graemegets posted on February 23, 2008 15:12

The question of what happens to us when we die is an age old question that will probably never be solved while alive. We might get to know when we have died, but we have no way of bringing that information back to the living. At least, not that we know of. For all the ghost stories, none seem to involved any spirit/ghost telling us what to expect after death. People through the ages have debated, argued and even fought over this and many theories exists for many different possibilities.

How do you envisage your after life’? Sitting on a cloud, living in some paradise or perhaps in hell and damnation. The imagination can go wild with 100 different ideas, but one thing these ideas have in common is that each one still requires the 5 senses we have in human (physical) form. How else can we perceive the bliss of heaven, paradise or the torment of hell in the way that most of us imagine it without our bodies. Of cause, when we die, we leave our bodies behind. That means our ears, eyes, skin(touch), nose and tongue. We also leave our brains which process our emotions (good and bad), which processes our senses, interprets what we think and makes our choices and defines how we perceive the world around us. We are always told that we can’t take it with us, but how many of us thought this might include our senses, our pleasure and our pain?

We are made up of these senses, thoughts and perceptions. We are the result of our collective thoughts and feelings as we travel through this life. Everything we are, we became through our senses and our brain. This is not to say that our spirit and or soul is not involved, but these, I believe, are still processed via our physical body. At least while we are alive.
Think also, about how we refer to ‘life after death’ or the ‘after life’. Both use the word ‘after’ and ‘life’. ‘After’ would indicates that there is ‘something’ after death.  That there is an ‘end’  to life and therefore a beginning to something else.  More importantly, we use the word ‘life’.  Yet we define life as being organic, physical, grown and reproduced. Something that is alive – not dead. Yet we use this word to describe what happens after death. In short, we use the word ‘life’ to describe death.

So what are we left with when we die? How will we experience our imagined heaven or hell without these senses and body parts? What we tend to do is envisage a spirit, that sees, hears, feels and thinks just like our physical bodies do. Buy why should they? Why have a physical body if our spirit can do all these things? Why become physical? Surly, when we die, we become something completely different. Perhaps, even as some people believe, it’s just pure oblivion after death. Perhaps we become part of the collective and loose our sense of individuality. The point is that when we die, the likelihood of any of these senses is minimal as our senses use physical chemistry to operate. As a spirit, we will not have a retina for photons to strike and cause nerve reactions that are interpreted by the brain as sight. You have to remember that what we see is merely an interpretation of nerve impulses that have been activated by photos, fed down the optical nerve to the image centres of the brain and processed. No one knows what the world or universe actually looks like. If fact, it does not look like anything. Or, for that matter, feel, taste or sound like anything. We only experience our world around us by processing information in a common way which is a function of our brains. Think how differently a bat ‘sees’ the world. A bat has no concept of how we see things and therefore, how the bat perceives the world is completely different to how we do. The same goes for many other animals that see, smell, hear differently to how we do.

There are different reasons why we do imagine our ‘after life’ in a similar way to how we experience life in a physical body. Our ideas of what happens after death might be defined by religions or philosophies that depend on fear of what happens in the afterlife to control people in the current life. How can you project an idea of punishment or reward without using sensations we already know?  And if not by religion, then by the mere fact that it’s almost impossible to imagine what happens after death any other way other than, say, oblivion. Much in the same way that we cannot handle the idea of the edge or end of the universe. Our minds cannot conceive of the end of the universe – there must be something on the other side of the universe. So is it the same for the afterlife, How can we perceive anything other than what we already know.

One of the points of this ramble, is that the likelihood of any similar sensations or method of environment perception after we die is very unlikely unless we acquire another body of sorts after death (such as re-incarnation?). In all likelihood, we will have none of our current senses. Perhaps we will have a different set of senses or a different way to process our afterlife environment.

One of the things that have become clear to me is that we have limited time to enjoy our physical senses and while we are alive, we should take full advantage of these sensations. Spend time to enjoy the taste of our food, the colour in the sunsets , the touch of your partners skin, the beautiful sounds around us. Even the unpleasant sensations we experience from time to time are only possible through our physical body and they can remind us just as well that we are physical, real and here right now. Enjoy being alive now because when you are dead, well, who knows.
If nothing else, ponder on what else could be waiting for us in the afterlife. How different could it be or how similar could it be. I guess that the answer to this would be tightly wrapped up in the meaning of existence – but that’s another discussion.

 


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graemegets posted on February 19, 2008 03:42
In Roman times the circus existed to bring entrainment to the people. Thousands of people would attend the circus to shout with bloodthirsty vigour as they watched people killing each other, being ripped apart and eaten alive by lions. To be a gladiator was to know certain death, to be a criminal was to know certain death. The public loved the kill and the circus was the only place to get that thrill without killing people yourself. (and ending up in the circus yourself for the crime).
 
Society today looks back on the olden day circus as barbaric, violent, disgusting and unbelievable. Certainly, their were people against the circus in those times and some even lead armies against Rome. In AD 325, Constantine put a brief stop to the circus, though it was overruled three years later. With Christianity becoming an official religion in AD 393, a ban was placed on putting Christians in the arena, but non-Christians still suffered and died in large numbers. It was only the lack of funding that eventually started to put an end to the circus.
 
In today's modern and supposedly 'civilised' world, the idea is shocking, and yet I don't think we have really changed one bit. The only difference between then and now is the circus is a place of family fun entertainment. But people still relish the the suffering of others. Both consciously and unconsciously. These days it generally does not involve blood, but I think its just as bad.
 
The most obvious way to see this is of cause from films and TV. We all know that violent films with lots of action sell better than one the promotes love and understanding. We also know that newspapers sell better when they are jam packed with bad news rather than good news. We as humans love disaster. There are still people who run dog fights, we see in Iraq how western forces degraded and tortured captured people.
 
A look at TV also shows us that people love programs where other people get hurt. Just take a look those programs that so called 'funny' clips from people. How many of those clips are about someone hurting them selves with canned laughter just to make sure you know when to laugh. We love reality shows that involve people getting into fights and arguments and if a fist fight happens then all the better - ratings up. We even love watching people being told to eat disgusting things and to terrible things in reality shows.
 
Then there are the hundreds of games that promote the idea of killing. I going into a computer game shop and being stunned at the number of games that involved killing and then seeing the small shelf that have non-violent games.
 
Are we really any different to the public that loved the games in Rome?
 
I think a classic example of going for the kill was the whole Jade Goodie, Shilpa Shetty debacle. I think we can all agree that her behaviour was not the best and that the really should not have said (in anger) what she did. But what is amazing is that the public and the media went in for the kill in a far more vicious and longer attack than Jade was ever guilty of. It struck me that the photos that where splashed all over the papers of Jade with some terrible expression on her face would have taken the media people very conscious and specific effort to go through the footage frame by frame to find the picture that made Jade look the worst. The public bought newspapers ten to the dozen, people wrote hate letters and death threats. All in all, I think that what the public and the newspapers did to Jade Goody was tantamount to throwing her in arena with the lions. In fact that might have been kinder than the pain that she suffered and is still suffering.
 
So no, I don't think that we are any different or more civilised than the Romans who relished in the games.
 
I think that when we start to take a step back and have a really honest, good look at ourselves and our actions, we might begin to see that actually we have a long way to go before we can call ourselves civilised. Only when we start to really act with compassion and understanding can be begin to put out our love for the kill.
 
But until then, we are nothing but the crowd loving the blood at the circus.

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