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some problems with the idea of an afterlife (Read 27072 times)
orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #15 - Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:12pm
 
Thaks, that's a good way of looking at it, and might imply we should try to lighten up a bit I guess... I try to but sometimes life experiences I could do without get in the way..

So do you think all our "souls" had their start in the beginning of time? Do you think our "souls" "grew" in some way through being embodied in different kinds of creature? What about before there was even any life? I mean for the firrst billion or so years the earth was barren, as I think current science has it.. and how come some creatures have stayed as "lower'lifeforms and we get to be human?


dave_a_mbs wrote on Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:04pm:
Just to add to what Don is saying, for the Hindu, the purpose of life is to live, It is called lila, Sanskrit for "play". And we're all here because we like to play, and because we are playing in this specific manner together, we have fun in the same universe. Ultimately, no matter whether we view ourselves as spiritual persons or as mechanists, we are what the wavefront of the Big Bang, the Creator's Event One,  looks like, but 14 billion years after the fact.  

welcome to the forum - you ask good questions

d

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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #16 - Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:16pm
 
Orlando:

Comments below.

orlando123 wrote on Aug 3rd, 2007 at 3:54pm:
Hi - I feel like some of your remarks are a little bit judgmental. I agree now that ouija baords are a bad idea, but I didn't experiment with any bad attitude, I just wanted guidance and evidence about the meaning of life and if there was an afterlife etc. Your words could imply that I lacked an attitude of love and light and almost deliberately allowed an angry and unhappy entity to have an influence over me, which was not the case. However I was not in an espcially happy and stable time in my life at the time, which could also have an effect i guess.

""Sorry if you thought I was being judgemental. I was just making a comment about ouija boards in general.  Lots of people have used ouija boards without having anything negative in mind. The question is, who ends up answering the call?""

I tried to get this spirit, if that's what it was, to "go into the light" but he wasn't interested.

However, i suppose that, in the long run, he has not "got the upper hand".

""Most certainly not.  I don't believe you'd be here sharing today if he had.  It seems key that you decided to cut off contact.""

Are you opposed per se to the idea of what I suppose you would call trance mediumship (even though I was conscious) where the spirit speaks through you? I am unsure how common a phenonenon it is, especially the kind I experienced, where it is not just "inspired speaking" of some kind but you actualy relax and let the spirit use your body/vocal chords etc and don;t know what you will say.

""I can't make a blanket statement for all cases, because I don't know. I have read of channeled cases that weren't right. On the other hand, Rosalind Mcknight allowed a spirit she was associated with to speak through her body when she worked at TMI with Robert Monroe. So much of what this spirit shared was positive and seemed accurate. It seemed like this spirit had no interest of playing the role of guru for personal attention. These dialogues can be found in her book "Cosmic Journeys.""

When you say negative spirits approach you sometimes, do you mean it's a sensation you get, or you see images, or you hear voices? Anyway, thanks for the extra info on your own experiences. What type of meditation methods do you use?


""All of the above, I've seen, heard and felt them.  They've tried to scare me, but didn't succeed.  When they say something ridiculous, I tell them so.""

Regarding meditation, I don't use methods such as watching my breath or repeating a mantra. Instead I try to open up to love, or get to know the real me. I found that it isn't necessary to stop my mind when I do this. Thought that appears within my mind just points to the one who is aware of it, "me." Smiley Sometimes I'll meditate on a specific issue.

I apologize again if it seems as if I was making a judgmental comment towards you. That wasn't my intent at all.""

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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #17 - Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:20pm
 
Dave:

My name is "Albert," not "Don."  Perhaps I should end my posts with Albert.

Albert. Smiley
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #18 - Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:35pm
 
No offense taken recoverer. Thanks for the pointers about how you meditate. That sounds perhaps more constructive than a more mechanical method like a focus on each breath or reciting a mantra etc as you say (both of which I've tried before).

