DocM
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It strikes me that until humanity experiences a quantum leap in spirituality in acknowledging that we are more than our physical bodies, most scientists and those who could perform a meticulous study of the afterlife will apply their talents to other venues such as chemistry, physics, etc.
It should be noted that the remote viewing crew had a problem with the "interpreter" phenomenon of the human brain when they were trying to view distant objects, people or places. The best viewers learned how to tune out their natural logical ability to interpret images, and be able to truly describe the information they were given without personal interpretation. Most of us are not so skilled. We may get images of iron girders. Our brain/mind asssemble this into a metallic bridge, but the truly talented remote viewer describes the girders without over intrepreting and eventually locates a shipyard, which is verified........
How many of us travel to the afterlife on a whim, fully conscious and communicate in complete conversations with the dead? I don't. I have only been lucky enough to have several conscious directed experiences that were convincing.
The other phenomenon, an important one, is that earthly memories of the deceased may fade as the outer layers of the person's old life fades. So social security numbers may be offered by the newly deceased, but as their stay continues, and they are following their natural inclinations, they may have less information at their disposal. In fact Swedenborg encounters beings who told him they were most learned in their earthly lives, who then spoke only gibberish to him when they tried to show off their knowledge in the astral plane. He reasoned that since they never displayed love of others or God, only love of their own superiority, that these discarnates could not hold onto their rationality, because in order to function in the astral, one had to realize and acknowledge that love was the foundation behind everything.
If we ask 100 people on this forum to try to contact a recently deceased person, we may get some "hits" and "misses." But how many of the 100 would have enough epxerience to travel in the astral and reach the dead at will? 1? 2? I don't know the answer, but clearly we're not there yet.
It might be interesting if the retrieval section had a moderated area for group activities to verify retrievals. Where one of us could report a newly deceased friend or family, with a short bio, and pick up the responses over the next few days, sort through the hits and misses, and gather it into a database.
Ultimately, you pay your money, you make your choice (so to speak). I asked a brilliant agnostic neurosurgeon (a friend) about the afterlife. He saw no evidence that it existed. I gave the evidence I had amassed, and he admitted he didn't have answers for the issues I raised, but was not convinced. So I said, "Jeff, what would you do if, when you die, you found that "you" as a being still existed?" His answer was simple; he said "I'd start believing in life after death, and take it from there." "As long as you keep an open mind," I said gently, "there is hope for you afterall."
Matthew
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