there may or may not be any sort of afterlife and we may never know, even in death.What kind of afterlife would we not find out about upon death?
If you die, and you fail to learn or experiencing anything ever again, then there is no "afterlife", by definition. (for you who died, at least.)
What I meant was, we may or may never know about an afterlife during life, and only if there's something more will we know about it in death. If somebody appears from beyond (be it God, an angel, or somebody who has died) and says "here's what's going to happen...", then the living will know.
If there is no afterlife, we will not know in death. If there is, we may or may not find out about it - depending on whether there's some choosing process. If we're not chosen, we die and never know about it. So, we may not know even in death.
I'm not saying there's an afterlife. But for the sake of argument, who's to say death is the end? Death is a word humans have defined to describe a specific state of being. And as we understand it and have defined it, it is the end. Just because we've set aside a word and assigned a meaning to it doesn't mean our understanding is correct.
The motherboard on my computer can crash and "die", but I might be able to transplant the hard-drive into an identical PC and viola! It "lives" again as it did before.
All we are, our memories, our thoughts, our hopes and dreams are in a collection of wiring in our brains. Who's to say that can't be recreated and replicated? Who's to say that a computer couldn't someday replicate the functions of the brain? Or that that a human clone's brain may be molded to duplicate ours?
If our thoughts can live on beyond our bodies, would that be life after death?
IF there is some all-powerful being, who knows what powers of science are available in his toolbox?
Now the next question is why would something so intelligent want a collection of so many of us hanging around forever? I think I'd want the most intelligent ones if at all. At least you can have intelligent conversation. Maybe show them the wonders of the universe and know that they can comprehend and appreciate what was created.
Unfortunately, if you believe what religion has to say about it, God's only going to take the most loyal to an afterlife. And the most loyal, well, let's just say that some of them don't exactly dwell on the wonders of the universe. Or science at all.
Let's face it, a lot of not-so-bright people are religious. Maybe devoutly so. But can you stand to be in a room trying to have a conversation with them for very long? Imagine the room filled with them - FOREVER.