I am a bit scared of attempting to inititate some form of spirit communication though, becasue of what's happened before. Anyway, I guess doing some of your type meditation wouldn;t hurt, and if something helpful arouse in terms of messages/images etc that would be fine too
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #19 - Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:44pm
 
Orlando:

I can see why you would be concerned. I've been very careful about communicating with spirits. I don't want to be led astray. Numerous things have shown me that I'm in contact with spirits who represent the light. I do have to keep an eye out for the pesty spirits.

I figure many people don't need to communicate with spirits. Different paths for different people. The main thing is to grow in love as much as we can.  

 



orlando123 wrote on Aug 3rd, 2007 at 4:35pm:
No offense taken recoverer. Thanks for the pointers about how you meditate. That sounds perhaps more constructive than a more mechanical method like a focus on each breath or reciting a mantra etc as you say (both of which I've tried before).

I am a bit scared of attempting to inititate some form of spirit communication though, becasue of what's happened before. Anyway, I guess doing some of your type meditation wouldn;t hurt, and if something helpful arouse in terms of messages/images etc that would be fine too

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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #20 - Aug 3rd, 2007 at 10:38pm
 
Quote:
Why shouldn't science eventually show that all consciousness is a product of the brain?


because of those remarkable instances where people obtain information out of body they couldn't have attained any other way.  bruce moen does this some in his books. 

what, will science explain that by saying our brain magically has powers that extend through the whole universe?   Grin  really the more you try to explain such things with conventional science, the more laughable it becomes.  your brain is held within your skull.  your brain cannot go get information outside of the skull, that is obvious.  so something else is at play i.e. the soul or the mind. 

(of course, scientist don't even try to explain such remarkable occurences.  they simply deny that it happened in the first place!  how convenient.  i'm sure psychopathic murderers love that logic. "no i didn't just kill that guy."  just say something didn't happen, and it magically didn't!  haha)

also science may not believe in things like remote viewing, but our government did enough to spend millions on the stargate program.  and scientists are still dumb enough to think people aren't being abducted by aliens.  give me a break.
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #21 - Aug 4th, 2007 at 4:53am
 
Thanks Seeker, I dare say you are right. I am reading parapsychologist Dean Radin's The Conscious Universe at the moment, which appears to give strong scientific backing for psi phenomena for example, and Prof Brian Josephson, a nobel physics laureate reccomends it and is also open to such things being real. I am also interested by some of the NDE experiences which appear to have happenned when there was no brain acxtivity, but clinching proof is very elusive. Doctors have treid to set up experiments putting pictures above hospital beds in case someone reports an OBE where they floated up, to see if they saw the design, but so far things like this have always failed.
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Never say die
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #22 - Aug 4th, 2007 at 11:16am
 
Western Materialistic Mechanistic Science is just another belief system. It poses as objective, rational, neutral and unemotional but when it deals with laws of non-physical energy and consciousness it makes alot of assumptions and cannot prove its hypothesis simply with referring to laws of the physical world. If we are all one which I believe we are and this is essentially the truth revealed to us at the highest states of consciousness, then it is no wonder that western materialist mechanistic science continues to ignore and fails to investigate spirituality. While of course I am well aware of the alternate scientific paradigms put forward by the likes of Dean Radin and others like Dr Claude Swanson http://www.synchronizeduniverse.com/ , the pervading method of scientific analysis is still based on a mentality of separation which creates a worldview of randomness and meaninglessness. Perhaps meaning even in a spiritual worldview is still essentially one that is created and reality is affected by the observer, like in some quantum physics theories ... but I'd rather see things from that point of view than purely an materialist one.

I am only in the early stages of Bruce's books and tapes. I am far less experienced in spiritual experiences then most of you on this board, yet I seem to have more trouble rationally disbelieving in the afterlife than believing in it. If there's no afterlife then alot of very sensitive, aware and intelligent people are all deluded? I also find that hard to believe.

My latest doubt is a more semantics issue. Is there really an 'afterlife'? because if we are all one and if time doesn't really exist as I keep reading and hearing about, then wouldn't 'afterlife' be a misnomer? It is all these complexities and differences in religious beliefs that I have shifted from one to another over the time that has led to me to a simpler view. We all stem from the 'one' the ever expanding consciousness creatively moving through existence. The 'one' will not reach an ultimate climax, for if there is no time then there cannot be an end or a beginning.

