Chuck Rost trolling a trading forum with religious nonsense, from the same crazies time and again. Must be part of his/her church. "Ooooooohhhhh, soooooo convincing, I better sign up quickly to the church and get myself a meal ticket into heaven before the devil gets me".
Pretty lazy to just post links without commentary. Shows disrespect for the readers here. So i'm not going to look at the YouTube presentation. All i can say is that any universe or world with a beginning is at odds with the reality of eternity. Time is a foreign concept where eternity rules. Time "begins" (there is really no such thing as a beginning) when the so called "prodigal son" volunteers to leave the original conditions to forge for himself a new life in a foreign land. It would please the prodigal son for as many as possible to waste as much time as possible wandering around wondering about the "beginning" of their so-called "world". Most of this "beginning" worship is to validate the new conditions of the new world as legit, sanctioned, granted and willed. But none of it is legit, none of it is sanctioned, none of it is granted, and none of it is willed. The basis of the foreign land we so fondly call "the universe" is faith. The grimoire called the book of "Hebrews" even admits this. But faith, if you read between the lines of Jesus words, is like "sand". You can try to build on it, but it doesn't make for a very good, or very long lasting foundation. Whatever is built on it will eventually come crashing down. Rost is doing his best to uphold what has been built on the sand. He loves the sand and wants to keep playing with the sand. What else is built on the sand is his notion of Christianity, a much-vaunted edifice. I've said too much in response to trolls.
Researchers find neurological link between religious experiences and epilepsy https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/03/170308131158.htm#:~:text=A relationship between epilepsy and,religious activity -- and epilepsy. Summary: A relationship between epilepsy and heightened religious experiences has been recognized since at least the 19th century. In a recent study, researchers found a neurological relationship exists between religiosity -- a disposition for spiritual experience and religious activity -- and epilepsy. This finding sheds light on the connection between religion and neuropsychological processes within the human brain.
In your case, specifically do yourself a favor click the link watch it. You might learn something for a change.
A low-grade study with 19 Participants, I mean,LOL https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/figure/10.1080/13674676.2016.1238449?scroll=top&needAccess=true
Where is the link to the actual paper? Your link just provided the abstract. I bet you didn't even read the paper for the details and methodology. I bet you just lazily read the headline.
What, you can’t do a moment of your own research for fear of dismantling a shaky belief system? Start here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4550801/ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18171635/