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== Sourcing ==

I took a look over sourcing here. Way too much reliance on primary sources and poor sources like MDPI. Will be doing some serious trimming in the coming days. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 04:24, 25 April 2017 (UTC)
:Did some this morning. More to come. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 13:18, 9 May 2017 (UTC)
:: Thank-you for the trimming - a bummer for me because of all the work gone up in smoke, but good catch nonetheless 03:26, 29 May 2017 (UTC)[[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]])
:::Good thing, too. We can't go around depending on primary sources for subjective experiences! [[User:OakMiner|OakMiner]] ([[User talk:OakMiner|talk]]) 01:18, 17 July 2017 (UTC)

==The Handbook of Near-Death Experiences: Thirty Years of Investigation==
Hello {{u|Jytdog}} - regarding your edit [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Near-death_experience&diff=782790905&oldid=782788481] why did not you delete all citations of "The Handbook of Near Death Experiences" if the source is non-MEDRS?

In the MEDRS policy they say that "academic and professional books written by experts in the relevant fields and from respected publishers" can be used. The Handbook is from a respected Academic publisher [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwood_Publishing_Group] don't you think? The authors are some of the best known names in the field, for instance Greyson is either author or co-author on more 27 publications mostly related to NDEs (in Pubmed)

Anyone's thoughts and comments are appreciated [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 07:08, 15 June 2017 (UTC)

== Regarding the section on Cross-cultural aspects ==

A reference is made in to Keith Augustine's "Hallucinatory Near-Death Experiences" at the very end of the article. It reads:

"Studies that have investigated cultural differences in NDEs have argued that the content of the experiences do not vary by culture, except for the identity of the figures seen during the experiences. For example, a Christian may see Jesus, while a Hindu may see Yamaraja, the Hindu king of death."

I've read the entirety of the reference, and I can unequivocally say that the citation contradicts what is written in this paragraph of the Wikipedia article. In fact, Keith Augustine discusses the marked ''dissimilarities'' between Western NDEs and those of Eastern cultures (e.g., India) reported by cross-cultural studies. While meetings with various religious figures have been reported in the NDEs of different cultures, it is not merely the identity that the NDEr perceives that differs. Augustine, as well as the cross-cultural studies that he cites in his essay, actually indicate the content is quite different across cultures. In the studies that he cites, several themes common to NDEs reported from western cultures (E.g., a tunnel with a light at the end of it) were not universally present cross-culturally.

Until then, we should delete the known offending section of this article. Furthermore, for any user(s) who took part in writing the section that references Keith Augustine's "Hallucinatory Near-Death Experiences", I recommend that we scrutinize all other contributions that they have made to this article. If they have cited a source so blatantly incorrectly once, their other contributions to this article (and any other) become highly suspect.

[[Special:Contributions/24.44.23.186|24.44.23.186]] ([[User talk:24.44.23.186|talk]]) 21:55, 17 June 2017 (UTC)Zed
:I wonder what ref you are reading. The section in the ref on [https://infidels.org/library/modern/keith_augustine/HNDEs.html#differences cultural differences] exactly says that Christians from the West see culturally-determined images of Jesus, which somebody from india sees " recognizably Hindu religious figures." [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 04:42, 18 June 2017 (UTC)

::Yes, it does say that, but the section implies that that is the ONLY difference of note, that otherwise the experiences are highly similar. The section in this article specifically reads: "Studies that have investigated cultural differences in NDEs have argued that the content of the experiences do not vary by culture". If you'll re-read my original post as well as the Keith Augustine reference, you'll note his discussion on various studies that conclude completely the opposite of what this Wikipedia article claims.

::Whether that's the final word or not from the academic community is not for us to decide. However, as it stands, the reference cited contradicts the claim made for that section of this Wikipedia article. I'd correct it so that it properly reflects the analysis in the Keith Augustine reference, but I'm not familiar with the writing guidelines for articles.
::[[Special:Contributions/24.44.23.186|24.44.23.186]] ([[User talk:24.44.23.186|talk]]) 20:46, 19 June 2017 (UTC)Zed

::Edit: Quotations from the Keith Augustine reference, taken at many different points throughout his section on cross-cultural comparisons: (1) "Studies that have investigated cultural differences in NDEs have argued that the content of the experiences do not vary by culture", (2) While deceased friends and relatives are sometimes encountered in Thai NDEs (in 4 of the 10 accounts), rather than greeting the NDEr (as in the West), they inform the NDEr 'of the rules governing the afterlife'", (3) "Tunnels are "largely absent in Thai NDEs" (with one exception unlike Western tunnel experiences), and feelings of peace or euphoria and experiences of light have not been reported at all", (4) "Unlike Western cases, life events are not viewed or relived as flashbacks. Landscapes are common in Thai NDEs, but typically unpleasant, as in the tours of the various hells.", (5) "Given such stark phenomenological differences, Murphy concludes: 'The fact that Thai (and Indian) NDEs do not follow the typical Western progression reflected by Kenneth Ring's temporal model seems to rule out the possibility that there is an ideal or normal NDE scenario, except within a particular cultural context'", (6) "He nevertheless concedes ''vague'' cross-cultural commonalities 'in which individuals commonly use culturally-derived patterns to confabulate individualized death-process phenomena that serve common psychological functions' [emphasis mine]", (7) "Despite a few core elements—such as having an OBE, going through a tunnel, encountering a light, and meeting deceased relatives—descriptions of the world encountered during Western NDEs are nearly as variable as dreams.", (8) "Of the 8 prototypical Western NDE elements, only 'meeting others' is truly universal in non-Western cultures. Landscapes are nearly universal, but quite variable in their details.", (9) "...existing cross-cultural studies suggest that any cross-cultural core consists of a very small number of elements", (10) "Since far more differences than similarities have been found between Western and non-Western accounts, the commonalities between different Western NDEs require a special explanation."
::[[Special:Contributions/24.44.23.186|24.44.23.186]] ([[User talk:24.44.23.186|talk]]) 21:03, 19 June 2017 (UTC)Zed
::::You are providing your own analysis of Augustine. This is not valid. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 01:34, 20 June 2017 (UTC)
::::: User 24.44.23.186 is right - if I understood him/her correctly. Keith Augustine's article is geared towards showing that NDEs are hallucinations (which they may be after all - but that is not the point) hence he is repeatedly insisting on the fact that there are important cultural differences. So citing this reference to support the fact that "that the content of the experiences do not vary by culture" does not make sense. Have I understood you correctly User 24.44.23.186? [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 05:57, 28 June 2017 (UTC)
:::::::The IP is providing an interpretation of Augustine instead of summarizing what Augustine says. This is not what we do here. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 01:52, 29 June 2017 (UTC)
::::::::It's not an interpretation; it's exactly what he says. But feel free to pretend it says whatever you want, I won't be trying to fix your work on this article anymore. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/24.44.23.186|24.44.23.186]] ([[User talk:24.44.23.186#top|talk]]) 04:49, 7 July 2017 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== Needs to get worked over ==

The content below consistently attributes things to French or other people and doesn't cite the source. I started fixing it and got fed up. The actual citations need to be provided.

This whole thing verges very hard on SYN and OR in selecting arguments to discuss and where to go into depth with quoting sources cited in the reviews and then citing those primary sources.

;Spiritual explanations - afterlife claims and skeptical responses
{{see also|Consciousness after death}}

Many individuals who experience an NDE see it as a verification of the existence of an [[afterlife]], and some researchers in the field of [[near-death studies]] see the NDE as evidence that human [[consciousness]] may continue to exist after death. The transcendental (or survivalist) interpretation of the NDE contends that the experience is exactly what it appears to be to the persons having the experience. According to this interpretation, consciousness can become separated from the [[brain]] under certain conditions and glimpse the spiritual realm to which [[soul]]s travel after death.<ref name=French2005rev/><ref name="www-new1.heacademy.ac.uk">{{cite book|last1=Murray|first1=Craig D.|title=Psychological Scientific Perspectives on Out-of-Body and Near-Death Experiences|date=2009|publisher=Nova Science Publishers|location=New York|isbn=978-1-60741-705-7|pages=187–203}}</ref>