Never say die
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #23 - Aug 4th, 2007 at 11:26am
 
About the time issue.

10. TIME AND PROPHECY. One unusual aspect of ESP, Remote Viewing and Psychokinesis is that "time" doesn't seem to matter. One can exert an influence or acquire information in the past and in the future, almost as easily as in the present. In conventional physics, the order of events is very important, but in the realm of psychic phenomena there seems to be a flexibility to move in time that defies current physics.

http://www.synchronizeduniverse.com/
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #24 - Aug 4th, 2007 at 11:39am
 
Hi

While "western materialistic science" may sometimes be stuck in its ways an not open enough to new possibilities I disagree with the idea it is just a "belief system" - science is a system of seeking rational proof and repeatable experiements etc so people can agree between themselves that certain things about the world are facts (or the best hypothesis currently available). Science has given us modern medicine so mothers rarely risk dying in childbirth and children rarely die in infancy, both commonplace 100 years ago, and , for example , we have cheap air travel and computers and the internet. If we had continued to base everything just on traditions and dogmas, or just personal beliefs,  instead of studying and seeking factual information we would have none of this. It is understandable if scientists are a bit wary of seeming to accept things that could be seen as cranky or lacking in solid theoretical grounding and evidence, as they don;t want to damage their careers and lose funding etc, which is a shame, however at least science does eventually move on in the face of enough evidence - 21st century science is a very different thing from 17th century science, for example - which you can;t say for many belief-based systems.


Also it is understandable that science tends to examine things in a compartmentalised way rather than always thinking of "the one" and interconnectedness. Again , it would not have got far if scientists had done otherwise. Not to say that your approach is not useful and complementary , but then those scientsist who are seeking a "theory of everything"combining quantum mechanics and the theory of relativity etc are working in a "holistic"way, you could say, also you can;t say that astrophysisists do not look at "the big picture"! Subjective experiences are valuable too, but they only have meaning to the person experiencing them, so science has to try and find out what mechanisms are going on, what particles and waves and forces etc exist so as to explain things in language that many people can agree on and understand.

As for many senstive people believing in life after death etc that is not a good reason to assume it is right on its own, that is a logical fallacy. in the past many sensitve people thought the earth was the centre of the universe and the stars and sun revolved around it, but it wasn't right then and it's still not right now. Many intelligent people (including women) thought it was wrong for women to work or vote. ditto for the keeping of slaves. A billion or two people believe in one form or another of Christainity, which I think is largely nonsense when studied logically and thoroughly. Quite a lot of presumably otherwise intelligent and likeable people eblief in even crankier religions like Mormonism or Scientology (which says human life on earth started when an alien brought a lot of alien souls here in spaceships shaped like airplanes and then dumped them into a volcano).

There are many reasons why people might believe in life after death without it being factually true, such as the fact none of us like to think we and our loved ones might one day not exist. However although belief in some kind of survival is very common around the world the details of it vary greatly. I would also like to think this common belief does point to a factual truth, but just becasue lots of nice people think it does that is not evidence.

Never say die wrote on Aug 4th, 2007 at 11:16am:
Western Materialistic Mechanistic Science is just another belief system. It poses as objective, rational, neutral and unemotional but its set of assumptions are based on alot of pre-conceptions and assumptions. If we are all one which I believe we are and this is essentially the truth revealed to us at the highest states of consciousness, then it is no wonder that western materialist mechanistic science continues to ignore and fails to investigate spirituality. While of course I am well aware of the alternate scientific paradigms put forward by the likes of Dean Radin and others like Dr Claude Swanson http://www.synchronizeduniverse.com/, the pervading method of scientific analysis is still based on a mentality of separation.

I am only in the early stages of Bruce's books and tapes. I am far less experienced in spiritual experiences then most of you on this board, yet I seem to have more trouble rationally disbelieving in the afterlife than believing in it. If there's no afterlife then alot of very sensitive, aware and intelligent people are all deluded? I also find that hard to believe.

