(March 19, 2019 at 11:27 am)Catharsis Wrote:(March 19, 2019 at 7:57 am)Rahn127 Wrote: If you truly had a soul that is independent from your body, meaning it has it's own thoughts, it's own awareness (seeing, hearing, feeling, etc), then when your brain is unconscious, you should be able to see, think and feel stuff, but that doesn't happen.
When your brain is unconscious, there are no thoughts, no feelings, no sight, etc.
When you are unconscious, you cannot determine if you are unconscious or if you are dead.
What about near death experiences?
Hallucinations of an unconscious brain lacking oxygen?
There is a reason the superstitious call this crap "near death". It is away of mentally clinging to superstition without admitting it is crap.
There is a huge difference between coming close, and going beyond the window of repair.
Clinical death can be simply a doctor or nurse not finding vitals. That does happen only to have the patent come out of it. But in that case that is not permanent death, just merely having enough juice that flies under the radar.
Permanent death is beyond any repair, and nobody survives that. If one put a grenade in their mouth and pulled the pin, (NOT RECOMMENDING, DO NOT TRY THAT AT ANY TIME), your head would get blown off, and you would not come back from that.
If someone comes out of a medical emergency it only means there was just enough juice to allow for a recovery. That state isn't always detected by medical staff.
Point is, nobody survives permanent death. I watched my late mother take her last breath, and she did not jump up out of her bed 5 minutes later much less an hour or a day later.
I agree, though, humans do not understand medically speaking, how when we are not talking about something like a decapitation, how someone can "seemingly" survive death, when the reality is, if they come out of it, they were never dead at all.
The superstitious could quite easily prove surviving death is possible if they could prove it was possible to survive a decapitation. They wont conduct such an experiment, nor would I recommend it.