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Can you prove life after death?
Whenever we argue about whether a thing can be proved, we
should distinguish five different questions about that
thing:
- Does it really exist or not? "To be or not to be,
that is the question."
- If it does exist, do we know that it exists? A thing
can obviously exist without our knowing it.
- If we know that it exists, can we be certain of this
knowledge? Our knowledge might be true but uncertain; it
might be "right opinion."
- If it is certain, is there a logical proof, a
demonstration of why we have a right to be certain?
There may be some certainties that are not logically
demonstrable (e.g. my own existence, or the law of
non-contradiction).
- If there is a proof, is it a scientific one in the
modern sense of 'scientific'? Is it publicly verifiable
by formal logic and/or empirical observation? There may
be other valid kinds of proof besides proofs by the
scientific method.
The fifth point is especially important when asking whether
you can prove life after death. I think it depends on what
kinds of proof you will accept. It cannot be proved like a
theorem in Euclidean geometry; nor can it be observed, like
a virus. For the existence of life after death is not on the
one hand a logical tautology: its contradiction does not
entail a contradiction, as a Euclidean theorem does. On the
other hand, it cannot be empirically proved or disproved (at
least before death) simply because by definition all
experience before death is experience of life before death,
not life after death.
If life after death cannot be proved scientifically, is
it then intellectually irresponsible to accept it? Only if
you assume that it is intellectually irresponsible to accept
anything that cannot be proved scientifically. But that
premise is self-contradictory (and therefore intellectually
irresponsible)! You cannot scientifically prove that the
only acceptable proofs are scientific proofs. You cannot
prove logically or empirically that only logical or
empirical proofs are acceptable as proofs. You cannot prove
it logically because its contradiction does not entail a
contradiction, and you cannot prove it empirically because
neither a proof nor the criterion of acceptability are
empirical entities. Thus scientism (the premise that only
scientific proofs count as proofs) is not scientific; it is
a dogma of faith, a religion.
I.
The first reason for believing in life after death
is simply that there is no compelling reason not to, no
objection to it that cannot be answered. The two most
frequent objections are as follows:
(a) Since there is no conclusive evidence for life after
death, it is as irresponsible to believe it as to believe in
UFOs, or alchemy. Perhaps we cannot disprove it; a universal
negative always is difficult if not impossible to disprove.
But if we cannot prove it either, it is wishful thinking,
not evidence, that makes us believe it.
Now this objector either means by 'evidence' merely
empirical evidence, or else any kind of evidence. If he
means the latter, he ignores all the following proofs for
life after death. There is a lot of evidence. If he means
the former, he falls victim to the self-contradiction
argument just mentioned. There is no empirical evidence that
the only kind of evidence we should accept is empirical
evidence.
In most supposedly scientific objections of this type, an
impossible demand is made, overtly or covertly-a demand for
scientific proof-and then the belief is faulted for not
satisfying that demand. This is like arguing against the
existence of God on the grounds that "I have not found Him
in my test tube," or like the first Soviet cosmonauts'
"argument" that they had found no God in outer space. Ex
hypothesi, if God exists He is not found in a test tube
or in space. That would make Him a chemical or a meteor. A
taxi trip through Cleveland disproves quasars as well as a
laboratory experiment disproves God, or brain chemistry
disproves the soul or its immortality. The demand that
non-empirical entities submit to empirical verification is a
self-contradictory demand. The belief that something exists
outside a system cannot be disproved by observing the
behavior of that system. Goldfish cannot disprove the
existence of their human owners by observing water currents
in the bowl.
(b) The strongest positive argument against life after
death is the observation of spirit at the mercy of matter.
We see no more mental life when the brain dies. Even when it
is alive, a blow to the head impairs thought. Consciousness
seems related to matter as the light of a candle to the
candle: once the fuel is used up, the light goes out. The
body and its nervous system seem like the fuel, the cause;
and immaterial activity, consciousness, seems like the
effect. Remove the cause and you remove the effect.
Consciousness, in other words, seems to be an epiphenomenon,
an effect but not a cause, like the heat generated by the
electricity running along a wire to an appliance, or the
exhaust fumes from an engine's tailpipe.
What does the observed dependence of mind upon matter
prove, if not the mortality of the soul? Wait. First, just
what do we observe? We observe the physical manifestations
of consciousness (e.g. speech) cease when the body dies. We
do not observe the spirit cease to exist, because we do not
observe the spirit at all, only its manifestations in the
body. Observations of the body do not decide whether that
body is an instrument of an independent spirit which
continues to exist after its body-instrument dies, or
whether the body is the cause of a dependent spirit which
dies when its cause dies. Both hypotheses account for the
observed facts.
