The reason why so many of us are afraid of death is that we just don’t understand it. We can’t prepare for what we don’t know and the unknown is scary that way. So we keep asking ourselves: “what happens to us after we die?”.
According to two leading scientists, the human brain is a biological computer, and human consciousness is just a software program activated by the ‘bio quantum computer’ inside the brain.
Furthermore, it continues to exist even after death. Researchers say that after people die, the soul returns to the cosmos. It does not die.
UK scientist Dr. Sam Parnia believes human consciousness lives on even after we die. He shared his findings in Morgan Freeman’s Netflix show “The story of God.” Here’s what he, along with other leading scientists have found.
The study was carried out over a four-year period and included more than 2000 people who suffered from cardiac arrest. According to the analysis, almost 40 percent of the patients who survived resuscitation reported they were aware of the moments when they were clinically dead. 39 percent out of 140 survivors declared going through common near-death experiences.
They were feeling at peace, and it seemed that time was passing very slowly. Some recollected seeing a bright yellow light or an unexpected flash.
Dr. Sam Parnia, who is an assistant professor at the State University of New York conducted the study and said that patients who explained their near-death experiences were describing hallucinatory stories. Nevertheless, one man, gave a “realistic” description of what was going on while the doctors and nurses tried to revive him.
He had been dead for some minutes when he came to life again. When he regained consciousness, the man said that he had left his body and had been able to see the things happening around him in the room very clearly.
The brain can’t work if the heart has stopped.
Telling The Telegraph about this 57-year-old social worker at Southampton, Dr. Parnia explained: “The person described everything that had been going on in the room, but most importantly, he heard a machine that beeped two times every three minutes.
So we were able to time how long the experience continued,” “ Actually, our brain can’t work if the heart doesn’t beat. But in this situation, conscious experience lasted for up to three minutes after the man’s heart had stopped functioning.”
Dr. Parnia is not alone in his theories. After extensive research, the University of Arizona’s Stuart Hameroff and British physicist Sir Roger Penrose also believe that while our bodies physically die, our soul, or what they refer to as “consciousness” lives on forever.
Scientists are starting to find that the soul is made of information that can be stored at a quantum level. It’s those quantum mechanisms, or the behavior of matter, that make the infinite process possible.
Dr. Hameroff and Dr. Roger have concluded that the soul and its consciousness are simply made of stored information. Think of the conscious mind as a program on a computer. Even if the computer itself dies, the program itself can be transferred and continue to exist.
This way of thinking is what has led them to say that even after human beings die, their soul comes back to the universe, and it does not die itself.
This theory was recently described on The Science Channel’s documentary show Through the Wormhole.
In this show, Dr. Hameroff explained: “Imagine that the heart stops, the blood can’t flow; the microtubules lose their quantum state but not the quantum information. We cannot destroy it. And it just spreads and diffuses into the universe. In case the patient gets back to life, this quantum information can go back into microtubules.
That is the reason why the patient says that they’ve had a near death experience.’However If the person dies, this quantum information might continue to exist although it has already left the body.
And that is maybe what we call a soul.
The scientists further say that what humans understand as consciousness is actually the result of quantum gravity’s effects within the so-called microtubules.
This process is named after the two scientists as “Orchestrated Objective Reduction” (Orch-OR).
Their theory argues that when people go through a phase referred to as ‘clinical death,’ the brain’s microtubules lose their quantum state. However, they maintain the information contained within them.
Dr. Hans-Peter Dürr, once head of the institute, has stated: “This world, it is just the material level that we can understand. “What exists beyond is an absolute reality that is much bigger.“The body dies, but the spiritual quantum field remains. In this way, we become immortal.”
“The origin of consciousness reflects our place in the universe, the nature of our existence. Did consciousness evolve from complex computations among brain neurons, as most scientists assert? Or has consciousness, in some sense, been here all along, as spiritual approaches maintain?” ask Hameroff and Penrose in the current review.
“This opens a potential Pandora’s Box, but our theory accommodates both these views, suggesting consciousness derives from quantum vibrations in microtubules, protein polymers inside brain neurons, which both govern neuronal and synaptic function, and connect brain processes to self-organizing processes in the fine-scale, ‘proto-conscious’ quantum structure of reality.”