mardi 12 mai 2009

LIFE AFTER DEATH




LIFE


Life is a characteristic of organisms that exhibit certain biological processes such as chemical reactions or other events that result in a transformation. Living organisms are capable of growth and reproduction, some can communicate and many can adapt to their environment through changes originating internally.[1] A physical characteristic of life is that it feeds on negative entropy.[2][3] In more detail, according to physicists such as John Bernal, Erwin Schrödinger, Eugene Wigner, and John Avery, life is a member of the class of phenomena which are open or continuous systems able to decrease their internal entropy at the expense of substances or free energy taken in from the environment and subsequently rejected in a degraded form (see: entropy and life).[4][5]
An entity with the above properties is considered to be a living organism, hence, a 'life form'. However, not every definition of life considers all of these properties to be essential. For example, the capacity for evolution is sometimes[citation needed] taken as the only essential property of life; this definition notably includes viruses, which do not qualify under narrower definitions as they are acellular and do not metabolize.
A diverse array of living organisms can be found in the biosphere on Earth. Properties common to these organisms—plants, animals, fungi, protists, archaea, and bacteria—are a carbon- and water-based cellular form with complex organization and heritable genetic information. They undergo metabolism, possess a capacity to grow, respond to stimuli, reproduce and, through natural selection, adapt to their environment in successive generations. So far, there is no evidence of extraterrestrial life.





DEATH




Death is the permanent termination of the biological functions that define a living organism. It refers to both a particular event and to the condition that results thereby. The true nature of the latter has for millennia been a central concern of the world's religious traditions and of philosophical enquiry. Religions, almost without exception, maintain faith in either some kind of afterlife or reincarnation. The effect of physical death on any possible mind or soul remains an open question. Contemporary science regards organismic death as final by definition.
Animals almost without exception (see Hydra) die in due course from senescence. Intervening phenomena which commonly bring death earlier include malnutrition, predation, disease, accidents resulting in terminal physical injury, or, in extreme circumstances, grave ecosystem disruption. Intentional human activity causing death includes suicide, homicide, and war. Roughly 150,000 people die each day across the globe.[1] Death in the natural world can also occur as an indirect result of human activity: an increasing cause of species depletion in recent times has been destruction of ecological systems as a consequence of the widening spread of industrial technology. [2]




Death is the permanent termination of the biological functions that define a living organism. It refers to both a particular event and to the condition that results thereby. The true nature of the latter has for millennia been a central concern of the world's religious traditions and of philosophical enquiry. Religions, almost without exception, maintain faith in either some kind of afterlife or reincarnation. The effect of physical death on any possible mind or soul remains an open question. Contemporary science regards organismic death as final by definition.
Animals almost without exception (see Hydra) die in due course from senescence. Intervening phenomena which commonly bring death earlier include malnutrition, predation, disease, accidents resulting in terminal physical injury, or, in extreme circumstances, grave ecosystem disruption. Intentional human activity causing death includes suicide, homicide, and war. Roughly 150,000 people die each day across the globe.[1] Death in the natural world can also occur as an indirect result of human activity: an increasing cause of species depletion in recent times has been destruction of ecological systems as a consequence of the widening spread of industrial technology. [2]






Dear Brothers,


you are asked to read again this part LIFE AFTER DEATH, in order to know that someone may die but survive.

You will ,moreover, find that in 1994 in Rwanda TUTSI were killed; just a million and more in only a hundred days.Besides,there are some who survived. It is very difficult to explain such phenomen where they beat a man until he or she dies fortunately he or she comes out that situation.

I simply want to talk about surviving : Do you at least feel this sorrow of being a survivor?
With this , a survivor has many problems; namely : Not first of all having hope of living , means of living ,
being traumatised every time, not again having parents, relatives and other devil thinigs you can not imagine to happen.All these details exist ,are not imagination in Rwanda, as I said before due to the TUTSI'S GENOCIDE in 1994.
Some were thrown in toilets, deep holes, allover the hills, in bushes,anyway,everywhere.
LIFE AFTER DEATH is very difficult you know; so, everyone's support is always needed.
It can ,however, be moral support, material and other kind.
THANK YOU SO MUCH






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