When a body is paralyzed, the mind and will are still
operative, though deprived of expression. Bodily death may
be simply total paralysis. When you take a microphone away
from a speaker, he can no longer be heard by the audience.
But he is still a speaker. Body could be the soul's
microphone. The dependence of soul on a body may be somewhat
like the dependence of a ship on a dry-dock. Ships are not
built on the open sea, but on dry-dock; but once they leave
the dry-dock, they do not sink but become free floating
ships. The body may be the soul's dry-dock, or (an even
better metaphor) the soul's womb, and its death may be the
soul's emergence from its womb.
What about the analogy of the candle? Even in the
analogy, the light does not go out; it goes up. It is still
traveling through space, observable from other planets. It
'goes out' as a child goes out to play; it is liberated.
But what of the need for a brain to think? The brain may
not be the cause of thought but the stopping down, the
'reducing valve' for thought, as Bergson, James and Huxley
suppose: an organ of forgetting rather than remembering,
eliminating from the total field of consciousness all that
serves no present purpose. Thus when the brain dies, more
rather than less consciousness occurs: the floodgates come
down. This would account for the familiar fact that dying
people remember the whole of their past life in an instant
with intense clarity, detail, and understanding.
In short, the evidence, even the empirical evidence,
seems at least as compatible with soul immortality as with
soul-mortality.
II
According to the medievalist, the most logical of
philosophers, "the argument from authority is the weakest of
arguments." Nevertheless, it is an argument, a probability,
a piece of evidence. Forty million Frenchmen can be wrong,
but it is less likely than four Frenchmen being wrong.
The first argument from authority for life after death is
simply quantitative: "the democracy of the dead" votes for
it. Almost all cultures before our own have strongly, even
officially, believed in some form of it. Children naturally
and spontaneously believe in it unless conditioned out of
it.
A second argument from authority is stronger because it
is qualitative rather than quantitative: nearly all the
sages have believed in it. We must not, of course, answer
the challenge 'How do you know they were sages?' by saying
'Because they believed'; that would be begging the question
pure and simple. But thinkers considered wise for other
reasons have believed; why should this one belief of theirs
be an exception to their wisdom?
Finally, we have the supreme authority of the teachings
of Jesus. Belief in life after death is central to His
entire message, "the Kingdom of Heaven." Even if you do not
believe He is the incarnate God, can you believe He is a
naive fool?
III
Arguments from reason are logically stronger than
arguments from authority. The premises, or evidence, for
arguments from reason can be taken from three sources, three
levels of reality what is less than ourselves (Nature),
ourselves (human life), or what is more than ourselves
(God). Again, we move from the weaker to the stronger
argument.
We could argue from the principle of the conservation of
energy. We never observe any form of energy either created
or destroyed, only transformed. The immortality of the soul
seems to be the spiritual equivalent of the conservation of
energy. If even matter is immortal, why not spirit?
IV
The next class of arguments is taken from the
nature of Man. What in us survives death depends on what is
in us now. Death is like menopause. If a woman has in her
identity nothing but her motherhood, then her identity has
trouble surviving menopause. Life after menopause is a
little like life after death.
IV. A.
The simplest and most obvious of these arguments
may be called Primitive Man's Argument from Dead Cow.
Primitive Man has two cows. One dies. What is the difference
between Dead Cow and Live Cow? Primitive man looks. (He's
really quite bright.) There appears no material difference
in size or weight immediately upon death. Yet there is an
enormous difference; something is missing. What? Life, of
course. And what is that? The answer is obvious to any
intelligent observer whose head is not clouded with
theories: life is what makes Live Cow breathe. Life is
breath. (The word for 'soul', or 'life', and 'breath' is the
same in many ancient languages.) Soul is not air, which is
still in Dead Cow's lungs, but the power to move it.
Life, it is seen, is not a material thing, like an organ.
It is the life of the organs, of the body; not that which
lives but that by which we live. Now this source of life
cannot die as the body dies: by the removal of the soul.
Soul cannot have soul taken from it. What can die has life
on loan; life does not have life on loan.
The 'catch' in this argument is that this 'soul' may in
turn have its life on loan from a higher source, and
transmit it to the body only after having been given life
first. This is in fact the Biblical teaching, contrary to
the Greek view of the soul's inherent, necessary and eternal
immortality. God gives souls life, and souls can die if they
refuse it. But in any case the soul survives the body's
death.
IV. B.
Another quite simple piece of evidence for the
presence of an immaterial reality (soul) in us which is not
subject to the laws of matter and its death, is the daily
experience of real magic: the power of mind over matter.
