The “Death is not Final” debate is up on YouTube now #AfterDeath

I blogged about the “Death is not Final” debate a few days ago, but until now all you had were my notes.

Now, here is the actual debate itself …

What strikes me as an interesting discovery is that both of those for the motion, Dr. Eben Alexander (Neurosurgeon & Author, Proof of Heaven), and Dr. Raymond Moody (Medical Doctor & Author, Life After Life), might indeed be entitled to claim the word “Dr”, but they are also both quite clearly complete and utter Cranks. I do not use that term as an insult, but rather as a factual description. Both appeared to be touting the idea of stuff beyond our current scientific understanding and appeared to be quite certain about it all despite the complete lack of any credible “objective” evidence and instead lean very heavily upon purely subjective human experience which is simply not a reliable means for determining what is and is not actually true.

Dr. Steven Novella nails it when he makes the observation that every aspect of NDEs (Near Death Experiences) can be induced in the lab with appropriate stimulation of the brain, and also points out that the mind is the brain. We can mess with the brain and see exactly what it does to the mind, there is no evidence of any mental activity that happens independently of the brain.

One other point to pick out is that Eben Alexander claims at 1:26:30 that Carl Sagan believed that the evidence for past life experiences in children is overwhelming. He went as far as citing Sagan’s Demon-Haunted World, pg 302. This is simply not factually correct at all, If you read Sagan, here is what he actually wrote, and you will clearly see that he did not “believe”, but rather simply was talking about ideas that could be tested …

“Perhaps one percent of the time, someone who has an idea that smells, feels, and looks indistinguishable from the usual run of pseudoscience will turn out to be right. Maybe some undiscovered reptile left over from the Cretaceous period will indeed be found in Loch Ness or the Congo Republic; or we will find artifacts of an advanced, non-human species elsewhere in the Solar System. At the time of writing there are three claims in the ESP field which, in my opinion, deserve serious study:

(1) that by thought alone humans can (barely) affect random number generators in computers;

(2) that young children sometimes report the details of a previous life, which upon checking turn out to be accurate and which they could not have known about in any other way than reincarnation;

(3) that people under mild sensory deprivation can receive thoughts or images “projected” at them.

I pick these claims not because I think they’re likely to be valid (I don’t), but as examples of contentions that might be true. The last three have at least some, although still dubious, experimental support. Of course, I could be wrong.”
~Demon-Haunted World, pg 302 – Carl Sagan

Eben was wrong about what he though Sagan believed … but then he was also wrong about rather a lot of other stuff as well. It might also perhaps be worth pointing out that even if Sagan had actually believed, it still does not verify it as true, because for such an extraordinary claim you need extraordinary evidence, an appeal to authority (especially a case one) does not cut it.

So how did the debate go?

Like this …

Death_Is_Not_Final_–_IQ2_Debates

But that result is quite frankly meaningless. Yes, it is a result that aligns with what I think is true, and it is also encouraging that after all the arguments were thrashed out the audience went against the motion due to the lack of credible evidence for it and that was also despite the heavy bias we can all have in leaning towards the motion.

So why is this a meaningless result? Basically because while debates are interesting, reality is not something we get to vote on, so winning a debate does not establish “truth”, only evidence can do that.

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2 thoughts on “The “Death is not Final” debate is up on YouTube now #AfterDeath”

  1. Do you have any Idea what Dr. Alexander has been through? Seriously do you know his personal story? He is a neurosurgeon who had a profound experience of healing. I’m sorry but not all near-death experiences can be reproduced in the lab. Have they been able to reproduce the experience of leaving the body and going to another place and seeing an object or people in conversation (for example) and then proving that the object or the conversation in another room was indeed there or taking place?

    I think we live in an age where technology and scientists are worshipped without question. That is just as dangerous as worshipping religious leaders or any other human for that matter without question. There are clear facts like global warming (for instance) being mostly human caused. There are other Ideas that are simply conjecture for both religionists and scientists.

    Reply
    • // Do you have any Idea what Dr. Alexander has been through? //
      Nope … in this sense, I do not … and neither does anybody else.

      // Seriously do you know his personal story? //
      Actually, yes I do.

      // I’m sorry but not all near-death experiences can be reproduced in the lab. //
      If true, then there should of course be evidence for this … but I quite honestly do not find any. However, having not done an extensive search of every study, I may be wrong, and so I would add that even if not reproduced in a lab, it should not imply that there is not a natural explanation involving brain chemistry. When faced with something we do not understand, the only truly viable answer is “I don’t know” and not default to a supernatural explanation.

      // I think we live in an age where technology and scientists are worshipped without question. //
      I’d like to suggest that this may not be true. Take Climate change as an example, while 97% of climate change scientists agree on the prevailing scientific consensus and that is evidence based, a vast section of the public dismisses the data and takes a different view. (The example you cited was a good one)

      // There are other Ideas that are simply conjecture for both religionists and scientists. //
      Correct … we agree … and when faced with things we cannot explain, the default is “we do not know” if there is no verification for something.

      Reply

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