My latest doubt is a more semantics issue. Is there really an 'afterlife'? because if we are all one and if time doesn't really exist as I keep reading and hearing about, then wouldn't 'afterlife' be a misnomer?

Never say die

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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #25 - Aug 4th, 2007 at 11:42pm
 
Quote:
Doctors have treid to set up experiments putting pictures above hospital beds in case someone reports an OBE where they floated up, to see if they saw the design, but so far things like this have always failed.


yes and that's disappointing.  but i do believe people such as bruce moen (he's hardly alone) are very trustworthy in describing their OOB experiences. 

and the book the afterlife experiments does seem to "prove" that (some) psychics are the real deal.
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #26 - Aug 5th, 2007 at 5:27am
 
I've not read any of Bruce's books or this one you mention (am pretty new around here) . However does Bruce definitely say he experiences going out of his body in a literal way, in this world? MY problem with OOB accounts is they often seem to involve alleged other worlds and so on, which can;t be verified and might just exist inside the experiencer's head. I suppose even if they have the impression of being in "this world"it could still be vivid imagination/memory unless they go and bring back some information they couldn;t have known about otherwise etc and I can;t understand why this is not easy to test for if some people say they can do it at will
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #27 - Aug 5th, 2007 at 9:15am
 
Hey there!

Quote:
There are many reasons why people might believe in life after death without it being factually true, such as the fact none of us like to think we and our loved ones might one day not exist. However although belief in some kind of survival is very common around the world the details of it vary greatly. I would also like to think this common belief does point to a factual truth, but just becasue lots of nice people think it does that is not evidence.


Its the same thing with atheism, atheist also claim they have disproven a god, some see this disprove in scientific facts. Or even worse, like what we call "theodizee problem", if there is suffering in the world, and a god, but no divine intervention, could be also seen as if there is none, if there were, he would use divine intervention, and so on....a never solved philosophycally problem). But if you let's say can explain that thunder and lightning (pagan religions named their thundergod Donar, Thor or whatsoever), that does not automatically mean that the idea of divinity is disproven. Moslems do believe e.g., that science is a way to explain how gods world runs, why is it so hard to accept it like this? It is that ridiculous discussion, science contra religion (have you ever thought about that both of them try to answer the same questions, so the gap between cannot be that big).
Nowadays, scientists found, that there could have been a big bang that caused our universe (strange, where shall this molecules come from, if before the big bang was nothingness. Right, you could say "but who made the creator, who is worshipped by so many people?".
Many forget, that believing means having faith in something, if you don't have faith, you cannot provide it by so called proofs for the big question of our lives "What does it mean to be dead?". "Is there a god?" "Is there none?" There is NO relevance for any proofs, if you do not believe in it, you could leave it up to this (but since you are here on this board, you might not being anymore much into such easy giving up Wink ) , I mean, it is kind of ridiculous, do you really think, that a god, that has an afterlife for us, would reveal everything about it? For what should we live here, if everyone would know everything about this, that, what Bruce calls the C1 reality, would be a pre-heaven. But a human is able to decide which path he wants to go, wether to be moral, couragous, open minded, or a liar, traitor, murderer, what ever, so if we are capable to think about this, why should god mind to take this decision away. The same with the afterlife, some say, it is just a nice idea, to nice to be true, only for the grieving and mourning, to please themselves with something like that. If that is a fact, and what religion with afterlife-ideas is about, than there would be no use to it.
The believers find their evidence in the bible, but if you look at the older parts, there is nothing like an idea of an afterlife, they focus on a life regarding to gods word, and that was all man could do.

