I'm just guessing here, but I'd say the heart stops, the brain stops, all systems shut down, and depending on who you ask after that there is either nothing or a whole lot of something.
2007-07-17 23:00:41
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Once a baby is born it starts dying . cells and systems no longer needed to survive die, first is the ability to breath under water up to the moment a baby takes that first breath of air it cant drowned in water . From here on parts of humans die most cells like skin blood brain fat etc are replaced with new cells unless they are destroyed by damage or disease and as time goes on parts of the body /the heart wears out and cannot function the control system brain does not receive the oxygen it needs so the body dies. well that's how I'm understand the process of dying . If you think man is here by accident and life is a totally random occurrences that's the end if you believe that there is a higher power then you go ,the part that is you,your personality etc ,goes to a better place.
2007-07-18 03:25:40
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
The process of death in humans is no more different than that of an ant or an elephant, no more than the end of a biological process.
A good look a Buddhist teachings will indicate that a belief in this illusion that we call the self is the beginning of all 'Dukka' or misery we feel in life and in the thought of death.
The illusion of self is formed by the 'aggregates' which are the components of the body which form a feeling of being separated from other living things, being more special and there for having a 'purpose', and that something must happen to us after death because we are too caught up in the selfishness of our lives to believe that we can just die.
Unfortunately, reading and truly believing are are poles apart and to keep the layperson in tune with the teachings and on the right path the idea reincarnation was adopted. Once a pupil, through meditation and learning has seen the truth he or she has no problems in accepting the 'Ultimate Truth'
And that is that there is no process after death.
2007-07-17 23:06:44
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
1⤋
There are various possibilities to the question; firstly and most likely the brain simply ceases to continue working and "shuts down" somewhat like a PC is turned off, the processor discontinues its work.
Another possibility, that many mystics agree on, is that of reincarnation. The soul leaves the body and enters a new vessel, and a new life begins.
2007-07-18 00:29:00
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Here is the best book ever which explains this process and leaves you with no doubts and no further questions concerning this happening, explaining also the process in details. http://www.amazon.com/Why-We-Live-After-Death/dp/1574610058
The soul leaves the body when the body dies. It might be a feeling as if you leave a cloak. In this book from Richard Steinpach, Why we live after death, you will find the explanations you need.
I am personally convinced that the soul lives on if the body dies.
2007-07-17 23:09:58
·
answer #5
·
answered by I love you too! 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
What's ironic is that humans have no concern for the millenniums that came before our individual existence, but we are wholly preoccupied with the millenniums that may take place without us after we're gone. Except for fable, there is no evidence that humans exist in any form after death...like all other living forms, we are born, we live, we degenerate, we die. I think the most important thing is to make wonderful use of the time you KNOW you have, and eternity will take care of itself.
2007-07-17 23:13:24
·
answer #6
·
answered by hobbesjohnson 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
I do not know very much about charkas, but I think they the great interpretation of physical orientation of human body and mind. Besides, when it comes to thinking I chose to think intuitively and transcendently, and thus allowing my mind to express itself freely; however when it comes to guidance for the things that I need to do, things that would effect and shared existence, I try to learn from the greatest sources of wisdom in human mind, and from the people around me at large.
Regarding the issue of death, I think death basically is a process of constant living. It is in the sense that we are not just alive, we live; and since we live we think about death. To contemplate death is to think about life, how life will end, or shift in forms of reality possible in existence. It is all very spiritually significant in the mind. We think about death because we are concern about life, and more importantly continuation of life after life forever.
In my understanding living is like burning of a candle that when burns illuminated itself and also all things around it. And while a candle burns it give out light, and the sphere of that light spreads all around, illumination all that come in its scope. But the candle is burning, it is living but at the same time it is also dying. The only proof that a candle does not live and die all at the same time in equal measures, therefore, is in the fact that it generates light, light that remains travelling in all directions into the universe forever.
2007-07-18 00:25:15
·
answer #7
·
answered by Shahid 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
If any important organs of our body die, brain, heart and lungs stop first. No brain: no control. No heart: no nutrition for cells. No lungs: no oxygen for the cells to replicate. If cells don't replicate and get no nutrition, they die. Our cells are constantly dying and there is constant reinforcement from our body. If no reinforcement, we cells just disappear and die. However our nails and hair are growing for a few days after death due to the nutrition they store.
2007-07-20 00:55:54
·
answer #8
·
answered by leomcholwer 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
the coma is the spirit dream,life is the noisy nightmare where you have to indulge. you die you dream for ever.
2007-07-21 09:35:49
·
answer #9
·
answered by Karl M 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
your heart stops beating the lights go out you feel nothing and never will again.
It is the end
2007-07-17 22:59:10
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