Before modern science, most people assumed there was an afterlife. But that belief was soon to decline among the educated classes. With the new 17th century
mechanistic science, it suddenly seemed to many of the “brights” that there was
no afterlife, no soul, and no God. Science was about what can be measured
exactly. There is no way to
measure and manipulate soul, God, or afterlife; therefore, they do not exist!
Material science continued to evolve, but people still had mental
experiences (pardon the oxymoron). They would reason about various issues, make
moral judgments, have all sorts of feelings, memories, fantasies, dreams, and
volitions. Now and then someone saw a ghost or got a message from a dead person
in a dream, but one kept silent about that sort of thing.
Scientists and philosophers committed to materialism invented
arguments designed to explain away all mental realities. The reductionist
program lives on in the brilliantly obtuse work of Daniel Dennett who believes,
contrary to the human race, that consciousness is an “illusion.” Problem is, if
something is an illusion, how can it be physical? Illusions are misinterpretations; only minds interpret, and only
minds can have illusions.
Reducing the mental to the physical is a curious undertaking. The very act of making that reduction seems
to me a mental act. Something, we assume, is always going on somewhere in the
brain while someone is thinking, feeling, remembering, etc., but these are
correlations not explanations.
They don’t logically entail reduction of mental occurrences to brain
occurrences, as many mistakenly assume. A feeling is about sadness or joy, regret or longing; brain
states are not about anything. They
exist but don’t know that they exist; we know they exist because we know that
we exist.
Mind is totally unlike anything occurring in the physical
brain. In spite of all the
scientific knowledge of the correlations, states of mind and consciousness
remain irreducible. Brain and
consciousness interact, but they are different agencies. Brain events, for example, occur in
space; mental events occur in their own nonphysical space, for example, in
dreams. The way things stand,
there is a persistent sense--shared even by materialists—that consciousness is a
mystery.
Consciousness is a definite mystery to those who believe
that physical reality is the basis for explaining everything. Otherwise, my consciousness (or
experience) is immediately transparent to me, a fluctuating scene with periodic
gaps; it is all I know and is my sole access to anything I might claim is real
in any sense. It is that out of
which I make, infer, and sometimes invent my view of the external world. I could be a super-Houdini, but I can
never get out of my immediate experience, except indirectly by inference or by acts of imagination, these also being forms of consciousness.
Now then our key to the afterlife. The question of the afterlife is a question of consciousness. Jones dies. That is, his once strong
and handsome body is now a corpse.
But Jones was also a conscious being: that is, he loved, suffered,
dreamed, believed, regretted, and so on.
What we want to know is what happened to Jones’s conscious reality, his
lived world, his memories, feelings, desires. These all made up the invisible stream of his life on earth. The question is whether the inner Jones
has survived in some new dimension of a “next” world.
The key to the answer lies in the nature of
consciousness. If the conscious
stream of being we call Jones is somehow woven of the same fabric of Jones the
material corpse, the answer is almost certainly no. If soulful Jones resides in a few pounds of brain matter,
it’s farewell forever to the good fellow.
But in fact, as noted above, science has not been able to reduce
or assimilate consciousness to the brain.
The world of mind and consciousness apparently exists in its own right, according
to its own logic; it follows that the death of the brain does not entail the death of consciousness. This is the key to the afterlife
question. It permits us to open
the door to an afterlife.
But by this key we are not guaranteed entrance. We only know we are not forbidden by the
logic of our inner nature. To gain
some assurance that individual persons do survive bodily death, we can turn to
all the research on postmortem survival, including near-death studies;
reincarnation memories, behaviors, and bodily marks; mediumship; hauntings and
apparitions.
To know for sure about what may come after, however, one
will have to step through the door. In
the meantime, the trick is how to handle the suspense.
"If science cannot explain the one thing I know for certain to exist," says my businessman friend Earl Crockett," then so much the worse for science."
ReplyDeleteCONSCIOUSNESS, I believe, IS the UNIVERSAL GOD, the SPIRIT, the FORCE, the POWER, the all-knowing, all-seeing, omnipotent, omnipresent; and each individual SOUL-CONSCIOUSNESS is and/or can connect with that INVISIBLE SPIRITUAL POWER through mindful BREATHING, PRAYING, MEDITATING and, most importantly, ACTING and BEHAVING in GOOD FAITH. The ancient Indian texts suggest the same, as do all religious-mystical writings.
ReplyDeleteWhere does our SOUL-CONSCIOUSNESS go after the body's death? The Russian language suggests - into the AIR. AIR is Voz-DUKH; DUKH is SPIRIT. the derivative of DUKH is DUSHA, which means SOUL. Where does the writer's, the artist's or any person's
INSPIRATION come from? Obviously, the AIR. The brain and the body, the hands, act in order to implement into physical reality what is received as the IDEA for anything and everything.