ABSTRACT

Where are the dead? What are they doing? What kind of a process is dying? What relationships exist among the dead themselves, and between the dead and those in the world they have left behind? Modern philosophers argue that the idea of disembodied survival - to which many believers pay lip service - is incoherent, and that there can be evidence neither for nor against something incoherent. By contrast, this book argues, the idea of an embodied survival (albeit a form of embodiment differing from our present embodiment) makes perfect sense in itself and fits much better with the alleged evidence for post-mortem survival. Exploring post-mortem survival, Where are the Dead? uses a variety of empirical data, alongside mythological, legendary and purely fictional material, to illustrate how the less familiar idea of embodied post-mortem survival might actually ’work’ in some real afterlife environment. By asking questions about the nature and whereabouts of the afterlife, and about what it might be like to be dead, the book explores themes nowadays relatively neglected even in disciplines explicitly concerned with ideas about death, dying and life after death.

chapter 1|26 pages

Clarifying the question

chapter 2|21 pages

What could it be like to die?

chapter 3|24 pages

What might it be like to be dead?

chapter 4|31 pages

Locating the afterlife

chapter 5|39 pages

What would the dead be doing?

chapter 6|35 pages

Between the living and the dead

chapter 7|30 pages

Post-mortem identity and continuity