I am not talking about enegy that can be burned or broken down. Yes you are correct. a decomposing body gives off it's energy much the same as when we eat a steak. I am talking about electrical impulses which travel through you brain spinal columb, and nervous system. This type of energy is not stored in lifeless tissue.
Yes it is! You seem to have some idea of brainwave energy as some sort of mystical pseudo-Star Trek type force. It's not. It's simple electrochemical energy. It obeys all the same laws of physics as any other type of energy
As far as the experiment goes, like I said , I am sorry I don't have details. It was not the same one you mentioned though.
You've no dates or details but you know it wasn't the one rem mentioned? How do you know?
You can say what you like about it I suppose since I didn't bother to write down sources during my conversation. I don't think it would matter if I had.
Yes, it would. It matters a lot whether you can back up your claims with evidence. Maybe not to you, but to those of us who don't arbitrarily pick and choose their beliefs, evidence is paramount.
Yes your right, there is no hard evidence that what you call a NDE can prove an afterlife. I was not speaking of near death, I am talking about life after death. Clinical death, in a hospital setting.
Are you saying that when someone is technically dead (by certain definitions) but not so much that the doctors have given up on him, God has already whisked him off to the afterlife? Does such a person lose weight when they "clinically die"? Do they regain the weight when they're resuscitated?
I don't believe there will ever be any way to prove this. So this disagreement could hypotheticlly go on forever.
Only if you're right! if I'm right, it's got another 70 or 80 years at most!
I understand all of you explanations. They make sense. I just have a different point of view.
Which is fine, in itself. It's only when you try to defend that point of view with bad science or unfounded assertions that I have a problem.
I believe ojective evidence is a good thing. There are some things though that can not be proven or disproven.
When something can be neither proven nor disproven, it is prudent to assume the simplest explantion is true. A car could be powered by invisible elves, but if it appears in every way to be powered by an internal combustion engine and appears to obey known scientific and engineering principles, then it's absurd to imagine a supernatural element without good reason to do so.