(August 18, 2011 at 9:09 pm)Rhythm Wrote: You keep asking the same question as though it hadn't been answered before CRod. Without the functions of your sensory systems, including your brain itself, you don't experience anything. There is no description because there is no experience. All descriptions of death are either from before the moment of death (from the dyings point of view) or after the moment of death (from an observers point of view). A person may say "I am dying". A seperate person may point to that person and say "he is dead", but the dead have a tendency not to sit up after death and say "I am dead".
"you don't experience anything"
What is it like to not experience anything?
"Its not what your looking at that matters, its what you see." -Henry David Thoreau
♪Oh, I get lost in my mind Lost, I get lost I get Lost in my mind Lost in my Mind Yes, I get lost in my mind Lost, I get lost I get lost I get lost Oh, I get♪ -The Head and the Heart
"You are wise, witty and wonderful, but you spend too much time reading this sort of stuff.”- Frank Crane
♪Oh, I get lost in my mind Lost, I get lost I get Lost in my mind Lost in my Mind Yes, I get lost in my mind Lost, I get lost I get lost I get lost Oh, I get♪ -The Head and the Heart
"You are wise, witty and wonderful, but you spend too much time reading this sort of stuff.”- Frank Crane