Who's Online

We have 17 guests online

Quote

“When we live, we live with love, and when we die, we die with love. In every breath, we feel it with our whole existence; it is our warmth in the cold, and our oasis in the heat.”
-Fethullah Gulen

Statistics

Members: 4
News: 659
Web Links: 26
Visitors: 2856030
Some parts or cells of the body remain alive for some time more after death? Print E-mail
User Rating: / 8
PoorBest 
Written by Bediuzzaman Said Nursi   
Friday, 20 January 2006
ImageAs everybody knows, while a man is alive in the world, it is the spirit, which both suffers pains and feels joys and happiness. Although the spirit feels pains, in appearance, through the nervous system and uses this system in its extremely complicated acts of communicating with all parts of the body down to each cell of it- it is still a mystery for science what type of an interaction there is between the spirit and the body, including, especially, the brain.

Any kind of failure in any part of the body, which causes death, can also be sufficient for the nervous system to stop operating. However, as scientifically established, certain cells of the brain continue to live for some time more after death, scientists have been making studies to receive signals from the brain after death through those cells. If they succeed in doing so and can decipher those signals, it will be useful, especially, in criminology, in bringing to light the crimes whose authors have remained unknown. The following verses of the Holy Book, which tell us how, during the time of the Prophet Moses God revived a slain one, who informed of his killer, suggests this:

"When Moses said to his people, 'God commands you to sacrifice a cow,' ...they sacrificed her, a thing they had scarcely done. And when you killed a living soul, and disputed thereon 'God disclosed what you were hiding" so We said', 'Smite him with part of it"' ; even so He brings to life the dead, and He shows you His signs, that haply you may have understanding (2:67, 72-3)."


Related Items:
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 28 November 2006 )
 
< Prev   Next >