If I get you right, you say, that if you believe in an afterlife, and there is none, you would be screwed, it is not really like this, if just the idea can help anyone to lead a better life, you would not life forever, but a better life in C1. Look at humanism, also some humanists were atheists, they believed in morality, and a life according to morals, rational decisions, to make things work during your time, to be helpful for others.
You see, it is also something to believe in, it is not religion, but agrees with the fact, that humanbeings need something to believe in, or to life for. So if you take the god away, there will be another god instead, maybe science, but that does not make the scientist godlike.
Science is the proof of what we see and think because of the ability of seing, measuring and touching it as reality, but no scientist could ever proof if everything here and now really happens, how can we know that this is our reality? Because of senses? Brainfunction? Consciousness, brainactivity in science can be shown through an eeg, brainwaves, but no thoughts were ever found in a brain (discussed it witch alysia and spooky), also read about some strange NDE's, with flatlined brain, and a status of the body, that makes no vital function work to keep the body going on (yes, they were after all, reanimated after this state), so where do we take that wisdom, that the brain contains our consciousness (it is only, that we are told so), if the brain is dead, there must be none of thinking or remembering any more, but how if is possible, that some nde-experiencers, had this kind of status (yes, nde might be not the right proof for afterlife existences, and not everyone during clinical death had this impressions) even without a brain, that could recipe dmt to hallucinate? Or how comes that, that some people during surgeries were able to retell details without being conscious.
That could make one think about if the brain is really the center of our life, it is more like our human cpu, it receives and makes conclusions, links new structures to make the new born thoughts for us available, if we want to re-think them. I see it as receptor, for me the consciousness seems to be the lifeforce, but at this point, I don't know it better, even if it is like I think, as body and brainfunktion work as a sort of dualism, the consciousness could also be hidden in some part (I only said it is not the brain, the brain provides the outcome of conscious decisions).

If you want your (literally) consciousness to survive, your thoughts, and work, it is after all possible (yes, even this way you won't be anymore in the sense of the afterlife we talk about on this board), maybe you write a book, make an invention, do something for charity, so you won't be forgotten, because only the one, who is forgotten, is really dead (last part stolen from Kant Smiley ).

And now I think we are in the right area, the brain has something called "subconsciousness".
Dreaming was found (as sort of brain activity) there, and most of our vivid imaginations also happen there, at least the brain functions tell us so. It is well observed by science, but no evidence, that we fool ourselves with this kind of overromaticizing our surroundings, or if it comes from elsewhere. So science brings details, but has not yet found the world formula. Physicists, like you mentioned, look on the big picture, the universe, that is why I am personally interested in physics (also want to become an engineer), especially the astrophysical theories about our universe, also the delivered results, by measuring, etc. Call me dumb, but I like physics, because there is space for someone like a god (physicists see god at least as a possibility..)
But I really think, that with research on this scientific boundaries such as death, there could be also brought up more details, maybe their method is also wrong. So to your question, why it is so hard to prove, it is maybe that this subject was not taken serious, and the scientists, who dare to do research on this levels, are just at the beginning of discovery. There could be progress, but I claim, that we never come to a level of fact , that allows us more than visions to speculate, than we would have that sort of pre-heaven on earth, like I said before, and that is probably not, what a god would have had as an aim for humankind.

So it is up to you, whether it is science, that is right, or religion, or spiritualists, alternative thinking.

OOB, other world. And that is a big problem, since it would be senseless to travel to another world, an afterlife, would mean, that there is no other world, no one behind, it is a fluent thing, we may change at transition (death), leaving the physical thing behind, but go to another level, that includes our state of consciousness, that is I think the most possible kind of afterlife, I am not familiar with the idea of astral worlds, maybe we stuck in something like a big package of knowledge, and who knows, maybe the afterlife does take also place on this earth, or you are thrown out somewhere in space, being the little bit of stardust forming new planets.

Yes, you are right, experiences are bound to personality, but that must not mean, that a scientist has more right to see his theory more reasonable as your experience (a masters or doctors degree just means that he is specialized not allknowing) , because it is until today not proven, if this existence is really reality. So it is like a 50/50 chance for survival or not surving physical death, that does not shed to much hope to no matter whom of the two parties (to make it scientific...,just kidding..Smiley ).
But why bothering with an afterlife? You could also look for maybe a life before birth (I don't think of the growth of the baby inside the womb) , if this is possible, the afterlife would be no question.