The transcendental model is in some friction with the dominant view from mainstream [[neuroscience]]; that consciousness is a product of, and dependent on, the brain.<ref>James H. Schwartz. ''Appendix D: Consciousness and the Neurobiology of the Twenty-First Century''. In Kandel, ER; Schwartz JH; Jessell TM. (2000). ''Principles of Neural Science, 4th Edition''.</ref> According to the mainstream neuroscientific view, once the brain stops functioning at [[brain death]], consciousness fails to survive and ceases to exist.<ref>Piccinini, Gualtiero; Bahar, Sonya. "[http://www.academia.edu/2795738/No_Mental_Life_after_Brain_Death_The_Argument_from_the_Neural_Localization_of_Mental_Functions No Mental Life after Brain Death: The Argument from the Neural Localization of Mental Functions]" (2011). University of Missouri – St. Louis.</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Bernat JL|date=8 Apr 2006|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(06)68508-5|issue=9517|journal=Lancet|pages=1181–1192|pmid=16616561|title=Chronic disorders of consciousness|volume=367}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Laureys|first1=Steven|last2=Tononi|first2=Giulio|title=The Neurology of Consciousness: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuropathology|date=2009|publisher=Elsevier Academic Press|location=Amsterdam|isbn=978-0-12-374168-4|page=20|edition=1st|quote="In brain death there is irreversible cessation of all functions of the brain including the brainstem. Consciousness is, therefore, permanently lost in brain death."}}</ref>

[[Pim van Lommel|Van Lommel]] said that the NDE poses a major challenge to current scientific thinking regarding the relationship between consciousness and the brain: "How could a clear consciousness outside one's body be experienced at the moment that the brain no longer functions during a period of [[clinical death]] with flat [[EEG]]?... (the) NDE pushes at the limits of medical ideas about the range of human consciousness and the mind-brain relation.<ref name=Lommel2001primary/>{{third-party-inline}}

Other NDE researchers such as [[Sam Parnia|Parnia]], [[Peter Fenwick (neuropsychologist)|Fenwick]]<ref name="horizonresearch.org2">Sam Parnia, Peter Fenwick. "[http://www.horizonresearch.org/Uploads/resusrv.pdf Near death experiences in cardiac arrest: visions of a dying brain or visions of a new science of consciousness]" (2001).</ref> and [[Bruce Greyson|Greyson]],<ref>Greyson, B. (2003) Incidence and correlates of near-death experiences in a cardiac care unit. Gen. Hosp. Psychiat., 25: 269–276.</ref> have expressed similar questions and concerns.

These arguments raised by several researchers have been criticized by some [[scientific skepticism|scientific skeptics]] and [[scientist]]s on several grounds. [[Chris French]] (2005, 2009) noted that, "it is clear that the argument that recent findings present a major challenge to modern neuroscience hinges upon the claim that the NDE is actually experienced "during a period of clinical death with flat EEG" as claimed". With respect to the former point he pointed out that it is not at all clear that NDEs actually do occur during a period of flat EEG. Assuming that the patients in question entered a period of flat EEG, French argued that the NDE may have occurred as they entered that state or as they slowly recovered from it. Parnia and Fenwick (2001) had rejected the idea that the NDE may have occurred as the patient is becoming unconscious because they argued that this happens too quickly. But French points out that it is unclear how much time would be required to experience an NDE and that a common feature of [[altered state of consciousness|altered states of consciousness]] is [[time perception|time distortion]]. He argued that this is well illustrated by the life review component of the NDE itself which, although involving a review of a person's entire life, only seems to last a very brief time. And that therefore, "who can say, therefore, that the few seconds of remaining consciousness as an individual enters the state of clinical death is insufficient for the experiences that form the basis of the NDE?".

[[File:Chris French World Skeptics Congress Berlin 2012.jpg|thumb|alt= photo of Chris French presenting from podium at the World Skeptics Congress 2012 in Berlin|[[Chris French]], a notable skeptic of the afterlife claims of NDErs]]

Parnia and Fenwick (2001) also claimed that the NDE could not occur as a person slowly regains consciousness as this period is characterized by [[delirium]] and not by the lucid consciousness reported by NDErs. French again argued that the attribution of confusion is typically made by an outside observer. The subjects themselves may not subjectively feel confused at all. He quoted from an article by Liere and Stickney where they noted that, "Hypoxia quickly affects the higher centers, causing a blunting of the finer sensibilities and a loss of sense of judgment and of self-criticism. The subject feels, however, that his mind is not only quite clear, but unusually keen",<ref>Liere, E.J. and Stickney, J.C. (1963) Hypoxia. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.</ref> and that the subjective claim of great clarity of thought may therefore well be an illusion. French (2005) also noted that "it should be borne in mind that we are always dealing with reports of experiences rather than with the experiences themselves. Memory is a reconstructive process. It is highly likely the final narrative will be much more coherent after the individual has reflected upon it before telling it to others, given the inherently ineffable nature of the experience itself".

And with respect to the latter point, the survivalists have also been criticized by scientists like French and Braithwaite of placing undue confidence in EEG measures. French (2005) and Braithwaite (2008) claimed that survivalists generally appear to assume that a flat EEG is indicative of total brain inactivity and that therefore the experience of an NDE during such a flatline period would completely undermine the core assumption of modern neuroscience that any complex experience must be based upon a functioning neural substrate.<ref name=French2005rev/><ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/>

Even assuming that NDEs actually occur during such periods, the assumption that isoelectric surface EEG recordings are always indicative of total brain inactivity is according to Braithwaite and French wrong.<ref name=French2005rev/><ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/> Braithwaite noted that "unless surgically implanted into the brain directly, the EEG principally measures surface cortical activity. The waveforms seen in cortical EEG are largely regarded to come from the synchronistic firing of cortical pyramidal neurons. As such, it is entirely conceivable that deep sub-cortical brain structures could be firing, and even in seizure, in the absence of any cortical signs of this activity."<ref name="Braithwaite 2008">{{cite journal|last1=Braithwaite|first1=Jason|title=Near death experiences: The dying brain|journal=Skeptic magazine|date=Summer 2008|volume=21|issue=2|url=http://www.critical-thinking.org.uk/paranormal/near-death-experiences/the-dying-brain.php}}</ref><ref>Paolin, A., Manuali, A., Di Paola, F., Boccaletto, F., Caputo, P., Zanata, R., Bardin, G.P. and Simini, G. (1995). ''Reliability in diagnosis of brain death''. Intens Care Med 21: 657–662.</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Bardy | first1 = A. H. | year = 2002 | title = Near-death experiences [letter] | url = | journal = Lancet | volume = 359 | issue = | page = 2116 | doi=10.1016/s0140-6736(02)08926-2}}</ref> Braithwaite also noted that Gloor (1986) reviewed evidence indicating that inter-ictal discharges in the [[hippocampus]] or [[amygdala]] can produce complex meaningful hallucinations without the involvement of the [[cerebral cortex]].<ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/> B<ref>Gloor, P. (1986). Role of the limbic system in perception, memory, and affect: Lessons from temporal lobe epilepsy. In B. K. Doane & K. E. Livingstone (eds.). The limbic system: Functional organisation and clinical disorders. New York: Raven Press.</ref>

Another argument which, according to Braithwaite (2008), relies upon misplaced confidence in surface EEG measurement was put forward by Fenwick P. and Fenwick E. (1995).<ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/> B<ref>{{cite book|last1=Fenwick|first1=Peter|last2=Fenwick|first2=Elizabeth|title=The truth in the light : an investigation of over 300 near-death experiences|date=1995|publisher=Headline|location=London|isbn=978-0747211860}}</ref> According to Braithwaite, they argued that, in cases where the surface EEG recording was not flat, if the NDE was a hallucinatory experience based upon disinhibition, evidence of this disinhibition should be visible in the surface EEG recorded at the time.<ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/> However, Braithwaite argued that data from a recent study comparing EEG recorded at the scalp with EEG recorded from electrodes surgically implanted in deep sub-cortical regions show conclusively that high-amplitude seizure activity can be occurring in deep brain regions and yet be completely undetectable in the surface EEG.<ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Tao | first1 = J. X. | last2 = Ray | first2 = A. | last3 = Hawes-Ebersole | first3 = S. | last4 = Ebersole | first4 = J. S. | year = 2005 | title = Intracranial EEG substrates of scalp EEG interictal spikes | url = | journal = Epilepsia | volume = 46 | issue = | pages = 669–676 | doi=10.1111/j.1528-1167.2005.11404.x}}</ref> Braithwaite also discussed a study comparing surface EEG recordings with the fMRI blood-oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) response showed that the surface EEG could fail to detect [[epileptic seizure|seizure activity]] at the level of the cortex that was detected by the BOLD response.<ref name="Braithwaite 2008"/><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Kobayashi | first1 = E. | last2 = Hawco | first2 = C. S. | last3 = Grova | first3 = C. | last4 = Dubeau | first4 = F. | last5 = Gotman | first5 = J. | year = 2006 | title = Widespread and intense BOLD changes during brief focal electrographic seizures | url = | journal = Neurology | volume = 66 | issue = | pages = 1049–1055 | doi=10.1212/01.wnl.0000204232.37720.a4 | pmid=16606918}}</ref>

