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Originally posted by isyeye
I guess the question to ask is does "the soul" have mass?...and is it a form of "energy"?...otherwise the logic may not hold true.
edit on 21-1-2013 by isyeye because: (no reason given)
In 1901, MacDougall weighed six patients while they were in the process of dying from tuberculosis in an old age home. It was relatively easy to determine when death was only a few hours away, and at this point the entire bed was placed on an industrial sized scale which was apparently sensitive to the gram. He took his results (a varying amount of perceived mass loss in most of the six cases) to support his hypothesis that the soul had mass, and when the soul departed the body, so did this mass. The determination of the soul weighing 21 grams was based on the average loss of mass in the six patients within moments after death. Experiments on mice and other animals took place. Most notably the weighing upon death of sheep seemed to create mass for a few minutes which later disappeared. The hypothesis was made that a soul portal formed upon death which then whisked the soul away.
Originally posted by VinceGG
reply to post by Blue Shift
I actually like how you set this up, because to me the snowflake changed form and became one with the water, as the soul becomes one with the entire universe
When I die, the entire universe and all of reality, including everything that ever was or ever might be, will vanish into nothingness.
Originally posted by VinceGG
I'm a longtime lurker of this forum and today as I was talking about religion with one of my friends. I had come up with what seemed like a pretty solid theory. I felt it was important enough to not only search the forums for a similar theory, but to also spend an hour or so on the forums replying to threads I have previously read.
The law of conservation of mass, states that the mass of an isolated system will remain constant over time. Matter in the universe never just disappears completely. Mass can neither be created nor destroyed, although it may be rearranged in space and changed into different types of particles. Basically, it can change states, become another form of matter, or become a form of energy and does not disappear into nothing. I believe that consciousness/soul/spirit follows the same principal after it is released from our bodies.
What are your thoughts?edit on 21-1-2013 by VinceGG because: Grammar
Originally posted by isyeye
I guess the question to ask is does "the soul" have mass?...and is it a form of "energy"?...otherwise the logic may not hold true.
edit on 21-1-2013 by isyeye because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by VinceGG
I'm a longtime lurker of this forum and today as I was talking religion with one of my friendsa. I had come up with what seemed like a pretty solid theory. With that I felt it was important enough to not only search for a similar theory, but to also spend an hour or so on the forums replying to threads I have previously read.
The law of conservation of mass, states that the mass of an isolated system will remain constant over time. Matter in the universe is never just disappears completely. Mass can neither be created nor destroyed, although it may be rearranged in space and changed into different types of particles. Basically, it can change states, become another form of matter, or become a form of energy and it does not just disappear into nothing. I believe that consciousness/soul/spirit follows the same principal after it is released from our bodies.
What are your thoughts?
Originally posted by Blue Shift
Originally posted by SaturnFX
Just to play devils advocate for a moment, if consciousness simply dissipates upon death...
Then what is a ghost?
Show me one. Not just some fuzzy video or photo, or garbled EVP, either. Present me with a proven "ghost" and I'll tell you what it is.
or become a form of energy and does not disappear into nothing. I believe that consciousness/soul/spirit follows the same principal after it is released from our bodies.
Originally posted by VinceGG
reply to post by AFewGoodWomen
I'm not sure who Ryan Buell is or where you two spoke of this... But if it was your conversation with him that sparked this, I would have given you credit for inspiring the thought or even quoted it myself.
Originally posted by SaturnFX
Wanted to also point out a consideration on my "ghost".
Lets say again, assuming it is the person (personality?) of the formerly existing.
That doesn't instantly lead me to paranormal as the only answer.
I do enjoy the ancient civilization hypothesis. a civilization 300+ million years ago could have advanced so much that they live as literal energy.
But...your still bored...what better way to pass the time of eternity than to play a game..inhabit some strange creatures to experience a primitive way of life in full immersion (arguably also leads to the holographic universe hypothesis).
If I do have some sort of external soul, It may be a product of a civilization long since grown up and technologically mind bendingly advanced...I could simply be an avatar for my true self...just playing medieval monkeymen to pass the time. No reason to start envoking deities and all that.
pure philosophical ponderings now.
Originally posted by VinceGG
I'm a longtime lurker of this forum and today as I was talking about religion with one of my friends. I had come up with what seemed like a pretty solid theory. I felt it was important enough to not only search the forums for a similar theory, but to also spend an hour or so on the forums replying to threads I have previously read.
The law of conservation of mass, states that the mass of an isolated system will remain constant over time. Matter in the universe never just disappears completely. Mass can neither be created nor destroyed, although it may be rearranged in space and changed into different types of particles. Basically, it can change states, become another form of matter, or become a form of energy and does not disappear into nothing. I believe that consciousness/soul/spirit follows the same principal after it is released from our bodies.
What are your thoughts?edit on 21-1-2013 by VinceGG because: Grammar
Originally posted by Akragon
reply to post by Blue Shift
When I die, the entire universe and all of reality, including everything that ever was or ever might be, will vanish into nothingness.
And when you are still aware/conscious... will you say... I am nothing?
Originally posted by metalholic
There was a scientist back in the day who tried to prove that the soul had mass. He proved it I forget how much it weighed. But he actually measured the weight of it.
I'll try to find the sources.
In 1901, MacDougall weighed six patients while they were in the process of dying from tuberculosis in an old age home. It was relatively easy to determine when death was only a few hours away, and at this point the entire bed was placed on an industrial sized scale which was apparently sensitive to the gram. He took his results (a varying amount of perceived mass loss in most of the six cases) to support his hypothesis that the soul had mass, and when the soul departed the body, so did this mass. The determination of the soul weighing 21 grams was based on the average loss of mass in the six patients within moments after death. Experiments on mice and other animals took place. Most notably the weighing upon death of sheep seemed to create mass for a few minutes which later disappeared. The hypothesis was made that a soul portal formed upon death which then whisked the soul away.
Sourceedit on 21-1-2013 by metalholic because: (no reason given)
His results have never been attempted to be reproduced, and are generally regarded either as meaningless or considered to have had little if any scientific merit.[1][2] Nonetheless, MacDougall's finding that presumably the human soul weighed 21 grams has become a meme in the public consciousness, mostly due to its claiming the titular thesis in the 2003 film 21 Grams.