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13 answers

The statment 'brought back to life' implies that they have left life during the freezing proccess, there for, if they remember anything from their frozen time, then that will be a memory of their afterlife, however, your question assumes that there is only one afterlife, perhaps there is a personalised afterlife for each of us?

2007-01-15 02:36:17 · answer #1 · answered by Lucsan 2 · 0 0

First of all, human tissue breaks down when frozen, and is destroyed. A person frozen solid, therefore, could never be brought back to life. (That's right, all those people spending thousands of dollars having their bodies frozen are just fooling themselves.)
Second, purely hypothetical, if a frozen person was brought back to life, could it be claimed he had really been dead?

2007-01-15 02:36:59 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The soul is separate from the body, therefore if the frozen person was brought back to life it is likely that ..1....they have no soul or 2....another soul has claimed the defrosted body.
If no soul is present the body will be as a vegetable. If a new soul claims it, it will just be a new 'birth' and as such will have no memory of being dead or on the otherside.

2007-01-15 02:37:57 · answer #3 · answered by Angelfish 6 · 0 1

first of all to be frozen then you are dead, if you were alive when being put to freeze then you would surely be dead by the time the temperature drops past a human body temperature. people freeze to death now from severe cold weather so not likely if put to freeze. and when you die everything about you dies, when you under the operation bed you are put to sleep you don't know how the operation was conducted so much more if your are frozen.

2007-01-15 02:45:37 · answer #4 · answered by sugar 2 · 0 0

Anytime there is 'brain death' or something close to it, lots of unusual things happen, like the infamous white light. The human brain, being human, interprets all of this data and attempts to make a coherent story out of it.

Since most of us have heard of NDE etc, that's the story we use. And if we don't, someone is usually happy to give it to us anyway.

Because they have actually experienced a state that doesn't occur without medication during normal life, it is real and their 'knowledge' of it is very real. It's their interpretations of those experiences that are dodgy.

2007-01-15 02:46:52 · answer #5 · answered by The angels have the phone box. 7 · 0 0

Good question hadn't thought of that one?? Within the next 100/200 years they may well be able to do this? You will have to be rich to be a member mind!! Did you ever see that Twighlight Zone where they did a robbery of gold bullion, then went into some kind of sleep trance for a hundred years?

2007-01-15 02:43:05 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i would say that they have no memory of the time they were frozen whether you believe them to be alive or dead. So i would assume they would not have experienced an afterlife, proving that there isn't one. - and once you're dead that's it. enjoy life while you have it, it's too short to be fantasising about an "afterlife".

2007-01-15 02:41:36 · answer #7 · answered by mammmia 2 · 0 0

Ask Micheal Jackson.

2007-01-15 02:33:11 · answer #8 · answered by INDRAG? 6 · 1 0

no doubt we would read their story in the tabloids and see the interviews on the tv/get the book

whats the betting they would say there was

easy money for you if you want to try it

2007-01-15 02:38:11 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

logically speaking, the answer is yes, at least for the individual in question.

2007-01-15 02:42:35 · answer #10 · answered by rick m 6 · 0 0

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