This work has presented a complete dimensional model of consciousness in which awareness and memory are treated as geometric and informational structures rather than byproducts of neural activity. Within this framework, awareness compares to a point under biological constraint, while memory compares to an unlimited realm of time and space.
The persistence of awareness beyond biological death follows not as belief or testimony, but as logical consequence. Death does not terminate the observer; it removes the constraint that once contained it.
Reports from near-death and out-of-body experiences are not used here as proof, but as phenomenological outcomes consistent with the model's predictions. What is described by experiencers aligns with what this framework would expect to occur when awareness is released from physical limitation.
Whether this model is accepted or rejected, it reframes the problem of death in precise terms. Consciousness, if understood as an informational structure rather than a biological artifact, cannot be meaningfully extinguished by the failure of the body that once constrained it. On the contrary, it expands without bound into memory.
The question is no longer whether an afterlife exists, but how to comprehend the form awareness must take when it expands into the limitless space and time of memory.