Okay; let me think.....................................................
After thinking about it, I'd have to say that I don't know. I can only believe, because (since I'm not physically dead yet), I have no way to know otherwise. That's why I'm forced to believe or disbelieve.
Better?
When I think, I ponder, consider, and reason. When I believe, I have reached a decision to accept that reasoning (to various extents), even though it is not proven to me.
Had you asked me that question, I would have given you a simple yes or no.
Now you’re just being intentionally thick headed just to argue. Yes, like many words, think and believe have many meanings, and one meaning for both of them happens to be the same.
http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/believe
intransitive senses
1 a : to have a firm religious faith b : to accept as true, genuine, or real <ideals we believe in> <believes in ghosts>
2 : to have a firm conviction as to the goodness, efficacy, or ability of something <believe in exercise>
3 : to hold an opinion : THINK <I believe so>
So now that we’ve established that they are in fact the same question, perhaps you can give me that yes or no answer.
No verifiable evidence, but there are the biblical references of such, as well as other religious references of such.
No verifiable evidence. You could have stopped there; the rest of that sentence is irrelevant. Biblical references and other religious references are not evidence.
Since you "have this tendency not to put belief into things for which have no evidence", you must clearly have some evidence of the existence of this "non-existent state".
What would that evidence consist of.
This one is just simple logic, again I think (believe) you’re just being intentionally obtuse just to argue. If something doesn’t exist, then it is in a non-existent state.
There you go again changing the words I used, and this time I used believe and not think. Odd how you changed both think and believe into know, yet insist they don’t have similar meanings, isn’t it? Do you believe, think, have an opinion on whether or not something, anything at all, doesn’t exist?
You must certainly have some evidence that "you wouldn’t experience oblivion". Can you share it with us?
Yes, good catch. That was a poor choice of words on my part, since non-existence isn’t exactly what is implied by the word oblivion. However, I was originally talking about non-existence when elliotfc described what I said as oblivion. I took this to have the same meaning when I wrote the reply. If you didn’t exist, this includes the idea of no soul, nothing of you existed, how could you experience anything?
Well, I can accept "I simply stopped experiencing" during surgery, or even during other experiences (?) in life. However, you were still alive and in physical form.
How do you know what occurs after physical death, and if "oblivion" or "non-experience" applies?
I don’t know, stop using that word. I never implied its uses in any of my statements. It is just the most logical conclusion. I have no evidence of a soul or an afterlife; I do have evidence that when my brain stops functioning I stop experiencing. There is evidence my brain will quit functioning when I die; therefore I have reason to believe I’ll stop experiencing when I die.
An eternity of "non-experience" or "oblivion" is more reassuring?
You mean more reassuring than the idea of existing within nothingness, absolutely. Perhaps you are unable to comprehend the concept of non-existence, and thus, it is indistinguishable from existence within nothingness to you. I attempted to illustrate the concept with the anesthesia analogy, non-existence isn’t forever in darkness, it is just not experiencing anymore.
You can choose?
How do you know?
Choose what, know what?