No but given ALL the information there's a high likelihood of guessing what you might do. Humanity was meant to live in an entirely different environment, and a literal lifetime of corruption has brought us to where we are today - dazed and confused. We can't make appropriate plans when we're dazed and confused, we're unreliable as to what's best for us because we really have no idea what exactly is out there that could be best for us. Making completed plans on incomplete information is foolish, my friend.
My experience, and I've had a lot, is that the next world won't really be that much different than this one. There will be nations and commerce and exploration and most all the things we have now - PLUS the 90% of things we don't. The main huge deciding difference is how it evolves. This world this system evolved under corruption. Can you imagine what this world would be like if it had evolved under God's plan? That plan was for us to call the shots (and don't think for a minute we do that today). That's what we're lookin' at in the next life. The Messiah's role wasn't to change things, but to restore them. And God's deal with Adam was, 'I'll walk with you, talk with you, lend you an ear and give you advice, but what happens here is up to you'. Whe Adam gave that authority away, God couldn't take it back because He didn't want it, that wasn't His intention. His intention was for man to have authority, and that's why God had to come as a man to restore it.
My experience, and I've had a lot, is that the next world won't really be that much different than this one. There will be nations and commerce and exploration and most all the things we have now - PLUS the 90% of things we don't. The main huge deciding difference is how it evolves. This world this system evolved under corruption. Can you imagine what this world would be like if it had evolved under God's plan? That plan was for us to call the shots (and don't think for a minute we do that today). That's what we're lookin' at in the next life. The Messiah's role wasn't to change things, but to restore them. And God's deal with Adam was, 'I'll walk with you, talk with you, lend you an ear and give you advice, but what happens here is up to you'. Whe Adam gave that authority away, God couldn't take it back because He didn't want it, that wasn't His intention. His intention was for man to have authority, and that's why God had to come as a man to restore it.