The difference is difficult to identify in practice. The term thnetopsychism has also been used for example, Gordon Campbell (2008) identified Milton as believing in the latter though in fact both De doctrina Christiana and Paradise Lost refer to death as "sleep" and the dead as being "raised from sleep". ![]() Historically the term psychopannychism was also used, despite problems with the etymology and application. ![]() ![]() " Soul sleep" is often used as a pejorative term, so the more neutral term "mortalism" was also used in the nineteenth century, and "Christian mortalism" since the 1970s. Christian mortalism is the Christian belief that the human soul is not naturally immortal and may include the belief that the soul is uncomprehending immediately after bodily death, a time known as the intermediate state.
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