Where did the universe come from? Atheistic origin science has no answer.
June 1, 2014 at 1:02 pm
(May 31, 2014 at 9:56 pm)snowtracks Wrote:(May 30, 2014 at 2:28 am)Rampant.A.I. Wrote: I had an NDE where I witnessed a loved one die in front of me. The experience was so strong that it took almost more than six months for the feelings of loss on waking, vivid dreams, and being convinced at some level they had actually died and I was in a coma.these nde are generally thought of as falling into 3 categories : 1. neuro-psychological - brain is malfunctioning in some way, aka, oxygen deprivation, endorphins being released, etc. 2. psychological nature of person - caused by perhaps a defense mechanism or shock. person is have a troubling psychological experience. these two categories percentagewise together account perhaps for 95%. 3 meta-physical in nature - secular skepticism would serve well here. one thing for sure, messages interpreted to be from God would be bogus; however, could be originating from a spiritual deception source.
For the first week in the hospital, (heavily medicated and under daily MRI observation due to likelihood of slipping into a coma) I had to overcome the conviction that she was not actually dead every time I woke up alone, or was dead and I was hallucinating her when she returned.
Is this evidence that I have a ghost sitting next to me right now, or am actually still in a coma, or that I suffered a traumatic injury that caused the brain to hallucinate?
Why do experiences of God deserve special consideration?
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We know for a fact these experiences are originating within the brain, and mine can be dismissed with a psychological explanation, yet if I had told you I saw winged angels and pearly gates you'd unquestioningly accept it as evidence for the supernatural?