MikeA, not sure what you hope to gain from being in a skeptical/critical thinking forum when you are already convinced your experience is a reflection of reality (not that I want you to go away).
But as far as the black hole/endless loop, perhaps it might help to consider how YOU would have reacted when you were skeptical of such things had someone told you about an experience like that.
Maybe you would listen and acknowledge the importance of the experience to the other person. Maybe you are even somewhat open to the existence of an afterlife and consider the person MIGHT be onto something. But would it CONVINCE you that this person's vision was anything more than a creative experience generated by this person's brain? Would this person's experience have been convincing evidence to YOU that there is an afterlife?
If not, consider why. It isn't so much that you don't believe the experience happened. It's that you know that the most rational and logical thing to do is to FIRST look for an ordinary explanation. And that would be to explain it as a
brain-based experience. IF that fails, then maybe you will entertain a non-ordinary one.
But you realize that the person who had the experience may have more difficulty buying any explanation that isn't spiritual. Because it FELT real to them. And not just a little real, but amazingly real.
There are a lot of people with such experiences. I know a few and I know how life-changing they can be. I suspect many people who have had near-death experiences fall into this category.
They are impressive experiences for the person who has had them, but to anyone else they are, and can only ever be, someone else's experience. And even if you could experience something similar, it is not sufficient to be proof of an afterlife. It is evidence that two brains are capable of experiencing something very similar.
Have you read much on the brain and consciousness? I ask because what if you are a neurologist who has had epileptic patients with similar wondrous and transcendental experiences? Or a neuroscientist who understands well the kinds of spiritual experiences that are related to the temporal lobes?
The Spiritual Doorway to the Brain is quite an interesting look at that.
Maybe you are, like many here, just someone who has read and followed such research, thus making you also more inclined to view this person's experience as not at all unusual for a human brain?
Then, this type of personal story is unlikely to represent convincing evidence of an afterlife for you, no matter the intensity of the experience, the intelligence, or the sincerity of the person having it.
And that is pretty much where it stands here.
At any rate, I am rambling. Too much coffee too late and I write these crazy long posts.
As if someone might actually be drinking enough
coffee to read them.
