According to halakhah (Torah law), the deciding factor in death is presence or lack of a heartbeat.
The way your question is written it reads as "In what ways does Judaism bring death about in the world?" Judaism does not cause people to live or die. Therefore Judaism cannot effect death.
Yes.
When the brain no longer functions, it is typically referred to as brain death. Brain death is the irreversible loss of all brain function, including the brainstem, and is considered the legal and medical criteria for death in most countries.
Brain death is the irreversible end of all brain activity. The term brain death should not be confused with a persistent vegetative state like many people tend to do.
Certain sins. In actual practice, the death penalty (in Judaism) has not been imposed for two thousand years.
Brain Death - EP - was created in 1986-08.
brain death.
Brain death is the irreversible loss of all brain function, including the brain stem, resulting in the cessation of all neurological activity, whereas cardiac death is the irreversible stoppage of the heart, leading to the cessation of circulation and oxygen delivery to vital organs. Brain death is considered the legal and medical standard for determining death in many countries, while cardiac death is when the heart stops beating and cannot be restarted.
In Jewish belief, Jesus may have lived as a person, but nothing more. His birth and death are not viewed as anything and he plays absolutely no role whatsoever in Judaism.
Life after death
Brain death is considered legally and clinically irreversible, marking the complete and permanent loss of all brain function, including the brainstem. In contrast, cardiac death occurs when the heart stops beating and blood circulation ceases, but is often reversible in some medical scenarios. While both are considered forms of death, brain death is a more definitive end of all neurological activity, whereas cardiac death can sometimes be resuscitated. Therefore, brain death is generally regarded as more final than cardiac death.
In 1968, Harvard Medical School defined death as irreversible damage to the brain, or brain death.