Beautiful
Well-Known Member
I dont even know what to say. Sorry you think that way.
I dont even know what to say. Sorry you think that way.
What about clinically dead people who had nde's?
Yes? What's your point?
That's how I see it. If it was reversible, then it wasn't death.So you are saying that even when clinically dead, they arent considered dead to you?
Learning about each other's beliefs. You can be a teacher on other forums, there are plenty out there.Precisley, you enjoy a good discussion. I don't discuss or argue. It is only a conversation, as if in between great friends. I consider you my fellow brothers and sisters. I think we should speak with care and affection towards eachother, and uncover the beauty and secrets of life together...Not you holding your beliefs and I holding mine, you with your oppinions and me with mine...that is just nonsense.
That's how I see it. If it was reversible, then it wasn't death.
NDEs are fascinating, but at best, they give us clues about the extremes of life, rather than actual death. The "N" in NDE stands for "near", after all.
No, you said "if they didn't die" its not a NDE. So I said "what if they are clinically dead?" And you said "That does not mean they are dead." So you just made a new definition for what death is
So you know what death is?
@Beautiful, as Cino notes, we are very careful about not having the site become an instructional source. Discussions and sharing view points for the sake of interfaith purposes, however, are very welcome and you’ve made many such contributions already and I look forward to seeing more.No, really, read the rules.. I enjoy a good discussion, and personal takes on things, but religious instruction "let's find out together"-style is off topic here.
Sorry but I'm still not clear what your interpretation is here. Are you saying there is a personal essence which continues? Or not?
"Near-death experiences often occur in association with cardiac arrest. Prior studies found that 10–20 seconds following cardiac arrest, electroencephalogram measurements generally find no significant measureable brain cortical electrical activity.6 A prolonged, detailed, lucid experience following cardiac arrest should not be possible, yet this is reported in many NDEs. This is especially notable given the prolonged period of amnesia that typically precedes and follows recovery from cardiac arrest."
Anyway, I'm curious what you think about the content of these experiences always being so awe inspiring and specific? They always seem to be about the same thing, right?![]()
Even when the people they happen to are skeptics and not religious at all, like myself coincidentally![]()
And buddhism is based on the things that happen to meditators. Buddha was a meditator and his teaching is founded on meditation. Its all about the shocking and unexpected secrets that take place in the field of knowledge; of infinite consciousness; of meditation.
I'm curious why these experiences are always about trascendence. Why is it always about going beyond and learning cosmic knowledge and feeling cosmic love.
Why does the brain have this cosmic/spiritual agenda it wants to teach ? (Think of Akiane, who had her visions as a mere child and thus had no possible way of having spiritual knowledge beforehand)
Lol, exactly my thought! It made me certain how people could think G!d spoke to him if it was in a language I could read!!Wow, @wil, bad luck to get to peek at the akashic writings and then discover they're in a script you can't read!
And her family seems to be really into religious experimentation, so she had a frame of reference for her paintings. Apparently, that famous painting of Jesus was inspired by someone who was introduced to her specifically as a model.
Hallucinations beyond our brain connections being jumbled
I don't, my neurologists know much more than I.How do you know how the brain works? How do you know these experiences are consequence of it being jumbled?