What about people who claim to have experienced other deities in exactly the same fashion? You can’t count it as evidence only when it suits you, then discard it when it does not.
FWIW, no one has ever been evidence to recover from brain death to relate anything. The anecdotes described in so called “near death experiences” are from people in cardiac arrest, being kept alive, and the resuscitated by medical science. At best it is an appeal to mystery, and not really that mysterious either, since science can already explain how our brains continue to function whilst being starved of oxygen, after our hearts stop beating. There’s nothing to see here, another empty bag…
What is your criteria for disbelief here, is it remotely objective, or do you just discard the ones from competing superstitions, that claim to be evidencing different deities?
No it wouldn’t, that’s a false dichotomy fallacy is ever there was one.
Are you saying Muslims Hindus and Jews etc., don’t have minds and hearts? How does that work exactly? Most religions are designed to indoctrinate or people into accepting their claims uncritically, in may places now religion’s don’t have the power they once had to bully people with violence and threats of the same.