About This Book
An author argues against materialist claims that thought ceases at death and therefore denies postmortem identity, examining sensory testimony, personal identity, and scriptural texts to defend continuity of the person after bodily dissolution. He critiques philosophical positions by citing instances where bodily form fails to explain intelligence, maintains that consciousness presupposes rather than constitutes personal identity, and interprets biblical passages as implying a conscious separate state. The work also presents and analyzes contemporary sensory reports of apparitions, treating the doctrine of spectres as empirical support for immortality and blending philosophical argument, theological reflection, and eyewitness narrative.
About the Author
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