Scientists can prove there is an afterlife, claims a quantum physicist

Speaking with friends, coworkers, and even complete strangers, the topic of life after death is frequently brought up. Your position on a subject frequently reveals a lot about your values, viewpoints, and way of life. In fact, the question of life after death affects not only how you die and where you go afterward, but also how you live your life while still on Earth.
Science and religion have traditionally taken opposing positions on the matter, with science taking a more realistic stance that says our journeys end with the death of our flesh and religion promising us the rewards of a lifetime once we enter the pearly gates of eternity. Both of them and many of us have frequently been at odds with one another.
But what happens when science starts to think of us as beings who are more than just the flesh and bones we inhabit. Do our journeys end when we shed our physical bodies, or do some parts of us continue to exist after that? What transpires, furthermore, when all that we comprehend about the environment in which we live and our position within it is flipped into a new comprehension and configuration? Does this new viewpoint explain the afterlife in a way that traditional scientific theories are unable to?
That is exactly what Professor Robert Lanza appears to be doing. The physicist at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina approaches our being, our bodies, the universe, life, and consequently death from a refreshingly new perspective. Lanza asserts that science can actually demonstrate the existence of an afterlife by utilizing the knowledge and insight provided by quantum physics, specifically the Biocentrism theory. In fact, he views it as a logical extension of the theory and the perspective it provides. The solution, according to him, is to redefine how we see our entire worlds, including the idea of death and our experiences with it.
Please allow me to explain. Contrary to conventional theories that examine how life is created in the universe, biocentrism claims that quantum physics demonstrates that life itself creates the universe around it. Only an extension of our consciousness, the universe is influenced by our perceptions and ideas about it. Therefore, the experiences we have, including death, are shaped by the thoughts and beliefs we hold about ourselves.
In fact, if we think of the universe as a creation of our minds, we can see how death works in a similar way. One after another, we encounter evidence that supports what we have been taught and persuaded to believe about death. But even though the environment we live in might change and adapt to match our consciousness, our consciousness itself continues to exist. The possibility of an afterlife is therefore more likely than not.
According to Lanza, accepting biocentrism may require a significant change in the way we think about space and time, but once this change is made, we can discover the answers to the mysteries that have vexed and confounded science for ages.