I just got home and am now recovering from my 5th recent surgery.
Since they (the surgeons) do these laparoscopically, they are minimally invasive and heal faster than open cuts as before.
As usual, the last thing I remembered was talking to the anesthesiologist, and the next thing I remember instantly thereafter being wheeled out on a gurney by the attending surgery nurse, telling me the operation was successful and it is over.
There is no sense of time while being under the effect of the Propofol. You don't dream and you don't notice anything.
If this is what Death is like, then the only issue is whether we all wake up after Death without an recollection of it, and in a new world with other revived beings.
This question is a major issue of philosophy.
I know what the various dozen religions teach about it with their dogmas, and those do not interest me.
But the philosophical question by way of the rational, logical inquiry of human thought into the issue is what fascinates me.
I am inferring from these surgical
Since they (the surgeons) do these laparoscopically, they are minimally invasive and heal faster than open cuts as before.
As usual, the last thing I remembered was talking to the anesthesiologist, and the next thing I remember instantly thereafter being wheeled out on a gurney by the attending surgery nurse, telling me the operation was successful and it is over.
There is no sense of time while being under the effect of the Propofol. You don't dream and you don't notice anything.
If this is what Death is like, then the only issue is whether we all wake up after Death without an recollection of it, and in a new world with other revived beings.
This question is a major issue of philosophy.
I know what the various dozen religions teach about it with their dogmas, and those do not interest me.
But the philosophical question by way of the rational, logical inquiry of human thought into the issue is what fascinates me.
I am inferring from these surgical