Every time I deliberately move my arm, I do magic. If there
were no mind and will commanding the arm, only muscles; if
there were muscles and a nervous system and even a brain but
no conscious mind commanding them; then the arm could not
rise unless it were lighter than air. When the body dies,
its arms no longer move; the body reverts to obedience to
merely material laws, like a sword dropped by a swordsman.
Even more simply stated, mind is not part of the system
of matter, not measurable by material standards (How many
inches long is your mind?) Therefore it need not die when
the material body dies. The argument is so simple and
evident that one wonders who the real 'primitive' is, the
'savage' who understands it or the sophisticated modern
materialist who cannot understand the difference between
mind and brain.
IV. C.
A traditional Scholastic argument for an immortal
soul is taken from the presence of two operations which are
not operations of the body (1) abstract thinking, as
distinct from external sensing and internal imagining; and
(2) deliberate, rational willing, as distinct from
instinctive desiring. My thought is not limited to sense
images like pyramids; it can understand abstract universal
principles like triangles. And my choices are not limited to
my body's desires and instincts. I fast, therefore I am.
IV. D.
Still another power of the soul which indicates
that it is not a part or function of the body and therefore
not subject to its laws and its mortality is the power to
objectify its body. I can know a stone only because I am
more than a stone. I can remember my past. (My present is
alive; my past is dead.) I can know and love my body only
because I am more than my body. As the projecting machine
must be more than the images projected, the knower must be
more than the objects known. Therefore I am more than my
body.
IV. E.
Still another argument from the nature of soul, or
spirit, is that it does not have quantifiable, countable
parts as matter does. You can cut a body in half but not a
soul; you can't have half a soul. It is not extended in
space. You don't cut an inch off your soul when you get a
haircut.
Since soul has no parts, it cannot be decomposed, as a
body can. Whatever is composed (of parts) can be decomposed:
a molecule into atoms, a cell into molecules, an organ into
cells, a body into organs, a person into body and soul. But
soul is not composed, therefore not decomposable. It could
die only by being annihilated as a whole. But this would be
contrary to a basic law of the universe: that nothing simply
and absolutely vanishes, just as nothing simply pops into
existence with no cause.
But if the soul dies neither in parts (by decomposition)
nor as a whole by annihilation, then it does not die.
IV. F.
One last argument for immortality from the present
experience of what soul is, comes from Plato. It is put so
perfectly in the Republic that I quote it in its original
form, adding only numbers to distinguish the steps of the
argument:
- Evil is all that which destroys and corrupts. . .
- Each thing has its evil . . . for instance,
ophthalmia for the eye, and disease for the whole body,
mildew for corn and for wood, rust for iron . . .
- The natural evil of each thing . . . destroys it,
and if this does not destroy it, nothing else can . . .
(a) for I don't suppose good can ever destroy anything,
(b) nor can what is neither good nor evil,
(c) and it is certainly unreasonable . . . that the evil
of something else would destroy anything when its own
evil does not.
- Then if we find something in existence which has its
own evil but which can only do it harm yet cannot
dissolve or destroy it, we shall know at once that there
is no destruction for such a nature. . . .
- the soul has something which makes it evil . . .
injustice, intemperance, cowardice, ignorance. Now does
any one of these dissolve and destroy it? . . .
- Then, since it is not destroyed by any evil at all,
neither its own evil nor foreign evil, it is clear that
the soul must of necessity be . . . immortal.
V. We turn now to a stronger class of arguments: not from the
nature of Man but from the nature of God; not 'because of
what I am, I must be immortal' but 'because of what God is,
I am immortal.' The weakness of this type of argument for
practical apologetics, of course, is that it does not
convince anyone not already convinced, because it
presupposes the existence of God, and those who admit God
usually admit life after death already, while those who deny
the one usually deny the other as well. Yet, though
apologetically weak, the argument is theoretically potent
because it gives the real, the true reason or cause why we
survive death: God wills it.
V. A.
We could first argue from God's justice. Since God
is just, His dealings with us must be just, at least in the
long run, in the total picture. ("The long run" is the
answer to the problem of evil, the apparently unjust
distribution of suffering.) The innocent suffer and the
wicked flourish here; therefore 'here' cannot be 'the long
run,' the total picture. There must be justice after death
to compensate for injustice before death. (This is the point
of Jesus' parable of the rich man and Lazarus.)
V. B.
The next argument, from God's love, is stronger
than the one from His justice because love is more essential
to God. Love is God's essence; justice is one of His
attributes-one of Love's attributes.
Love is "the fulfillment of the whole law." Each of the
Ten Commandments is a way of loving. "Thou shalt not kill"
means "Love does not kill." If you love someone, you don't
kill him. But God IS love. Therefore God does not kill us.
