" I suggested that, at the end of life (the end of lives, if there's reincarnation), there must come a stage of shutdown at which the person has no memory that there ever was such a thing as a body, a life, time, events, problems, lack, incompletion, etc." — evripidis
so nirvana/moshka? — evripidis
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this is very interesting but in the particular scenario i mentioned the person's mind is still functioning normally.(remember he is not shot/stabbed/whatever yet. he will be in a split of a second but at the same time his"superpower" makes him percieve this as eternity"
perhaps it would help if i said that i was inspired to write this post after reading in some christian websites about the idea of universal reconciliation and how eternity can be "relative"
Leading up to that, the person is already in Timelessness, not expecting, wanting or knowing of the existence of anything else. — Ossipoff
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sorry for taking so long. the idea was that there is a difference between what mortals may perceive as eternity(in that case eternal punishment)
.and how god views things who is outside of time.
.as for my original question perhaps an even better way of clarifying what i mean would be the big bang. as any scientist knows it's not really correct to say "before" the big bang.
.logically extrapolating i assume that since time did not "pass" back "then"(for a lack of better words) it could be described as an eternal transcendent moment or something like that.
It’s even been suggested that we’re in an infinite eternal multiverse with infinitely-many component sub-universes.) — Michael Ossipoff
The idea of someone freezing their own time without freezing the time outside themselves doesn't seem to make sense to me. The examples that people have given seem to involve instances where people's perception of time is slowed down, but that is quite different from being completely frozen. — Mr Bee
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