NDE researcher Janice Miner Holden found 107 [[anecdotal evidence|anecdotal reports]] of patients being able to see and recall detailed events occurring during the cardiac arrest that are afterwards verified by hospital staff in the NDE literature as of 2009, out of which approximately 91% were accurate.<ref>{{cite book|editor1-last=Holden|editor1-first=Janice Miner|editor2-last=Greyson|editor2-first=Bruce|editor3-last=James|editor3-first=Debbie|title=The handbook of near-death experiences thirty years of investigation|date=2009|publisher=Praeger Publishers|location=Westport, Conn.|isbn=978-0-313-35865-4|chapter=Veridical perception in near-death experiences|last=Holden|first=Janice Miner|pages=185–211}}</ref>

According to French (2005) and [[Susan Blackmore|Blackmore]] (1993), when serious attempts at corroboration are attempted, the evidence often turns out to be nowhere near as impressive as it initially appeared.<ref name=French2005rev/><ref name=Blackmore1993>{{cite book|last1=Blackmore|first1=Susan|title=Dying to live : near-death experiences|date=1993|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, N.Y.|isbn=0-87975-870-8}}</ref> And such cases can possibly (since they had not been ruled out) be accounted for in terms of non-paranormal factors including, "information available at the time, prior knowledge, fantasy or dreams, lucky guesses, and information from the remaining senses. Then there is selective memory for correct details, incorporation of details learned between the end of the NDE and giving an account of it, and the tendency to tell a good story."<ref>Blackmore, S.J. (1996b). Out-of-body experiences. In G. Stein (ed.), The encyclopedia of the paranormal. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books. Pp. 471–483.</ref>

According to French (2005) a similar claim to the argument from veridical perceptions are the cases of [[blindness|blind]] people that during NDEs are able to see even though, in some cases, they may have been blind from birth; that paper says: "initial readings of such accounts often give the impression that the experience involves seeing events and surroundings in the same way that sighted people do, but closer reflection upon these cases suggests otherwise."<ref name=French2005rev/> French quoted from an article by NDE researcher [[Kenneth Ring|Ring]] where he noted that, "as this kind of testimony builds, it seems more and more difficult to claim that the blind simply see what they report. Rather, it is beginning to appear it is more a matter of their knowing, through a still poorly understood mode of generalized awareness, based on a variety of sensory impressions, especially tactile ones, what is happening around them."<ref name=French2005rev/> French (2005) concluded that, "NDEs in the blind are certainly worthy of study but do not merit any special status in terms of evidential support for spiritual explanations of the phenomenon."<ref name=French2005rev/>

Nevertheless, according to French (2005) future research in the near-death experience should focus on devising ways to distinguish between the two main hypotheses relating to when the NDE is occurring.<ref name=French2005rev/> If it really is occurring when some NDE researchers claim that it is, during a period of flat EEG with no cortical activity, then modern neuroscience would require serious revision.<ref name=French2005rev/> This would also be the case if the OBE, either within the NDE or not, could be shown to be veridical. Attempts to test the veridicality of OBEs using hidden targets (e.g., Parnia and Fenwick (2001)) should be welcomed.<ref name=French2005rev/>

{{reflist-talk}}

--[[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 07:23, 21 August 2017 (UTC)

Hello {{u|Jytdog}} - instead of going crazy about attributions, I would first make a list of all the resources we wish to use. There are more recent articles - for instance Prof Parnia has published other more recent review articles and like you wrote in the comments, the article by Dean Mobbs and Caroline Watt has not been used enough (though it is not classified as a review article in PubMed)

Also, I think we should create a sub-section under Explanatory models - for the Transcendental Theory - even French (a skeptic) has a whole section (in his review article) dedicated to this model. A lot of the above information could go in there whilst using more recent (review) articles and better attribution [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 17:01, 24 August 2017 (UTC)
:Sourcing is the foundation of Wikipedia. Being mindful that content is actually supported by sources is essential here, not to mention just basic acceptable scholarship. The content above would flunk a high school composition course and it is not acceptable in Wikipedia. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 17:05, 24 August 2017 (UTC)

::{{u|Jytdog}} I have read Dean Mobbs and Caroline Watts article. It is not classified as a review article by PubMed, although it is one. Same comment for the most recent article by Sam Parnia [https://academic.oup.com/qjmed/article-abstract/110/2/67/2681812/Understanding-the-cognitive-experience-of-death?redirectedFrom=PDF]. I propose we use both. Do you agree? [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 07:49, 30 August 2017 (UTC)
:::why do you think PMID 21852181 is not classified as a a review by pubmed? [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 17:30, 30 August 2017 (UTC)
::::you are right {{u|Jytdog}}, I double checked again and it is a review article indeed, so we should definitely use it - [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 05:31, 7 September 2017 (UTC)



"The content below consistently attributes things to French or other people and doesn't cite the source. I started fixing it and got fed up. The actual citations need to be provided."

I am basically the author of the whole "spiritual explanations" section, and sources were cited at first. But as more people started editing... i don't know what happened.

The Van Lommel quote in the beginning is from "Near-Death Experience in Survivors of Cardiac Arrest: A Prospective Study in the Netherlands.” The Lancet.

The 2005 Chris French source is: "Near-death experiences in cardiac arrest survivors"
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/7578454_Near-death_experiences_in_cardiac_arrest_survivors

I'm not so sure what the 2009 source was. Probably "Near-death experiences and the brain. In: Craig Murray, ed. Psychological scientific perspectives on out-of-body and death-near experiences. New York: Nova Science Publishers"

The Parnia and Fenwick source is "Near death experiences in cardiac arrest: visions of a dying brain or visions of a new science of consciousness" (2001).

The 2008 Braithwaite source is "Near death experiences: The dying brain". Skeptic magazine.

Since then, in addition to the source from 2008 Braithwaite released a new (similar) paper "Occam's Chainsaw: Neuroscientific Nails in the coffin of dualist notions of the Near-death experience (NDE"; http://www.academia.edu/10060970/Occams_Chainsaw_Neuroscientific_Nails_in_the_coffin_of_dualist_notions_of_the_Near-death_experience_NDE_

And in addition to Braithwaite, French, Blackmore, etc. Keith Augustine is also someone who is worth mentioning. There's a whole chapter on NDE's in The Myth of an Afterlife: The Case against Life After Death (2015) which seems to be a version of his "Hallucinatory Near-Death Experiences" article from infidels.org. [[User:Ironrage|Ironrage]] ([[User talk:Ironrage|talk]]) 08:18, 3 September 2017 (UTC)


{{u|Ironrage}} thank-you for the initial work you put in. Much appreciated. I will try to check the sources you listed here above, see if they are review articles or solid university press books, add few more sources (using same criteria) and then submit them here on the talk page [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 05:31, 7 September 2017 (UTC)


{{u|Ironrage}} Here below a first attempt to draft a list of articles that could be used:


REVIEW ARTICLE (used already) French, Christopher C. (2005-01-01). "Near-death experiences in cardiac arrest survivors". Progress in Brain Research. 150: 351–367. ISSN 0079-6123. PMID 16186035. doi:10.1016/S0079-6123(05)50025-6.


REVIEW ARTICLE (used already on the page) Parnia, Sam (2014-11-01). "Death and consciousness--an overview of the mental and cognitive experience of death". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1330: 75–93. ISSN 1749-6632. PMID 25418460. doi:10.1111/nyas.12582


REVIEW ARTICLE (used already on the page) Almost 40 years investigating near-death experiences: an overview of mainstream scientific journals.
Sleutjes A, Moreira-Almeida A, Greyson B. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2014 Nov;202(11):833-6. doi: 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000205. Review.
PMID 25357254.



== Article is misleading ==
REVIEW ARTICLE (not used) Near death experiences in cardiac arrest: visions of a dying brain or visions of a new science of consciousness. Parnia S, Fenwick P. Resuscitation. 2002 Jan;52(1):5-11. Review. PMID 11801343.