We want human life to triumph over death in the end because
we love; is God less loving than we? Is He a hypocrite? Does
He refuse to practice what He preaches?
Only if God does not love us or is impotent to do what He
wills, do we die forever. That is, only if God is bad or
weak-only if God is not God-is death the last word.
VI.
Whether the premises be taken from the nature of
the world, of man, or of God, the last three arguments were
all deductive, arguments by rational analysis. More
convincing for most people are arguments from experience.
These can be subdivided into two classes: arguments from
experiences everyone, or nearly everyone, shares; and
arguments from extraordinary or unusual experiences. The
first class includes:
- the argument from the demand for ultimate moral
meaning, or long-range justice (similar to the argument
from God's justice, except that this time we do not
assume the existence of God, only the validity of our
essential moral instinct)- this is essentially Kant's
argument;
- the argument from our demand for ultimate purpose,
for a meaningful end, or adequate final cause-this
argument is parallel, in the order of final causality
and within the psychological area, to the traditional
cosmological arguments for the existence of God from
effect to a first, uncaused cause in the order of
efficient causality and within the cosmological area;
- the argument from the principle that every innate
desire reveals the presence of its desired object
(hunger indicates the existence of food, curiosity
knowledge, etc.) coupled with the discovery of an innate
desire for eternity, or something more than time can
offer-this is C. S. Lewis' favorite argument.
- the argument from the validity of love, which
insists on the intrinsic, indispensable value of the
other, the beloved-if love is sighted and not blind and
if it is absurd that the indispensable is dispensed
with, then death does not dispense with us, for love
declares that we are indispensable;
- finally, the argument from the presence of a person,
who is not a thing (object) and therefore need not be
removed when the body-object is removed-the I
detects a Thou not subject to the death of the
It.
From one point of view, these five arguments are the weakest
of all, for they presuppose an epistemological access to
reality which can easily be denied as illusory. There is no
purely formal or empirical proof, e.g., that love's
instinctive perception of the intrinsic value of the beloved
is true. Further, each concludes not with the simple
proposition 'we are immortal' but with the disjunctive
proposition 'either reality is absurd or we are immortal.'
Finally, each is less a demonstration than an
almost-immediate perception: in valuing, purposing, longing,
loving, or presencing one sees the immortality of
the person. These are five spiritual senses, and when one
looks along them rather than at them, when one uses them
rather than scrutinizing them, when they are innocent until
proven guilty rather than proven innocent, one sees. But
when one does not take this attitude, when one begins with
Occam's razor, or Descartes' methodic doubt, one simply does
not see. They are less arguments from experience than
experiences themselves of the immortal soul.
VII.
Three arguments from unusual or extraordinary
experience are:
- The argument from the experience of medically 'dead'
and resuscitated patients, all of whom, even those
formerly skeptical, are utterly convinced of the truth
of their 'out-of-the-body' existence and their survival
of bodily death. To outside observers there necessarily
remains the possibility of doubt; to all, who have had
the experience, there is none. It is no more deceptive
than waking up in the morning. You may dream that you
are awake and in fact be dreaming, but once you are
really awake you are in no doubt. Unfortunately, this
waking sense of certainty can only be experienced, not
publicly proved.
- A similar sense of reality attaches to an experience
apparently even more common than the out-of-the-body
experience. Shortly after a loved one dies (most usually
a spouse), the survivor often has a sudden, unexpected
and utterly convincing sense of the real here-and-now
presence of the dead one. It is not a memory, or a wish,
or an image from the imagination. It is not usually
accompanied by an image at all. But it is utterly
convincing to the experiencer. Only to one who trusts
the experiencer is the experience transferable as
evidence, however. And that link can be denied without
absurdity. Again, it is a very strong and convincing
experience, but not a convincing proof.
- What would be a convincing proof from experience? If
we could only put our hands into the wounds of a dead
man who had risen again! The most certain assurance of
life after death for the Christian is the historical,
literal resurrection of Christ. The Christian believes
in life after death not because of an argument, first of
all, but because of a witness. The Church is that
witness; 'apostolic succession' means first of all the
chain of witnesses beginning with eyewitnesses: "We have
been eyewitnesses of His resurrection. . . and we
testify (witness) to you." This is the answer to the
skeptic who asks: "What do you know for sure about life
after death anyway? Have you ever been there? Have you
come back to tell us?" The Christian reply is: "No, but
I have a very good Friend who has. I believe Him, and I
follow Him not only through life but also through death.
Come along"
The
victory is yours in Jesus’ name.
Amen
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