Bruce said, everyone should try to get access on his own, maybe you are not ready yet, but I do understand your point, or problem because I have the same. I see a possibility, but not a proof, even if I critizised since so much in my article, I am bound to this searching for fact thinking, I am not into creationism, god cannot be outstanding, or a creature somewhere around nothing, I think more that it is like a universal reality, in each and everything, otherwise I would have a problem with the picture of god.
Or else what to do with entities, that revealed, if they were real or a trick, I don't know anymore.

Do not only rely on what you get told, that is only the door, but you must open it by yourself.

http://skepdic.com/essays/schwartz.html

Sry for posting so much, hope you enjoy it a little bit,

Love,

pulsar


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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #28 - Aug 5th, 2007 at 11:33am
 
Something I've noticed that to me is pragmatic evidence of our spiritual experiences
(spirit being eternal and our connection to the afterlife):

Similiar experiences activate energies in very particular parts of our physical system. For example,

    positive thoughts of a spiritual master like JC can be felt above one's temple;
    positive thoughts of a Highest Power/Authority/God can be felt at the very top center of the skull;
    when being guided by a Helper while OB, they always put their hand on your *left*  shoulder or side;
    matters of love are felt near or in the heart
    PUL is such an immensely powerful sensation that it involves one's total being.

These examples are incomplete.

Try to force and trick sensations to change, but once the subject and attitude toward it is set, they cannot move. However, if I switch my  attitude from positivie to negative, the energy field drops lower for whatever subject i'm on.
Certain areas of our physical bodies seem most sensitive to certain energies. It's  just like when ywe're hungry, or horney.   Smiley   Ancient cultures have made maps of these areas. Like accupuncture charts, they do not vary.

People can argue all they want, but once you have become aware of these connections between physical and spiritual, alot of words don't mean much. Experience it for yourself.

Love, Bets





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There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #29 - Aug 5th, 2007 at 5:38pm
 
Good grief Pulsar, that was a long post and I don;t have time to answer all you points right now. Thanks anyway. The problem with having beliefs is that if you are a bit of a skeptic, by which I just mean you like to study things and look at whether they make rational sense, not that I enjoy being contradictory for the sake of it, it is hard to know if beliefs are just wishful thinking or not, and I certainly don;t see why, of there is an afterlife an agnostic or Humanist who was a decent human being should have to suffer in some way. I have regularly read comments by atheists and agnostics saying they would like the comfort of a belief in a benevolent god or an afterlife but they just can't convince themselves it is true. I guess it is a matter of temperament rather than any especial virtue.

I also can;t really see why God could not provide a bit more to go on in terms of proof of his/her existance and of a soul and afterlife and so on. I don't see what harm it would do. Maintream Christianity for centuries (and still in some churches) tried to scare people into belief and religious observance by saying it si a fact you will go to Hell if you don;t follow the rules. Even when that was widely belived it didn;t stop people misbehaving (although the Protestant doctrine of salvation by belief alone, not acts and the Catholic sacrement of confession and absolution might have helped - ie you can behave badly and still have a get-out clause). If it was know to be the case we all survived death and there was no eternal Hell but that God wanted us to grow in love and compassion and our afterlife (and this life hopefully) would generally be better if we did this, I don;t see this would take away any free will or anything. Also it would make everyone more relaxed and less materialistic if we knew we had more than or 3 score and 10 to look forward to and didn;t have to try and grab as much pleasure and possessions and experiences etc as soon as possible/or on the other hand fear losing chances of security and prosperity and love by doing something a bit unconventional or risky. As it is we have very little to go on, and in fact seem almost set up to become agnostic if we are of a questioning frame of mind, because our biggest western religion, in its classic versions, includes many logical problems once you start to study it and its texts, so you end up a bit anoyed and wary about any religious claims. He could have done better than provide us with the BIble... (not that I think he did) which kicks off with a plethora of dubious myths, bloody battles and stupid rules etc just for a start.

As for the method Bruce Moens puts forward - saying he has thoroughly explored the afterlife already and so on, well that's great for him, but I am not aware of what proof he offers for saying this is reality and not his imagination. i guess I need to read his books or do one of the courses he has done..
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