This doesn't address the possibility that God might swoop up your consciousness. But, seeing as Im very well familiar with strength of conviction that atheists have regarding this matter, lets skip to point 2.
Actually, it does, though I may have assumed that we were taking as given that a person's "afterlife" begins after their natural life.
But there are problems with the idea of "God swooping up your consciousness". To begin with, what is "your consciousness"? What is "you"? If the physiological changes of, say, mental degradation caused by disease in old age don't count and don't affect your "soul", then why would the physiological changes of, say, growth and experience from birth to adulthood?
And also, it suggests that there are real living and breathing people who don't have "souls". Consider this:
- Steve is a unique person with identifying characteristics.
- Steve suffers a brain injury. Those identifying characteristics become so altered that it's no longer reasonable to call him the same person as he was before.
- "Old Steve" has effectively died, but "New Steve" is most definitely alive. What has happened?
If we assume your "swooping God", I see two possibilities:
- at the moment before the injury, God swooped down, scooped up Old Steve's "soul" so that it would not be affected by the injury. But then where did New Steve come from? Does New Steve have a soul?
- God chose not to "swoop", Steve was injured, killing Old Steve and replacing him with New Steve. What happened to Old Steve? Does he not get an afterlife?
This may be a simulation. At your death, a new program will start up with you in it again. Or you will be disconnected from the 'matrix' to hang out in what people might think is the real reality.
That doesn't actually have anything to do with the question of the afterlife. If we're all just brains in vats, well, brains do die.
If all the death in this world is only a simulation, then it's not really death. Therefore, you wouldn't be able to call the simulation beyond it an "afterlife".
Your explanation doesn't address eternal return at all, or point 4.
Yes, because you didn't bother to actually give a position on the issue for me to address. A link is not an argument.
I think that, if there is no god or advanced civilization controlling something like the matrix for the benefit of its citizens, that these points almost certainly are true and that we will indeed be 'reincarnated strictly in a physical sense', for lack of a better way of putting it.
Why?
They're definitely not
all true, since they're mutually exclusive.
Consciousness is not "energy", so none of that mumbo-jumbo about conservation of energy really applies to it.
However, if it did, then this would be a demonstration that consciousness is entirely physical, which is the position that suggests that there is no afterlife.
To claim, yes, unless someone actually knows that this is a fact. And I dont mean in the way that religious people assume the things they believe are facts. I mean that if a person has actually been to this otherwise indetectable physical realm, explored it, studied it, and then was sent back here again without any hard proof for whatever reasons. Such experiences, however, only have any truth value to the person who has them. If I heard this person tell me of his experience, I would think there is a very high probability that they are crazy or had a hallucination of some kind while on drugs. I certainly wouldn't give them the benefit of the doubt, just as I don't give any modern day eccentric preachers that benefit. Prove it. If you can't, keep it to yourself or reasonable people are going to think your nuts. But then, the world is full of credulous people who will believe any such nonsense if it is presented with enough skill.
Okay... it sounds to me that we agree on this point: someone saying "I've been to Heaven!" does not necessarily suggest the existence of Heaven.