The article is presenting NDE as "factual" when it is a pseudoscience backed only by anecdotal evidences. [[User:Random Taong Grasa|Random Taong Grasa]] ([[User talk:Random Taong Grasa|talk]]) 13:24, 7 March 2023 (UTC)


:If subjective experiences have real correlates that can be verified with third parties such as doctors etc ... It stops being subjective. Have a nice day. [[Special:Contributions/85.49.250.171|85.49.250.171]] ([[User talk:85.49.250.171|talk]]) 09:37, 7 September 2023 (UTC)
REVIEW ARTICLE (not used) Trends Cogn Sci. 2011 Oct;15(10):447-9. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2011.07.010. Epub 2011 Aug 17.
:There have been studies by Bruce Greyson which indicate that people experiencing NDEs have met, in their near-death state, relatives which died so recently that they had no possibility of knowing of their death or, even more impressively, relatives which they did not know existed. If anything, this demonstrates that more research must be done on the topic. [[User:XiphosS|XiphosS]] ([[User talk:XiphosS|talk]]) 12:39, 8 September 2023 (UTC)
"There is nothing paranormal about near-death experiences: how neuroscience can explain seeing bright lights, meeting the dead, or being convinced you are one of them." Mobbs D1, Watt C. PMID 21852181. DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2011.07.010
:Where does it ever state as factual? So far according to research conducted by the Missouri Medicine
:The Journal of the Missouri State Medical Association 22% of NDE are form patients that are under general anesthesia were localize lucid memories by present scientific understanding should not be taking place? [[Special:Contributions/2607:FB91:1C79:4F7:CC69:EBE6:FD40:2123|2607:FB91:1C79:4F7:CC69:EBE6:FD40:2123]] ([[User talk:2607:FB91:1C79:4F7:CC69:EBE6:FD40:2123|talk]]) 01:35, 17 September 2023 (UTC)
:this is how science works, by gathering self report data. I’m sorry, did you not realize that? [[Special:Contributions/207.161.254.87|207.161.254.87]] ([[User talk:207.161.254.87|talk]]) 15:34, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
::The ''phenomenon'' does exist. What Wikipedia won't say is that NDE would be the door to higher worlds, evidence of life after death, evidence of reincarnation, and so on. [[User:tgeorgescu|tgeorgescu]] ([[User talk:tgeorgescu|talk]]) 10:52, 29 April 2024 (UTC)


== Article is crap ==


Article must be crap when the topic is crap. It is all necessarily crap, in the absence of a definition of 'near-death'. Why is it missing?
Other Articles
All phenomena described are well-known symptomology of drifting in and out of consciousness. And who's to say a patient apparently unconscious actually is, as conventionally understood? That is, insensate to the world? Why might they not continue to hear and form memories, for example?
The focus on cardiac arrest is bizarre. What has cessation of heartbeat to do with anything? Intuitively, it would take some time for loss of consciousness from apoxia to set in. Where do you draw the line between consciousness and lack thereof?
The key figure is never mentioned: what proportion of so-called NDE's involved a situation that could reasonably be classified as likely to proceed to death? Well, very, very few, of course, being the obvious reason this is never reported.
'What we have here ... is ... a failure ... (to recognise classic pseudoscientific claptrap, together with a failure) ... to communicate...' [[Special:Contributions/122.151.210.84|122.151.210.84]] ([[User talk:122.151.210.84|talk]]) 01:55, 19 July 2023 (UTC)


:You should read a little
"Occam's Chainsaw: Neuroscientific Nails in the Coffinof Dualist Notions of the Near-death Experience (NDE)" by Dr Jason J Braithwaite. It shows 1 citations in Google Scholar [https://scholar.google.fr/scholar?q=Occam%27s+Chainsaw%3A+Neuroscientific+Nails+in+the+Coffinof+Dualist+Notions+of+the+Near-death+Experience+%28NDE%29&btnG=&hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5]. Not indexed in Pubmed. I would reject this source. However Dr Jason J Braithwaite seems like a solid guy with lots of publications [http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/psychology/people/jason-braithwaite] - can you please check which of the publications are review articles covering our subject ?
:bit more on NDE’s and some of the claims/ evidence behind them [[Special:Contributions/216.212.19.204|216.212.19.204]] ([[User talk:216.212.19.204|talk]]) 01:20, 30 July 2023 (UTC)


I will continue the work to identify more articles and also start working on making a list of books [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 06:58, 8 September 2017 (UTC)
::The experiences are profound and life-changing, but there is no evidence that the spiritual world, heavens, hell, God, and so on exist. [[User:tgeorgescu|tgeorgescu]] ([[User talk:tgeorgescu|talk]]) 02:12, 30 July 2023 (UTC)
:::They are subjective experiences yes, but they do not deny that they have some reality in them as it is possible for a person to see what happens around being unconscious? [[Special:Contributions/85.49.250.171|85.49.250.171]] ([[User talk:85.49.250.171|talk]]) 09:32, 7 September 2023 (UTC)
:You sound like you haven’t bothered to read into this topic at all and represent an angry atheist reaction [[Special:Contributions/207.161.254.87|207.161.254.87]] ([[User talk:207.161.254.87|talk]]) 15:33, 28 April 2024 (UTC)


== Cross-Cultural NDE section ==
"Towards a cognitive neuroscience of the dying brain" (http://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/-(53998d2c-d2a6-47aa-ae6a-ccd590e06ff5).html) is included in the list of publications and it's the same as the 2008 source but under a different name.


This section was arbitrarily removed in its entirety by MrOllie after I tried to make it more robust. He has called it "fringeish" without any justification. The section is historical and anthropological and has nothing to do with whether or not NDEs are veridical or not. The works cited are all by scholars -- historians of religions with PhDs from prominent universities with works published by Oxford University Press and other academic publishers.
There is also a reply from NDE researchers on the "There is nothing paranormal about near-death experiences.." article; https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22868045


Here's the section (the new material added is in italics):
In the Journal of Near-Death Studies there are also some relevant articles from Keith Augustine and other NDE researchers (https://infidels.org/library/modern/keith_augustine/keith-bio.html). [[User:Ironrage|Ironrage]] ([[User talk:Ironrage|talk]]) 12:41, 8 September 2017 (UTC)
:We need secondary sources expressing "accepted knowledge". This is an encyclopedia article, not a page where we track blow-by-blow debate in the literature. We don't use "comments". [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 18:34, 8 September 2017 (UTC)
::Fully agree [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 08:16, 23 September 2017 (UTC)


'''Historian of religions Gregory Shushan published an analysis of the afterlife beliefs of five ancient civilizations and compared them with historical and contemporary reports of NDEs, and shamanic afterlife "journeys". Shushan found elements that were specific to cultures, but concluded that similarities across time, place, and culture could not be explained by coincidence and that there probably is some form of mutual influence between NDEs and culture and that this influence, in turn, influences individual NDEs. ''In Shushan's follow-up study on NDEs in indigenous societies, he demonstrated that although NDEs occur around the world regardless of cultural or religious background, their reception varies widely. Many Native American, Polynesian, and Melanesian cultures valorized NDEs and stated outright that they were the source of local knowledge about the afterlife. In contrast, for many Australian, Micronesian, and African societies, NDEs were less relevant to afterlife beliefs, and were sometimes seen as a form of possession. ''


'''Others argue that near-death experiences and many of their elements such as vision of beings of light, judgment, the tunnel, or the life review are closely related to religious and spiritual traditions of the West. It was mainly Christian visionaries, Spiritualists, Occultists, and Theosophists of the 19th and 20th century that reported them.
As promised, here below a list of Books we could use


'''Parnia argues that although the interpretation of NDEs are influenced by religious, social, and cultural backgrounds, the core elements appear to transcend borders and are universal. As evidence, he states that some of these core elements have been reported by children at an age where they should not have been influenced by culture or tradition. Greyson states the central features of NDEs are universal and have been observed throughout history and in different cultures and have not changed over time.'''''''''
BOOK (already used on the page) Chapter "Leaving Body and Life Behind: Out-of-Body and Near" By Olaf Blanke in the book S. Laureys & G. Tononi (Eds.) The Neurology of Consciousness. © 2009, Elsevier Ltd.
The book is cited 52 times in Google Scholar [https://scholar.google.fr/scholar?hl=en&num=20&as_sdt=0%2C5&sciodt=0%2C5&cites=3788830560826998259&scipsc=&q=+S.+Laureys+%26+G.+Tononi+%28Eds.%29+The+Neurology+of+Consciousness.+%C2%A9+2009%2C+Elsevier+Ltd.+&btnG=]
Elsevier being one of the top providers of scientific, technical, and medical information, this is a no brainer




Here is my reply to MrOllie after he said my edit "doesn't convey any new information":
BOOK (currently not used on the page) Varieties of Anomalous Experience: Examining the Scientific Evidence, Second Edition – edited by the American Psychological Association. More especially chapter 12 by Bruce Greyson : Near Death Experiences
Bruce Greyson has authored or co-authored [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=%22Greyson+B%22] 45 articles on Near Death Experiences
The first edition of the book has been cited 435 times in Google Scholar [https://scholar.google.fr/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=%22Varieties+of+Anomalous+Experience%3A+Examining+the+Scientific+Evidence%22&btnG=]
Again, this book should be a no brainer


"Your comment 'this doesn't convey any new information' shows that you either didn't read carefully or that you don't understand the subject. Of course it conveys new information. It's a brief summary of the conclusions of an entirely different study, that reached entirely new and different conclusions, involving different cultures, from different time periods and of different social scale. The salient point is that NDEs influenced afterlife beliefs in some societies and did not in others -- which is not stated in the previous sentences."


