<P> A central theme of many religions is what happens to people upon death . Almost all religions are greatly devoted to the afterlife, emphasizing that what you do in your current life affects what happens to you in the afterlife . This usually takes the form of judgement by a deity, in which ones deeds and characteristics in life determine either punishment or reward (when one has been mostly good). </P> <P> In Ancient Egypt, it was believed that upon death, one's fate in the afterlife was determined by the weighing of one's heart . One's heart was kept within the body during mummification so that it can travel with the deceased into the afterlife . Upon death, one entered the underworld (Duat), where Anubis, the God of the dead, weighed the persons heart on a scale against the feather of Ma'at, the goddess of order, truth, and righteousness . If the heart weighed more than the feather, meaning that the person was more wicked than good, then the heart would be devoured by Ammit, a demon with the head of a crocodile, the front half of the body of a leopards, and the back half of a hippopotamus, but with goat arms . If a person's heart was devoured by Ammit, then he would die a second death and be completely annihilated from existence . </P> <P> Ancient Greeks believed that upon death, an individual would enter the realm of Hades, the Greek underworld, and be judged by King Minos, Aeacus, and Radamanthus . Depending on one's actions in life, an individual would be sent to one of three different planes: Elysium, the Asphodel Fields, or Tartarus . Elysium is for those who were righteous in life and is reserved for good people and legendary heroes . In Elysium people relax and enjoy a life of everlasting joy in a beautiful and comfortable field with trees and sun . The Asphodel Fields is the land of neutrality, where those who were either neutral, or whose good and bad deeds are about equal reside . It is a bland place symbolizing their lack of notability in life . The final realm, Tartarus, is the realm of the wicked . It is the deepest realm of Hades, and those who have performed wicked deeds are punished here for eternity . Punishment here reflects the wicked deeds committed in one's life (e.g., Tantalus killed and fed his son to the Gods, so he was punished by being made to stand in a pool surrounded by trees with fruit, but can partake of neither water nor fruit .). Mortals shared this realm with non-mortals . </P>

What explained the judgment process of the egyptian afterlife
find me the text answering this question