Rational Agnostic
Well-Known Member
One of the biggest challenges to religious beliefs in an afterlife is the apparent dependence of consciousness on the brain. Consciousness is clearly an unsolved mystery, and I'm not claiming that consciousness is simply brain chemistry. However, I do believe that consciousness is dependent on the brain, and that the brain somehow causes consciousness. This is because if the brain gets damaged, consciousness gets damaged. This can be seen in head injuries in which a person loses consciousness, as well as the fact that consciousness can be permanently damaged as a result of brain damage caused by a stroke. We also know that chemicals ingested interact with the brain in such a way as to alter or impair consciousness (alcohol is an obvious example, but nearly everything we ingest has some impact on the brain, and thus on consciousness). So, how do you square belief in an afterlife with these facts? We know that altering the chemistry of the brain alters consciousness, and damaging the brain damages consciousness. Yet all religious people believe that the destruction of the brain does not lead to the destruction of consciousness. Even more absurdly, not only do they believe consciousness survives the death of the brain, but also that it becomes even more vivid after the brain's destruction. But, given everything we know about the dependence of consciousness on the brain, this does not seem to be a rational belief.