Based on my book, Life After Death: The Burden of Proof
A. To dispel the common notion, held even by scientists, that the afterlife is a matter of faith that cannot be proved. In fact, there is a large, even overwhelming body of evidence. The main areas are as follows:
1. Near-death experiences. Thousands of patients have died, almost always from heart attacks, and then been resuscitated who experience some aspect of the afterlife. One Dutch study put the percentage at around 20% of all such cases. Amazingly, these patients were brain dead, showing no electrical activity in the cortex while they were dead. Yet they experienced sights and sounds, met deceased relatives, felt deep emotions, etc.
2. Near-death experiences in traditional cultures. The most famous of these are the delogs of Tibet, people who die and come back to life with detailed descriptions of the Bardo, the intricate Buddhist realm of heavens and hells.
3. Children who remember their past lives have now been studied in detail at the Univ. of Virginia. In some of the most striking cases, the child was born with a birthmark that matched the way he had died in the previous life (for example, entry and exit wounds from a bullet). The number of cases is now over 2,500.
4. Evidence of mind outside the brain. If consciousness is created by brain chemistry, there is little likelihood of a conscious afterlife. However, many intriguing experiments now exist to show that a person's thoughts can move beyond the brain. Besides the various experiments in telepathy and 'remote viewing,' which are much more credible than skeptics will admit, there is a replicated study from the engineering department at Princeton in which ordinary people could will a computer to generate a certain pattern of numbers. They did this through thought alone, having no contact with the machine itself.
5. In the area of information theory, a rising body of evidence suggests that Nature preserves data in the form of information fields. The most basic units of creation, such as quarks and gravity, may be interrelated through information that cannot be created or destroyed, only recombined into new patterns. If this is true, then it may be that what we call the soul is a complex package of information that survives death as well as precedes birth.
6. Then there are mysteries that no scientific theory can explain without consciousness. Foremost among these is consciousness itself. Inside the brain a hundred billion neurons register chemical and electrical signals. The brain contains no sights, sounds, smells, or tastes. It is a dark, semi-solid mass about the consistency of cold oatmeal. And yet this conglomeration of inert atoms somehow produces the entire visible, tangible world. If this metamorphosis can be explained, then we may find out how the brain might create subtler worlds, the kind traditionally known as heaven. If the secret lies not in brain chemistry but in awareness itself, the afterlife may turn out to be an extension of our present life, not a faraway mystical world.
7. Finally, there are traditions of spirituality--going far beyond organized religion--that tell us about consciousness from the viewpoint of wisdom. Science isn't the only valid way to extract knowledge from nature. The ancient Vedic rishis of India provided a clear, coherent worldview that fits perfectly into advanced concepts from quantum theory. The merging of wisdom and science has much to offer.
I've barely sketched in the outline of the argument offered in “Life After Death," but it's enough, I hope, to dispel the prevailing notion that nothing can be known about the afterlife and that faith is our only resort. Nothing in my book is based on faith. Yet I wrote the book for a second reason connected to faith: to offer consolation to the multitude of people who fear death. Far from being an end-point, death is part of a continuum. The awareness you cherish today carries over beyond death, and therefore it can be said that each of us is shaping our life after death right this minute.
2006-10-19 10:27:29
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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i do not question whether i will go to a heavenly state. i do not believe nor care if there is an afterlife.. i simply try to be a good person right now and live a full and happy life.
2016-03-28 14:25:21
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I question it all the time. Who knows what this life or afterlife have to offer. Who knows who are/ what is right.
2006-10-18 02:34:26
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answer #3
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answered by damisaunders@sbcglobal.net 2
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Yes, I'm very curious about that. I don't really know why... I don't 'technically' believe in all that stuff... I don't even really believe in a god. But I still wonder, if I'm wrong about there not being god, then... what happens when you die? I WISH I knew. Unfortunately I'll have to wait til I'm dead, which sucks....
2006-10-18 02:31:23
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I believe in Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior. He died on the cross and on the third day He rose from the dead to be with His Father in heaven. I am confident I will go to heaven because Jesus came as a man, died as a man and went to heaven as a man to show that all mankind can to do same.
2006-10-18 02:34:49
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answer #5
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answered by seekfind 6
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everyone shouldquestion, since there are no free passes, except for small children.
2006-10-18 02:30:45
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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yes...cause I don't know if I'm doing good enough....only god knows that....I just do my best....& pray to god to make my destination to heaven...& for forgivness....
2006-10-18 02:29:07
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answer #7
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answered by P.Y.T. 3
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i trust god
i trust my religion Islam
i know that anything that happens with me in this life is the best for me
if this thing is bad that means ill see the best at the other life so ill Waite and thank god
if this thing is good i thank god and wish for more in heaven
this is the perfect religion
Islam
love and proud to be a Muslim girl
2006-10-18 02:25:11
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answer #8
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answered by ayala 2
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yes as in this case no one can be absolutely 100 per - cent positive until the tests and answers have been given and the results verified by THE DEITY.
2006-10-18 02:24:51
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answer #9
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answered by Marvin R 7
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that's like asking, "do you question your ability to grow wings and fly?" I don't question things that are impossible, by known standards of what is possible and what is not.
2006-10-18 02:24:27
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answer #10
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answered by Real Friend 6
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