MrOllie replied:
I would reject BOOK (currently not used on the page) “The Myth of an Afterlife: The Case against Life After Death (2015)” is published by Rowman & Littlefield
"I read carefully, but still think the new source duplicates what we already have... In fact, the whole section is fairly fringey and lacks secondary sourcing."
Although Rowman & Littlefield publishes scholarly books and journals -- the book only shows only 7 citations in Google Scholar. [https://scholar.google.fr/scholar?hl=en&q=The+Myth+of+an+Afterlife%3A+The+Case+against+Life+After+Death+&btnG=&as_sdt=1%2C5&as_sdtp=] Also, I did not find any articles by Keith Augustine in Pubmed so I would reject this source because of the lack of authority of the book and author


He then deleted it entirely with no explanation on what he is basing his assessments. He does not explain what makes anthropological and historical work "fringey," and is not correct to say it lacks sourcing. This is a totally baseless and subjective deletion. Without this section, the article is based entirely on a hypothetical Western stereotype. [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9|2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9|talk]]) 03:53, 23 February 2024 (UTC)


:The works cited, by the way are:
Any thoughts {{u|Ironrage}} and {{u|Jytdog}} ? best [[User:Josezetabal|Josezetabal]] ([[User talk:Josezetabal|talk]]) 08:41, 23 September 2017 (UTC)
:Greyson, Bruce (2014). "Chapter 12: Near-Death Experiences". In Cardeña, Etzel; Lynn, Steven Jay; Krippner, Stanley (eds.). Varieties of anomalous experience : examining the scientific evidence (Second ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association. pp. 333–367.
:Parnia, Sam (2014-11-01). "Death and consciousness--an overview of the mental and cognitive experience of death". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1330 (1): 75–93.
:Schlieter, Jens (2018-08-06). What Is it Like to Be Dead?: Near-Death Experiences, Christianity, and the Occult. Oxford University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-19-088885-5.
:Shushan, Gregory (2009). Conceptions of the Afterlife in Early Civilizations: Universalism, Constructivism, and Near-Death Experience. London: Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-4073-0.
:Shushan, Gregory (2018). Near-Death Experience-in-Indigenous-Religions. Oxford: Oxford-University-Press. ISBN 978-0197685433.
:Note that Schlieter and Shushan are historians, the other two are medical scientists. [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9|2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9|talk]]) 04:05, 23 February 2024 (UTC)
::What we had there was a section that placed an over-emphasis on the opinions of individual academics. {{Tq| could not be explained by coincidence}} based on one person's opinion is classic fringe writing. This kind of thing is why Wikipedia is supposed to be written based on secondary sources that explain what the mainstream view of a field is. [[User:MrOllie|MrOllie]] ([[User talk:MrOllie|talk]]) 12:09, 23 February 2024 (UTC)
:::Almost nobody is working on NDEs across cultures and in history, which is why this relatively new scholarly research is important.
:::The statement "could not be explained by coincidence" is not "one person's opinion". It is not an opinon at all, in fact, and it's actually demonstrated and reasoned in the book. The research for that book was conducted at Oxford University and the book published by Oxford University Press. It was peer-reviewed, as were a number of articles stemming from the book.
:::In contrast, your statement that it's "fringe writing" is based solely on one person's opinion, and you ahev not substantiated it in any way.
:::It's one thing if you want to flag as "needs secondary source" or whatever, but to just delete it isn't justified. [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:EDA3:4395:BE5F:84A8|2600:1700:A790:63B0:EDA3:4395:BE5F:84A8]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:EDA3:4395:BE5F:84A8|talk]]) 21:31, 23 February 2024 (UTC)
::::If 'almost nobody' is working on it, that is a reason to leave the section out, not to compromise Wikipedia's standards. A maintenance tag is only appropriate if there if there is a realistic chance we could find a secondary source, but you're conceding here that we will not. [[User:MrOllie|MrOllie]] ([[User talk:MrOllie|talk]]) 22:03, 23 February 2024 (UTC)
:::::That's an incredibly specious rationale. The fact that it's a relatively neglected area of research is no reason to censor it. As I said earlier, the cross-cultural existence of NDEs is vital to understanding them, just as it would be to any phenomenon. It's actually ethnocentric to leave them out, and inaccurate to portray the phenomenon as only a Western one.
:::::I can add two summaries from the work of two prominent mainstream sociologists, Allan Kellehear and James McClenon, who earlier had similar findings about NDEs across cultures. For example:
:::::Kellehear, A. (1996) Experiences Near Death: Beyond Medicine and Religion. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
:::::McClenon, J. (1994) Wondrous Events: Foundations of Religious Belief. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
:::::Like the others, all these scholars, by the way, are secular and are not pushing any agenda or ontological interpretation of NDEs. And again, all are published by mainstream academic presses in peer-reviewed monographs. The argument - ''with much supporting evidence'' - is simply that different people in different cultures understand NDEs in different ways. In many, they inform beliefs; in others they don't. This is not speculation, but is based on what people in those different societies actually say.
:::::It's also a serious lacuna that the page has no reference to the work of Carol Zaleski, which should be mentioned alongside Schlieter, as both argue that NDEs are purely imaginary and culturally-constructed. This would also balance the perspectives of Kellehear, McClenon and Shushan. But of course you've deleted Schlieter, too....
:::::I'm hesitant to spend any time on this though, because I suspect you'll just delete it. [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:C89D:EAB4:54FC:4071|2600:1700:A790:63B0:C89D:EAB4:54FC:4071]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:C89D:EAB4:54FC:4071|talk]]) 03:55, 27 February 2024 (UTC)
::::::See [[WP:FRIND]]. If the woowoo doesn't get covered in independent sources, Wikipedia can't cover it. [[User:Bon courage|Bon courage]] ([[User talk:Bon courage|talk]]) 17:32, 3 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Are you saying that scholarly monographs published by academic publishers like Oxford University Press are not independent sources? And that they're "woowoo" simply because they deal with NDEs? Not a single one of them argues that they are actually evidence for an afterlife. We're talking about how NDEs are ''culturally'' and ''socially'' interpreted in different socities. Do you think that's "woowoo" and if so, on what grounds exactly [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4|2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4|talk]]) 06:12, 7 March 2024 (UTC)


==Fringe edits from Josezetabal==


The phenomenon NDe is already completely explained as result of a working memory - where we can perceive as a consious experience how a single stimulus/thought is processed by the brain (step-by-step). Therefore NDEs of persons in different cultures show identical contents and structures - because all human brains are working with the same neuronal structure: the brain. NDEs have nothing to do with death, nor with dying - because the words ´death, dying´ can be used only when this process is performed in reality: this does mean that these persons are dead and a corpse when they had such an experience - and can not tell anything about this experience because death is not reversible.
I noticed Josezetabal has been deleting sources that give the NDE a natural neuroscientific explanation, and this is quietly been going on for a while. He has deleted various academic or scientific sources because he claims they are not on PubMed. Just because a source is not a paper listed on PubMed does not mean it should be deleted.


The imagination/thought ´I will die / I am dead´ is a wrong idea for a person who can think. Because persons who can think are alive! Therefore the start of NDEs can be triggered by such ideas which are seen obviously as wrong/nonsense by outr brain. Then the brain concentrate its activity on the job to process a nonsense-experience for which we have no comparable experience in the memory. Thus we can say: Not the imagination ´I will die / I am dead´ is the trigger to start a NDE: The trigger is, that the brain has to process an experience which is obviously wrong/nonsense.
This source [https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-540-92276-6_85 Towards a Neuro-scientific Explanation of Near-death Experiences] by Vanhaudenhuyse, was removed by Josezetabal. His reason "Vanhaudenhuyse et al. 2009 does not exist in Pubmed - also reference 56 is a Book of Intensive Care Medicine and Vanhaudenhuyse is not one of the co-authors. So all references are wrong" [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Near-death_experience&diff=816574437&oldid=816387243]. I just linked to the Vanhaudenhuyse source. He was co-author. I do not usually edit on this wiki and I do not want to engage in an edit war, but there appears to be some deception going on here. Reliable sources have been deleted. [[User:Rebecca Bird|Rebecca Bird]] ([[User talk:Rebecca Bird|talk]]) 18:44, 24 December 2017 (UTC)


