present in the matter and energy that used to be a living brain? If the latter is true, even in part, then it is not certain that the subjective experience of a being's consciousness ends at the time of death, which could be interpreted as a form of afterlife.

Some investigation has occurred into the biological and experiential aspects of death; modern technology allows the process to be observed more closely than ever before. Claims of scientific evidence in support of an afterlife are generally considered not credible or pseudoscience by mainstream scientists. These claims do however, lead interesting theories regarding consciousness, and possibly, an afterlife.
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Philosophical arguments

Some non-believers in an afterlife, influenced by positivism, have argued that claims of an afterlife are unverifiable and unfalsifiable, and therefore cognitively meaningless. Some have argued that, on the contrary, particular claims concerning the nature of the afterlife are verifiable and falsifiable: all one has to do to verify/falsify them is die. On the other hand, they argue, the belief in the absence of an afterlife can be attacked as vacuous on the grounds that the statement "I cease to exist" is unverifiable, unfalsifiable, and therefore by the same token cognitively meaningless. In particular, the concept of our own non-existence is inconceivable:

* What experience corresponds to your own non-existence? None.
* If there is a life after death, then is there a life before birth? And if there was, can that experience be remembered?

Schopenhauer in particular argued that the idea of an afterlife or immortal soul is contradicted by the fact that it is impossible to attach sense to such a concept as the soul without reference to characteristics such as consciousness, which depend on such physical entities as the brain. Such concepts he argued, are beyond our reach and noumenal (thus unknowable). A counter-argument to that is that consciousness does not directly depend on physical entities, merely that our bodies are merely "temporary tools crafted by our souls" (which leads back to the idea of reincarnation).

2006-10-04 15:48:45 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Because Life can't follow Death

2006-10-05 08:23:58 · answer #2 · answered by Remo 1 · 0 0

b'cause life follows death

2006-10-05 16:22:17 · answer #3 · answered by rani 2 · 0 0

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