There has to be.Bcoz soul never dies.
2007-03-31 04:06:42
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answer #1
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answered by ⇐DâV£ MaΧiMiÅnO⇒ 6
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To paraphrase a former president " It all depends on what the definition of dead is". One definition of dead is that a person's physical heart has stopped beating. Another definition is that a person's physical brain lacks the electrical signals associated with life. There have been people who have been legally dead by these definitions and then returned to the living. Out of the Billions of people on the Earth there is bound to be some very unusual situation that an individual finds them self. For most people these definitions of death based on some observation is not what we mean by dead. Many people define the death of a person to be when the person ceases to exist. Such a definition leaves no possibility of life after death. A person using this definition and also believing in heaven denies that death can happen. There is no physical evidence possible to prove or disprove such a belief.
Everything in Science is based on the definition of the terms used. We use some terms in science that are also used in a religious setting. The definitions may be similar but are seldom the same. Failure to understand that different concepts are being described with the same terms has resulted in many arguments and much miscommunication over the ages.
2007-03-31 05:16:13
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answer #2
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answered by anonimous 6
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Can you prove life after death?
Whenever we argue about whether a thing can be proved, we should distinguish five different questions about that thing:
Does it really exist or not? "To be or not to be, that is the question."
If it does exist, do we know that it exists? A thing can obviously exist without our knowing it.
If we know that it exists, can we be certain of this knowledge? Our knowledge might be true but uncertain; it might be "right opinion."
If it is certain, is there a logical proof, a demonstration of why we have a right to be certain? There may be some certainties that are not logically demonstrable (e.g. my own existence, or the law of non-contradiction).
If there is a proof, is it a scientific one in the modern sense of 'scientific'? Is it publicly verifiable by formal logic and/or empirical observation? There may be other valid kinds of proof besides proofs by the scientific method.
2007-03-31 04:02:07
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answer #3
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answered by Dave 4
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No evidence.
Some have claimed that near death experiences have constituted some kind of circumstantial proof, but neurological analysis of brain activity during the so called near death experiences have some that the type of visual experiences reported are to be expected as the neural cortex is starved of oxygen (seeing a white light, feelins of being pulled toward it). The remainder of the near death experiences are apparently just supportive of the individual's own belief expectations.
2007-03-31 04:24:15
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answer #4
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answered by Dendronbat Crocoduck 6
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no.
We also have no proof that there isn't.
We can apply lex parsimoniae (latin: law of simplicity), also called Ockham's razor (invented by a Franciscan Friar): given that we just can't pick one over the other (scientifically), then we pick the simplest = there isn't.
This does not make it more true. It simply makes it more useful as a theory.
However, many people don't like that result.
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More useful as a theory: for example, in medecine, you treat the patient as if there wasn't. Therefore, you do what you can to protect life, as long as you can. If you used the reverse theory, then you'd treat people so that they could die faster and get to that afterlife which is, according to some, so much better.
2007-03-31 04:14:02
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answer #5
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answered by Raymond 7
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how's this for an answer?!
i've actuallty been dead for about 6 seconds!
while i was in Iraq on a patrol going door to door, I was the first to enter a house, not knowing that there our enemy was hiding behing the doorway ready for us..
As i walked in, I was stabbed right above where my body armor stops, and the knife went through my lung, barely missing my heart. Needless to say, I was airlifted to a nearby hospital, and suffered major bloodloss.
My body went into shock, and for 6 seconds, the medics and surgeons told me that I was dead. No heartbeat, no breathing, nothing.
Luckily, their AED was already charged, Automated External Defibulator, and I was brought back after the initial shockl.
They asked me what it was like to be dead, and honestly, it just all faded to black. No voices telling me to let go off my body and "come to the light." Nope. I just woke up. That was my experience.
2007-03-31 04:35:37
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answer #6
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answered by John Redcorn 4
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None at all. Though many people claim to have had near-death experiences and moving towards the light etc. But then again, many people claim to have been abducted by aliens too!
2007-03-31 04:01:06
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answer #7
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answered by catfish 4
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I don't think so, no one has ever come back from death and told us "oh yeah guys it's alright, and my hypothesis was correct!'. If someone did come back tell me who, cause i need some reassurance, I m pretty scared of dying. I am a bit young to be thinking about it so, on second thought don't tell me if you know someone. I want to find out for my self no spoiler.
2007-03-31 04:08:00
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answer #8
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answered by vrg_athlete26 3
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Absolutely . The Crucifixion, death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ as he spoke to his disciple's before returning to take his place with the father in heaven is as documented, written and spoken account as any in history. The only proof closer in existence is that of Elvis but he was full of sin and so I think Jesus is the truth you seek.
2007-03-31 04:12:27
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answer #9
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answered by Attaboyslim 4
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GOD is in charge of life after death. Trust HIM.
Don't miss out on all of your blessings; focus on your life before death.
2007-03-31 04:02:45
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answer #10
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answered by kitchenheatindex 5
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My dog sure makes faces at me like my Grandpa used to, so I think Grandpa might be a chihuahua now. Is that reincarnation?
2007-03-31 04:09:18
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answer #11
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answered by wwhrd 7
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