To process this strange experience - the brain use two strategies: A) this strange experience it compared step-by-step against the contents of the memory - these contents are reactivated when the comparison is performed an can be perceived as a conscious experience as a life-review in hierarchical order in a very high speed. 2) sometimes a virtual simulation of the actual situation is performed - which we know as an Out-of-Body-experience.
I agree! One only needs to look at who has disappeared and who has survived the edits to identify the culprits. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Perky28|Perky28]] ([[User talk:Perky28#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Perky28|contribs]]) 16:17, 14 February 2018 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
(When the life-review is perceived in hierarchical ASCENDING order - then it will be started in the 5th month of feoetus-age - in the same order as the physical senses develop: touch > acoustic > optical sense (= tunnel experience) > birth(indirect, light perception change from dim to brilliant) > early social encounter experiences (our parents are recalled as a ´being of light´ from which we get unlimited love and affection) > autobiographical experiences from th 2nd year of childhood up to the actual age. BUT - when a life-review is performed in hierarchical DESCENDING order - then it will start with the actual age and go back only until to the 2nd-4th year of childhood. We can not recall experiences from an earlier age - (= infantile/childhood amnesia) because earlier experiences have no autobiographical code (I-/my- code). )
(This explanation of NDEs is published already since 2006 - and it is embarrassing, that it is ignored up to now in discussions to the topic NDE. ) <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/2003:F2:5F3C:A812:AD79:B7BB:8F08:15D4|2003:F2:5F3C:A812:AD79:B7BB:8F08:15D4]] ([[User talk:2003:F2:5F3C:A812:AD79:B7BB:8F08:15D4#top|talk]]) 14:38, 5 March 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


:A. You are flat-out demonstrably wrong that "NDEs of persons in different cultures show identical contents and structures." That's precisely one of the things this section should be about -- the cultural and historical differences.
==Nonsense added to lead==
:B. You're the only one makin ontological statements about NDEs here. This section has nothing to do with that.
:C. Not a single scholar I've cited argues that NDEs are actually evidence for an afterlife. This is sociology, cultural anthropology, and history. The conclusions of people writing about cross-cultural NDEs can be used by people on both sides of the argument. They can say they're all in the brain because they're similar; or they can say they're hallucinatory because they're different -- because there are both similarities and cultural uniquenesses. But again, that's not even what the section is about. Did you actually read it, and my proposals for improvement?
:Once again, the issue is NOT about whether NDEs are evidence for an afterlife or not. Even if they're just hallucinations, they can still affect beliefs. And because of cultural diversity, they affect beliefs in different ways in different cultures. There's nothing controversial about that. If you think there is, please explain.
:This is not about the ontological reality of NDEs, or about whether a person can really "die" and come back to life, or even about life after death. It's about the cultural history of religious beliefs about an afterlife in different parts of the world. Can I say this any more clearly? [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4|2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4|talk]]) 06:25, 7 March 2024 (UTC)
::yuh [[Special:Contributions/85.92.180.147|85.92.180.147]] ([[User talk:85.92.180.147|talk]]) 14:28, 14 March 2024 (UTC)


"Purely mathematical research involving artificial neural nets has demonstrated that the volume secretion of neurotransmitters such as adrenaline during near-death trauma induces hallucination [7]. Then, as simulated cell apoptosis progresses, neural nets perform pattern completion upon their own internal damage, at first generating the equivalent of life review, and thereafter producing ever more creative, fantasy-like experience before fading to black.[8] Due to the accelerated progression of both true and false memories with cascading neural damage, we may expect dying neurobiology to experience time-dilation and a subjective feel of forever".


To A) NDEs in different cultures show identical contents and structures - that´s true. Typical for all NDEs are contents and structures which are already described since 1975 in the book of Dr. Ramond Moody ´Life after Life´. In this book we can read several examples of NDEs.
Utter nonsense added to the lead by Perky28. His source is this weird paper [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/089360809400065], ''Virtual input” phenomena within the death of a simple pattern associator'' by S. L. Thaler. This paper does not mention NDE's. It is off-topic to being adding it to an article on near-death experiences. [[User:Skeptic from Britain|Skeptic from Britain]] ([[User talk:Skeptic from Britain|talk]]) 03:21, 16 February 2018 (UTC)


In my text you can read a complete explanation of NDEs - you can study the explanation model if you are inteested in the topic NDEs. But when you want to discuss the cultural history of this topic - then you have to accept that this new access/explanation to the topic NDE is now part of the history too. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/2003:F2:5F3C:A824:7C37:479E:6DEA:754A|2003:F2:5F3C:A824:7C37:479E:6DEA:754A]] ([[User talk:2003:F2:5F3C:A824:7C37:479E:6DEA:754A#top|talk]]) 17:36, 14 March 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Thaler's 2016 paper that Perky28 added to the lead does not mention NDE's either [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27515220]. [[User:Skeptic from Britain|Skeptic from Britain]] ([[User talk:Skeptic from Britain|talk]]) 03:23, 16 February 2018 (UTC)


:"NDEs in different cultures show identical contents and structures - that´s true."
These mathematical studies couldn't be more relevant to this article, and yes, they have been published in the Journal of Near-Death Experience, as well as being discussed in the press (e.g., Scientific American). The PubMed article does discuss the hallucination accompanying a traumatized brain and is therefore extremely relevant. ...There, without any profanity, unlike the style of the Skeptic Brit. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Perky28|Perky28]] ([[User talk:Perky28#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Perky28|contribs]]) 16:52, 16 February 2018 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:No, it is not. Nor did Moody say they are. In fact, Moody pointed out that even among the Western NDEs he was aware of, no two have all the exact same elements. Since Moody, a number of scholars in sociology and religious studies have shown how they ''differ'' across cultures. Have you read the sources I mentioned that demonstrate this? Kellehear, McClenon, Zaleski, Shushan...and there are more. You're citing a single source from almost 50 years ago, which was not even an academic book to begin with. That book was not the end of the discussion, especially considering that it barely dealt with cross-cultural NDEs at all.
:I also found the addition of this material to be UNDUE; several of the refs were also primary sources, and the content described what was in the primary source. This is not how we build articles in Wikipedia. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 17:37, 16 February 2018 (UTC)
:I don't need to re-read your "text," because once again the cross-cultural section has nothing to do with "explaining" NDEs. So what does this even mean?:
:"when you want to discuss the cultural history of this topic - then you have to accept that this new access/explanation to the topic NDE is now part of the history too."
:It seems totally irrelevant to the question of how NDEs are seen in different cultures, as well as vague. Because of you grammar though, I'm not even sure what you're saying. Are you saying that any discussion of NDEs in different cultures must be predicated on your explanation of the phenomenon? [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:8096:E1CE:F7E8:DBA3|2600:1700:A790:63B0:8096:E1CE:F7E8:DBA3]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:8096:E1CE:F7E8:DBA3|talk]]) 21:48, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
::<strike>Embracing Moody's fantasies is right out. If we used that, the wackjobs would all quote Wikipedia as confirmation of their beliefs.</strike> --[[User:Hob Gadling|Hob Gadling]] ([[User talk:Hob Gadling|talk]]) 18:42, 4 April 2024 (UTC)
:::I'm not sure who that's directed to @[[User:Hob Gadling|Hob Gadling]]. The previous comment (erroneously) cited Moody to claim that NDEs are "identical" all over the world. I pointed out that this is not the case. There is no scholarly source that says that, anywhere. The claim is based solely on an unsubstantiated supposition, i.e, it's a ''belief'' not supported by research.
:::Though I pointed out that Moody didn't even actually say that to begin with, I would not cite him in a section on research into cross-cultural NDEs. I would cite the sociologists, anthropologists, and historians who have actually specialized in that area of research.
:::I'm not understanding the resistance to this suggestion. Or why content seems to be controlled more by people who don't understand the subject than by those who do. [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4|2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4|talk]]) 03:39, 5 April 2024 (UTC)
::::Sorry, I was tired. --[[User:Hob Gadling|Hob Gadling]] ([[User talk:Hob Gadling|talk]]) 06:09, 5 April 2024 (UTC)
:::::So where does this leave the section? No one has made a valid or informed argument against it. It's all been either misinformed or simply reactionary. But I don't want to waste my time rewriting it if it's just going to be deleted on some vague ''a priori'' philosophical grounds (i.e., that it's "woo"). And then get banned for a 3rd-time reversal. [[Special:Contributions/2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4|2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4]] ([[User talk:2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4|talk]]) 21:15, 5 April 2024 (UTC)


== Endogenous DMT ==
What in your opinion is UNDUE? I guess anything outside your ideology conveniently fits that definition. Besides, several secondary references have been included (e.g., Yam, Ricciardiello, Young-Mason). So, throw the baby out with the bathwater, book burning at midnight, and don't forget your torch! COI, I don't see any COI? This is wanton vandalism!!![[User:Perky28|Perky28]] ([[User talk:Perky28|talk]]) 17:49, 16 February 2018 (UTC)
:Please do reply on your talk page, which is here: [[User talk:Perky28]]. I'll be happy to further discuss content once the discussion there is resolved. Thanks. [[User:Jytdog|Jytdog]] ([[User talk:Jytdog|talk]]) 17:55, 16 February 2018 (UTC)


