Brain as Computer

Is there life after death? It could have been a no debatable issue when one has been there and came back and tell us the answer. Life and death are opposites. One is not the continuation of the other or the other way around. More or less I would agree with Stephen Hawking (sounds like Stephen King, the fictional book author), a British physicist who said: “I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken-down computers. That is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark.”

It’s a simple logic. Before someone was born, where was he? He was nothing. He was in a state of nonexistence. When someone dies, he goes back to that state, the state of nonexistence. Take this another illustration: when you snuffed out the light of the candle, where did the light go? It didn’t go anywhere. It went to nonexistence.

As I have mentioned, I more or less agree with Stephen Hawking, more for the notion that there is no life after death and less for idea that there is no God. This physicist is also an atheist. He denies the existence of God. Now, that is I think debatable.

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One Response to Brain as Computer

  1. Marissa says:

    This article is great :-) Keep it up!

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