Beliefs can be based on many real phenomena that one experiences.
But they can also just be pulled out of nothing.
These may not be measurable but that does not mean they can be ignored and brushed off.
Given the sheer number of claims, in the absence of anything more than 'belief', that's exactly what should be done.
The issue of Consciousness is very important as also the issue of an after-life.
Now there's a false equivalence and a half... consciousness is an observed phenomenon, for which we are still searching precise explanations. The idea of an afterlife isn't even close to being demonstrated as anything more than a hang-over from bronze-age superstitions. These two are not the same.
There is ample evidence for an after-life and ample evidence that consciousness is fundamental.
No. There's lots of evidence that people believe in an afterlife. There're lots of accounts of experiences that people try to tie to the idea of an afterlife, but that are equally as applicable to well-understood biochemistry. There is not 'ample evidence for an after-life' unless you aren't particularly critical about what you accept as evidence.
Belief in such matters cannot be brushed off. How you people can ignore such important and fundamental matters is beyond me.
Because it's not been shown in any way to be fundamental. The implications if it were true would, I agree, be important, but that's equally the case for Scientology's bullshit about Thetan brainwaves and the return of the Galactic Warlord, Xenu, but I'm not going to advocate pumping money into tin-foil hats and space lasers, either. You need more than a profound belief to justify your claim; it can motivate you to look for evidence, certainly, crack on, but come back when you have it, not when you have just the claims.
Luckily many young scientists seem to be free of the old science biases (two boxes syndrome) and seem to be looking beyond physical explanations. That is a welcome trend.
Scientists can study, that's what they do. Good science can be used to study ridiculous claims, and it will still be good science, but that they are studying it doesn't validate the claim at all, only the evidence arising from the study will do that. When these young scientists have something credible, that's when this discussion can move somewhere.
O.