Quasimodo wrote:The day after a very extensive and dicey open heart surgery one of these surgeons visited their patient to see how things were going. The patient said that he had been watching his entire surgery while hovering near the surgery suite ceiling.
I'm a bit confused here. I don't see anything to indicate that this patient was "dead" by any definition, but under anesthesia. I haven't heard of people parting ways with their bodies when anesthetized.
He described everything that happened, everyone that entered or left the room and many of the conversations that took place. Things that he couldn't possibly have known.
Does this mean he couldn't have known because he should not have been aware of his surroundings (being knocked out), or that they were things he could only have known by actually watching from the ceiling? In other words, he "saw" things that he could not possibly have seen from his bed?
I always have a hard time reconciling the idea of a "spirit" seeing and hearing with what we know about the physical processes involved with each. We know that all the parts required for hearing and seeing have to be in good working order for our audio and visual systems to work successfully. And that doesn't even take into consideration the fact that our memories are physically stored in actual brain cells, and can be lost due to a brain injury. It doesn't make sense to see, hear or remember without a body.