I wasn’t asking how long it takes for a human body to decompose. I was asking ‘when are we considered ‘clinically dead’, time wise.?”
According to everything I’ve read, medical science can’t seem to agree on this.
At one point in time it was 3 to 4 minutes, which coincided with the heart stopping since no blood is being pumped to vital organs.
Now it appears that it’s when there is no electrical impulses in the brain, however this has proved to be FAR from the case. Documented studies have proven time and time again that the brain can die along with the rest of the body yet the patient still has full recollection of things happening around them with 100% accuracy. I’ve brought this point up time and time again yet it gets ignored. Why?
My conclusion is that medical science doesn’t know for certain when someone is declared clinically dead, hence the reason why so many coffins have had scratch marks from nails inside the lid
If this is the case, then perhaps medical science should redefine what ‘clinically dead ‘ means but they don’t because they don’t know. If THEY don’t know and can’t explain unusual after death phenomenon, then how can any of us know for certain?
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/amp.livescience.com/46418-clinical-death-definitions.html