Trees talk to each other, cry and some even walk around.Of course it does. For consciousness brain activity or even the existence of a brain is not necessary. I write this as an atheist.
I have a couple of times on the forum. Give me a day or so to find at least one of those.Would you like to share more details?
Not if you believe in Christianity!That’s wild to think about. If consciousness really keeps going after death, it kinda changes how we see everything, right
As a child I would often dream of a bright blinding light, like a sun in my eyes and would wake up complaining about it to my mother.Most likely the eye lids open, the eyes continue to transmit images and light long after the heart stops beating.
Thats what those are aware of as going towards the light. Even if the eyelid's are pushed closed the eye still is
aware of the bright lights shined at them.
Christianity is not the only faith that believes in a life of the soul independent of a body.Not if you believe in Christianity!
Thanks. Also the writings of Carl Jung.@Babs2u @Marcy Sheiner and anyone else able to consider possibilities:
i highly recommend, as i have else on SF, "The Field" by Lynne McTaggart. It touches on the concept of 'collective' or universal consciousness without insisting on a specific label. Part of what appealed to me about it was the experiments conducted that suggest it's existence.
Near-death experiences (NDEs) occur in patients who have been close to death, sometimes during periods of low oxygen. However, the preservation or restoration of brain activity is essential for generating and retaining NDE memories. While the occurrence of complex conscious experiences (such as NDEs) despite severe brain stress has been studied, the underlying brain function during the event has never been completely absent.I am not a doctor. Let me be clear about that.
But I have enough education to know that a dead cell is dead, and under normal conditions, if you're not breathing for 5 minutes, you're either gone or hopelessly brain damaged.
Kinda like aNear-death experiences (NDEs) occur in patients who have been close to death, sometimes during periods of low oxygen. However, the preservation or restoration of brain activity is essential for generating and retaining NDE memories. While the occurrence of complex conscious experiences (such as NDEs) despite severe brain stress has been studied, the underlying brain function during the event has never been completely absent.
However, it has been suggested that during NDEs, the brain's inhibitory functions diminish or fail, leading to heightened perception or exaggerated neural activity. This theory is plausible and supported by scientific research. Studies indicate that, as the brain undergoes oxygen deprivation and energy conservation during the process of dying, it loses normal inhibitory control, particularly in areas such as the visual system. This loss of inhibition, or 'disinhibition', can cause the overactivation of brain circuits, resulting in phenomena such as the perception of bright light or other vivid sensory experiences reported in NDEs.
Disinhibition may also affect memory and emotional areas of the brain, which could explain reports of life review, out-of-body sensations and profound feelings of peace. The neurochemical environment changes dramatically during this process, including surges in neurotransmitters such as serotonin, which can produce experiences resembling hallucinations or mystical visions.
Neurophysiological recordings in animal models reveal increased high-frequency brain oscillations and cortical activity during the dying process, alongside loss of normal inhibitory function. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for how unconscious or near-unconscious brains might generate such experiences.
Therefore, the idea that a failing inhibitory system in the dying brain leads to amplified sensory and cognitive phenomena is well-grounded in current neuroscience and is a plausible explanation for many NDE characteristics.
That’s wild to think about. If consciousness really keeps going after death, it kinda changes how we see everything, right