"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." Carl Sagan, Demon Haunted World pg 7.
Tomatoman, you are working with a discredited philosophy of science called Logical Positivism.
If you read the paper I cited, you will find that there is no correlation of NDE with anything.
I'm not working with any philosophy. I'm saying that without evidence of an afterlife all you are doing is saying "wouldn't it be nice if there was an afterlife". That is is called wishful thinking.
And as for sagan's quote, when applied to an afterlife that is pretty thin. You might as well apply it to father christmas as an argument, it's about as relevant.
This is just a really bad way to do science. In fact, it is just the opposite of how science is done. It's the equivalent of "it seems so apparent that you need a designer to have design ..."
I wasn't "doing science" or putting forward a scientific proposition, as I didn't think it was necessary. I was giving my own opinion that wishing for a continued consciousness without a brain is silly. The fact that all science based evidence for a direct connection between your brain and your consciousness backs this up is neither here nor there.
The problem is that people have reported consciousness when their brain is shut down. What's more, if you read the paper, you will find many reports of the person in NDE "seeing" things that were not in line-of-sight of their physical bodies.
Which paper?* I’ve flicked quickly through the thread and can’t find it. Can you give the link again? From what I’ve read in the past all NDE reports of seeing things out of line of sight are extremely dubious at best or just hearsay and certainly wouldn’t pass a ‘laboratory’ test.
Reporting things when the brain is shut down is certainly very interesting, but as I'm sure you'd be the first to agree, is difficult to know whether these experiences actually happened when the brain was fully shut down, or as it was shutting down or being revived, which would make far more sense, and is what the increased levels of CO2 idea proposes and supports, apparently.
"1. All our theory, ideas, preconceptions, instincts, and prejudices about how things logically ought to be, how they in all fairness ought to be, or how we would prefer them to be, must be tested against external reality --what they *really* are. How do we determine what they really are? Through direct experience of the universe itself."
It strikes me that you are actually insisting on the possibility of an afterlife because you have a prejudice that that is how things ought to be instead of how things are. I know you have a christian faith. Are you sure you are not allowing this to influence you in this one area where it wouldn't in others? Would you for instance, be as vehement in not ruling out the possibility of astrology being true? Or witchcraft or levitation or telepathy or ghosts or alien abduction? And if not, why not?
Logic and logical chains are always trumped by data.
Indeed. Are you writing this for my benefit or is your subconscious trying to tell you something?
Now you are into your personal likes and dislikes. These, too, have nothing to do with how things really are.
I never pretended they weren't personal, but you may be missing the point. The point was that consciousness itself is evolutionarily designed to serve a physical body. A disembodied consciousness for any length of time is bad news as far as mental health, sanity, boredom and purpose go. Consciousness is as much designed by evolution as eyes or opposing thumbs. As Joey from Friends said "I thought it'd be great, you know? have some time alone with my thoughts... turns out, I don't have as many thoughts as you'd think.”
*I found the paper and skimmed through it. As I thought, the out of line of sight reports are presented as hearsay: "During the pilot phase in one of the hospitals, a coronary-care-unit nurse reported a veridical out-of-body experience of a resuscitated patient". This is in a paper, remember, and that is the best they can do: someone unnamed reporting something that once happened to someone else unnamed. It's not much better than than "this bloke down the pub told me...". Sorry, but it really isn't, which is presumably why it is presented as nothing more than an anecdote in the paper for you to interpret as you please.