I guess this is the right section for this subject. Because ghosts is like soul and does the soul live on, etc. Anyway, does anyone know if this Associated Press video news story is accurate or just a bunch of baloney?
link: 'Dead' Woman Comes Back to Life - YouTube
because it says at 56 seconds in that she went 17 and a half hours without any brain waves and now she's back and dancing and doing cartwheels and all sorts of stuff old grannies do in their spare time. Is this possible?
I love movies like "Re-Animator" and "Flatliners" but I have to wonder how long people can go being dead, or how certain we are of detecting it, and strange cases of someone thought to have been dead, not necessarily celebrities like Jesus, but you know throughout time there's been a lot of cases where people "wake up" after a few days or more. It seems like there has.
At the very least there needs to be better safeguards in place and more attempts at saving people who aren't complete jerks and deserve coming back to life. I suspect a lot of people only kind of partially died or could have received better medical help and then could have lived a few years longer.
I assume we're beginning to develop technology that can microscopically repair damage to brain cells and stuff that quickly happens after death. Little robots. Nanorobots. That kind of thing. Aren't we?
link: 'Dead' Woman Comes Back to Life - YouTube
because it says at 56 seconds in that she went 17 and a half hours without any brain waves and now she's back and dancing and doing cartwheels and all sorts of stuff old grannies do in their spare time. Is this possible?
I love movies like "Re-Animator" and "Flatliners" but I have to wonder how long people can go being dead, or how certain we are of detecting it, and strange cases of someone thought to have been dead, not necessarily celebrities like Jesus, but you know throughout time there's been a lot of cases where people "wake up" after a few days or more. It seems like there has.
At the very least there needs to be better safeguards in place and more attempts at saving people who aren't complete jerks and deserve coming back to life. I suspect a lot of people only kind of partially died or could have received better medical help and then could have lived a few years longer.
I assume we're beginning to develop technology that can microscopically repair damage to brain cells and stuff that quickly happens after death. Little robots. Nanorobots. That kind of thing. Aren't we?