Should include information re:DMT and Dr Rick Strassman’s 1990s study. I've been reading through his book "The Spirit Molecule", and there is strong evidence that NDEs could be triggered by release of endogenously produced DMT in cases of extreme stress. [[Special:Contributions/142.169.16.217|142.169.16.217]] ([[User talk:142.169.16.217|talk]]) 16:14, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
Jytdog, it seems that your editing privilege has been revoked on several occasions. Could it be that you are vandalizing articles based upon your own particular world view? Wikipedia should not be based upon bullying.[[User:Perky28|Perky28]] ([[User talk:Perky28|talk]]) 18:15, 16 February 2018 (UTC)
:We need to decide if this is appropriate to add. The question to ask is this [[WP:FRINGE]]. Wikipedia pages to look at are [[Rick Strassman]] and [[DMT: The Spirit Molecule]]. There is also [[N,N-Dimethyltryptamine#Near-death experience]], that unfortunately was added by a blocked user [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=N,N-Dimethyltryptamine&diff=prev&oldid=1066270622][https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=N,N-Dimethyltryptamine&diff=next&oldid=1066270622]. So while the connection between DMT and NDE may be notable enough for the DMT article, it may not be notable enough or mainstream enough for this article. [[User:Richard-of-Earth|Richard-of-Earth]] ([[User talk:Richard-of-Earth|talk]]) 21:40, 15 December 2024 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 21:40, 15 December 2024

This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 17 January 2022 and 11 May 2022. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Scoobydoo2022, The Best Wiki Writter, JACstudent, Finnigan71, Seankingston101, EV0 Abbott (article contribs). Peer reviewers: Candles59, JDJ44, Roxlef, Mylo27, Jbeditor16.

Article is misleading

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The article is presenting NDE as "factual" when it is a pseudoscience backed only by anecdotal evidences. Random Taong Grasa (talk) 13:24, 7 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

If subjective experiences have real correlates that can be verified with third parties such as doctors etc ... It stops being subjective. Have a nice day. 85.49.250.171 (talk) 09:37, 7 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
There have been studies by Bruce Greyson which indicate that people experiencing NDEs have met, in their near-death state, relatives which died so recently that they had no possibility of knowing of their death or, even more impressively, relatives which they did not know existed. If anything, this demonstrates that more research must be done on the topic. XiphosS (talk) 12:39, 8 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Where does it ever state as factual? So far according to research conducted by the Missouri Medicine
The Journal of the Missouri State Medical Association 22% of NDE are form patients that are under general anesthesia were localize lucid memories by present scientific understanding should not be taking place? 2607:FB91:1C79:4F7:CC69:EBE6:FD40:2123 (talk) 01:35, 17 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
this is how science works, by gathering self report data. I’m sorry, did you not realize that? 207.161.254.87 (talk) 15:34, 28 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The phenomenon does exist. What Wikipedia won't say is that NDE would be the door to higher worlds, evidence of life after death, evidence of reincarnation, and so on. tgeorgescu (talk) 10:52, 29 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Article is crap

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Article must be crap when the topic is crap. It is all necessarily crap, in the absence of a definition of 'near-death'. Why is it missing? All phenomena described are well-known symptomology of drifting in and out of consciousness. And who's to say a patient apparently unconscious actually is, as conventionally understood? That is, insensate to the world? Why might they not continue to hear and form memories, for example? The focus on cardiac arrest is bizarre. What has cessation of heartbeat to do with anything? Intuitively, it would take some time for loss of consciousness from apoxia to set in. Where do you draw the line between consciousness and lack thereof? The key figure is never mentioned: what proportion of so-called NDE's involved a situation that could reasonably be classified as likely to proceed to death? Well, very, very few, of course, being the obvious reason this is never reported. 'What we have here ... is ... a failure ... (to recognise classic pseudoscientific claptrap, together with a failure) ... to communicate...' 122.151.210.84 (talk) 01:55, 19 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

You should read a little
bit more on NDE’s and some of the claims/ evidence behind them 216.212.19.204 (talk) 01:20, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The experiences are profound and life-changing, but there is no evidence that the spiritual world, heavens, hell, God, and so on exist. tgeorgescu (talk) 02:12, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
They are subjective experiences yes, but they do not deny that they have some reality in them as it is possible for a person to see what happens around being unconscious? 85.49.250.171 (talk) 09:32, 7 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
You sound like you haven’t bothered to read into this topic at all and represent an angry atheist reaction 207.161.254.87 (talk) 15:33, 28 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Cross-Cultural NDE section

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This section was arbitrarily removed in its entirety by MrOllie after I tried to make it more robust. He has called it "fringeish" without any justification. The section is historical and anthropological and has nothing to do with whether or not NDEs are veridical or not. The works cited are all by scholars -- historians of religions with PhDs from prominent universities with works published by Oxford University Press and other academic publishers.

Here's the section (the new material added is in italics):

Historian of religions Gregory Shushan published an analysis of the afterlife beliefs of five ancient civilizations and compared them with historical and contemporary reports of NDEs, and shamanic afterlife "journeys". Shushan found elements that were specific to cultures, but concluded that similarities across time, place, and culture could not be explained by coincidence and that there probably is some form of mutual influence between NDEs and culture and that this influence, in turn, influences individual NDEs. In Shushan's follow-up study on NDEs in indigenous societies, he demonstrated that although NDEs occur around the world regardless of cultural or religious background, their reception varies widely. Many Native American, Polynesian, and Melanesian cultures valorized NDEs and stated outright that they were the source of local knowledge about the afterlife. In contrast, for many Australian, Micronesian, and African societies, NDEs were less relevant to afterlife beliefs, and were sometimes seen as a form of possession.

Others argue that near-death experiences and many of their elements such as vision of beings of light, judgment, the tunnel, or the life review are closely related to religious and spiritual traditions of the West. It was mainly Christian visionaries, Spiritualists, Occultists, and Theosophists of the 19th and 20th century that reported them.

Parnia argues that although the interpretation of NDEs are influenced by religious, social, and cultural backgrounds, the core elements appear to transcend borders and are universal. As evidence, he states that some of these core elements have been reported by children at an age where they should not have been influenced by culture or tradition. Greyson states the central features of NDEs are universal and have been observed throughout history and in different cultures and have not changed over time.''''


Here is my reply to MrOllie after he said my edit "doesn't convey any new information":

"Your comment 'this doesn't convey any new information' shows that you either didn't read carefully or that you don't understand the subject. Of course it conveys new information. It's a brief summary of the conclusions of an entirely different study, that reached entirely new and different conclusions, involving different cultures, from different time periods and of different social scale. The salient point is that NDEs influenced afterlife beliefs in some societies and did not in others -- which is not stated in the previous sentences."

MrOllie replied: "I read carefully, but still think the new source duplicates what we already have... In fact, the whole section is fairly fringey and lacks secondary sourcing."

