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According to Hick, the belief in a continued conscious existence after death is
{ 1 } - not publically verifiable -- and hence it's meaningless.
{ 2 } - verifiable by possible experiences.
{ 3 } - falsifiable by possible experiences.
{ 4 } - both verifiable by possible experiences and falsifiable by possible experiences.
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1 is wrong. Please try again.
According to Hick, the belief in a continued conscious existence after death is
{ 1 } - not publically verifiable -- and hence it's meaningless.
{ 2 } - verifiable by possible experiences.
{ 3 } - falsifiable by possible experiences.
{ 4 } - both verifiable by possible experiences and falsifiable by possible experiences.
This isn't his view.
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2 is correct!
According to Hick, the belief in a continued conscious existence after death is
{ 1 } - not publically verifiable -- and hence it's meaningless.
{ 2 } - verifiable by possible experiences.
{ 3 } - falsifiable by possible experiences.
{ 4 } - both verifiable by possible experiences and falsifiable by possible experiences.
We have to die and then see what happens. If Christianity is correct, we'll experience an afterlife, and we'll experience God.
If the skeptics are correct, we'll have no conscious experiences after death -- and so we won't experience that there's no afterlife.
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3 is wrong. Please try again.
According to Hick, the belief in a continued conscious existence after death is
{ 1 } - not publically verifiable -- and hence it's meaningless.
{ 2 } - verifiable by possible experiences.
{ 3 } - falsifiable by possible experiences.
{ 4 } - both verifiable by possible experiences and falsifiable by possible experiences.
If we die and there's no afterlife, we'll have no conscious experiences after death -- and so we won't experience that there's no afterlife.
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4 is wrong. Please try again.
According to Hick, the belief in a continued conscious existence after death is
{ 1 } - not publically verifiable -- and hence it's meaningless.
{ 2 } - verifiable by possible experiences.
{ 3 } - falsifiable by possible experiences.
{ 4 } - both verifiable by possible experiences and falsifiable by possible experiences.
If we die and there's no afterlife, we'll have no conscious experiences after death -- and so we won't experience that there's no afterlife.
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the end