Acharya Prashant clarifies the distinction between science and pseudoscience, defining science as an honest, experimentation-based field where theories are falsifiable and results are objective and person-independent. He dismisses pseudoscience as being based on mystical powers or subjective claims that cannot be replicated. Addressing homeopathy, he describes it as a sham, explaining that the extreme dilutions it requires are physically impossible to achieve given the finite amount of matter on Earth. He emphasizes that government certification of a practice does not equate to scientific validity, as governments often support belief systems rather than knowledge systems. Regarding the afterlife and karma, Acharya Prashant rejects the Puranic descriptions of a soul's journey after death, stating that such literature must be rejected if it contradicts Vedantic philosophy. He explains that nothing enters the body at birth and nothing leaves at death; life is a biological process originating from matter, such as amino acids and proteins. He defines good karma not as a way to earn future rewards or a better afterlife, but as the act of being good and joyful in the present moment. He asserts that the goal of life is to address current suffering and 'get out of the burning house' of conditioning immediately. Finally, he discusses the origin of life and the concept of a superpower. He explains that life and death are a continuous cycle where matter becomes conscious, as seen in the boundary-defying nature of viruses. He rejects the idea of an external divine superpower, stating that the only true superpower is the Self, or Atman, within the individual. He encourages the listener to take responsibility for their own power by discarding limiting concepts and realizing their inherent potential as the Self, which is the core of Sanatan philosophy.