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re: Heaven and Hell Exist, and I Believe I Know Where

Posted on 2/17/14 at 1:17 am to
Posted by mizzoukills
Member since Aug 2011
40686 posts
Posted on 2/17/14 at 1:17 am to
Correct.

However, each night our brains don't experience the "surge" of activity that the brain experiences after death or sometimes during NDE (near death experiences).

I believe that our brains are wired with an "afterlife experience", and that experience can be positive or negative depending on the amount of guilt or sin that we carry into that experience.

Also, brain decomposition would signal an absolute end to any experience, unless you allow yourself to believe in cellular memory. If RNA can pass genetic hereditary traits from one human to another, could it also pass on memories or conscience?

I don't know.
This post was edited on 2/17/14 at 1:23 am
Posted by Stacked
Member since Apr 2012
5675 posts
Posted on 2/17/14 at 1:28 am to
While there's brain activity for upwards of (some guess) 10 minutes, the brain doesn't surge for 10 minutes. There's a surge of 4 stages that lasts roughly 4 seconds, 6 seconds, 20 seconds and then no surge or meaningful activity after that.

Take if from this site, I'm no neuro-scientist though.

quote:

In this study, the neuroscientists distinguish four distinct stages of brain death. Cardiac arrest stage 1 (CAS1) reflects the time (~4 seconds) between the last regular heartbeat and the loss of a oxygenated blood pulse (i.e. clinical death). The next stage (CAS2) lasts about 6 seconds, and ends with a burst in low-frequency brain waves (so-called 'delta blip'). The third death stage, CAS3, lasts approximately 20 seconds at which point there is no more evidence of meaningful brain activity at the final stage, CAS4.
Posted by roadhouse
Chicago
Member since Sep 2013
2703 posts
Posted on 2/17/14 at 3:29 pm to
quote:

If RNA can pass genetic hereditary traits from one human to another, could it also pass on memories or conscience?


The Monarch butterfly may do something similar to this

LINK

quote:

The long migration of monarch butterflies is remarkable in itself, but even more amazing given the fact that the migrating butterflies are two generations removed from those that made the journey the previous year. "It is in their genes," Reppert said.
This post was edited on 2/17/14 at 3:39 pm
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