He then deleted it entirely with no explanation on what he is basing his assessments. He does not explain what makes anthropological and historical work "fringey," and is not correct to say it lacks sourcing. This is a totally baseless and subjective deletion. Without this section, the article is based entirely on a hypothetical Western stereotype. 2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9 (talk) 03:53, 23 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The works cited, by the way are:
Greyson, Bruce (2014). "Chapter 12: Near-Death Experiences". In Cardeña, Etzel; Lynn, Steven Jay; Krippner, Stanley (eds.). Varieties of anomalous experience : examining the scientific evidence (Second ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association. pp. 333–367.
Parnia, Sam (2014-11-01). "Death and consciousness--an overview of the mental and cognitive experience of death". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1330 (1): 75–93.
Schlieter, Jens (2018-08-06). What Is it Like to Be Dead?: Near-Death Experiences, Christianity, and the Occult. Oxford University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-19-088885-5.
Shushan, Gregory (2009). Conceptions of the Afterlife in Early Civilizations: Universalism, Constructivism, and Near-Death Experience. London: Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-4073-0.
Shushan, Gregory (2018). Near-Death Experience-in-Indigenous-Religions. Oxford: Oxford-University-Press. ISBN 978-0197685433.
Note that Schlieter and Shushan are historians, the other two are medical scientists. 2600:1700:A790:63B0:D955:12E0:459F:4A9 (talk) 04:05, 23 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What we had there was a section that placed an over-emphasis on the opinions of individual academics. could not be explained by coincidence based on one person's opinion is classic fringe writing. This kind of thing is why Wikipedia is supposed to be written based on secondary sources that explain what the mainstream view of a field is. MrOllie (talk) 12:09, 23 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Almost nobody is working on NDEs across cultures and in history, which is why this relatively new scholarly research is important.
The statement "could not be explained by coincidence" is not "one person's opinion". It is not an opinon at all, in fact, and it's actually demonstrated and reasoned in the book. The research for that book was conducted at Oxford University and the book published by Oxford University Press. It was peer-reviewed, as were a number of articles stemming from the book.
In contrast, your statement that it's "fringe writing" is based solely on one person's opinion, and you ahev not substantiated it in any way.
It's one thing if you want to flag as "needs secondary source" or whatever, but to just delete it isn't justified. 2600:1700:A790:63B0:EDA3:4395:BE5F:84A8 (talk) 21:31, 23 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If 'almost nobody' is working on it, that is a reason to leave the section out, not to compromise Wikipedia's standards. A maintenance tag is only appropriate if there if there is a realistic chance we could find a secondary source, but you're conceding here that we will not. MrOllie (talk) 22:03, 23 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That's an incredibly specious rationale. The fact that it's a relatively neglected area of research is no reason to censor it. As I said earlier, the cross-cultural existence of NDEs is vital to understanding them, just as it would be to any phenomenon. It's actually ethnocentric to leave them out, and inaccurate to portray the phenomenon as only a Western one.
I can add two summaries from the work of two prominent mainstream sociologists, Allan Kellehear and James McClenon, who earlier had similar findings about NDEs across cultures. For example:
Kellehear, A. (1996) Experiences Near Death: Beyond Medicine and Religion. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
McClenon, J. (1994) Wondrous Events: Foundations of Religious Belief. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Like the others, all these scholars, by the way, are secular and are not pushing any agenda or ontological interpretation of NDEs. And again, all are published by mainstream academic presses in peer-reviewed monographs. The argument - with much supporting evidence - is simply that different people in different cultures understand NDEs in different ways. In many, they inform beliefs; in others they don't. This is not speculation, but is based on what people in those different societies actually say.
It's also a serious lacuna that the page has no reference to the work of Carol Zaleski, which should be mentioned alongside Schlieter, as both argue that NDEs are purely imaginary and culturally-constructed. This would also balance the perspectives of Kellehear, McClenon and Shushan. But of course you've deleted Schlieter, too....
I'm hesitant to spend any time on this though, because I suspect you'll just delete it. 2600:1700:A790:63B0:C89D:EAB4:54FC:4071 (talk) 03:55, 27 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
See WP:FRIND. If the woowoo doesn't get covered in independent sources, Wikipedia can't cover it. Bon courage (talk) 17:32, 3 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Are you saying that scholarly monographs published by academic publishers like Oxford University Press are not independent sources? And that they're "woowoo" simply because they deal with NDEs? Not a single one of them argues that they are actually evidence for an afterlife. We're talking about how NDEs are culturally and socially interpreted in different socities. Do you think that's "woowoo" and if so, on what grounds exactly 2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4 (talk) 06:12, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]


The phenomenon NDe is already completely explained as result of a working memory - where we can perceive as a consious experience how a single stimulus/thought is processed by the brain (step-by-step). Therefore NDEs of persons in different cultures show identical contents and structures - because all human brains are working with the same neuronal structure: the brain. NDEs have nothing to do with death, nor with dying - because the words ´death, dying´ can be used only when this process is performed in reality: this does mean that these persons are dead and a corpse when they had such an experience - and can not tell anything about this experience because death is not reversible.

The imagination/thought ´I will die / I am dead´ is a wrong idea for a person who can think. Because persons who can think are alive! Therefore the start of NDEs can be triggered by such ideas which are seen obviously as wrong/nonsense by outr brain. Then the brain concentrate its activity on the job to process a nonsense-experience for which we have no comparable experience in the memory. Thus we can say: Not the imagination ´I will die / I am dead´ is the trigger to start a NDE: The trigger is, that the brain has to process an experience which is obviously wrong/nonsense.

To process this strange experience - the brain use two strategies: A) this strange experience it compared step-by-step against the contents of the memory - these contents are reactivated when the comparison is performed an can be perceived as a conscious experience as a life-review in hierarchical order in a very high speed. 2) sometimes a virtual simulation of the actual situation is performed - which we know as an Out-of-Body-experience. (When the life-review is perceived in hierarchical ASCENDING order - then it will be started in the 5th month of feoetus-age - in the same order as the physical senses develop: touch > acoustic > optical sense (= tunnel experience) > birth(indirect, light perception change from dim to brilliant) > early social encounter experiences (our parents are recalled as a ´being of light´ from which we get unlimited love and affection) > autobiographical experiences from th 2nd year of childhood up to the actual age. BUT - when a life-review is performed in hierarchical DESCENDING order - then it will start with the actual age and go back only until to the 2nd-4th year of childhood. We can not recall experiences from an earlier age - (= infantile/childhood amnesia) because earlier experiences have no autobiographical code (I-/my- code). ) (This explanation of NDEs is published already since 2006 - and it is embarrassing, that it is ignored up to now in discussions to the topic NDE. ) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2003:F2:5F3C:A812:AD79:B7BB:8F08:15D4 (talk) 14:38, 5 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

A. You are flat-out demonstrably wrong that "NDEs of persons in different cultures show identical contents and structures." That's precisely one of the things this section should be about -- the cultural and historical differences.
B. You're the only one makin ontological statements about NDEs here. This section has nothing to do with that.
C. Not a single scholar I've cited argues that NDEs are actually evidence for an afterlife. This is sociology, cultural anthropology, and history. The conclusions of people writing about cross-cultural NDEs can be used by people on both sides of the argument. They can say they're all in the brain because they're similar; or they can say they're hallucinatory because they're different -- because there are both similarities and cultural uniquenesses. But again, that's not even what the section is about. Did you actually read it, and my proposals for improvement?
Once again, the issue is NOT about whether NDEs are evidence for an afterlife or not. Even if they're just hallucinations, they can still affect beliefs. And because of cultural diversity, they affect beliefs in different ways in different cultures. There's nothing controversial about that. If you think there is, please explain.
This is not about the ontological reality of NDEs, or about whether a person can really "die" and come back to life, or even about life after death. It's about the cultural history of religious beliefs about an afterlife in different parts of the world. Can I say this any more clearly? 2600:1700:A790:63B0:75AE:A5FC:BBFB:35D4 (talk) 06:25, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
yuh 85.92.180.147 (talk) 14:28, 14 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]


To A) NDEs in different cultures show identical contents and structures - that´s true. Typical for all NDEs are contents and structures which are already described since 1975 in the book of Dr. Ramond Moody ´Life after Life´. In this book we can read several examples of NDEs.

In my text you can read a complete explanation of NDEs - you can study the explanation model if you are inteested in the topic NDEs. But when you want to discuss the cultural history of this topic - then you have to accept that this new access/explanation to the topic NDE is now part of the history too. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2003:F2:5F3C:A824:7C37:479E:6DEA:754A (talk) 17:36, 14 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

"NDEs in different cultures show identical contents and structures - that´s true."
No, it is not. Nor did Moody say they are. In fact, Moody pointed out that even among the Western NDEs he was aware of, no two have all the exact same elements. Since Moody, a number of scholars in sociology and religious studies have shown how they differ across cultures. Have you read the sources I mentioned that demonstrate this? Kellehear, McClenon, Zaleski, Shushan...and there are more. You're citing a single source from almost 50 years ago, which was not even an academic book to begin with. That book was not the end of the discussion, especially considering that it barely dealt with cross-cultural NDEs at all.
I don't need to re-read your "text," because once again the cross-cultural section has nothing to do with "explaining" NDEs. So what does this even mean?:
"when you want to discuss the cultural history of this topic - then you have to accept that this new access/explanation to the topic NDE is now part of the history too."
It seems totally irrelevant to the question of how NDEs are seen in different cultures, as well as vague. Because of you grammar though, I'm not even sure what you're saying. Are you saying that any discussion of NDEs in different cultures must be predicated on your explanation of the phenomenon? 2600:1700:A790:63B0:8096:E1CE:F7E8:DBA3 (talk) 21:48, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Embracing Moody's fantasies is right out. If we used that, the wackjobs would all quote Wikipedia as confirmation of their beliefs. --Hob Gadling (talk) 18:42, 4 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure who that's directed to @Hob Gadling. The previous comment (erroneously) cited Moody to claim that NDEs are "identical" all over the world. I pointed out that this is not the case. There is no scholarly source that says that, anywhere. The claim is based solely on an unsubstantiated supposition, i.e, it's a belief not supported by research.
Though I pointed out that Moody didn't even actually say that to begin with, I would not cite him in a section on research into cross-cultural NDEs. I would cite the sociologists, anthropologists, and historians who have actually specialized in that area of research.
I'm not understanding the resistance to this suggestion. Or why content seems to be controlled more by people who don't understand the subject than by those who do. 2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4 (talk) 03:39, 5 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, I was tired. --Hob Gadling (talk) 06:09, 5 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So where does this leave the section? No one has made a valid or informed argument against it. It's all been either misinformed or simply reactionary. But I don't want to waste my time rewriting it if it's just going to be deleted on some vague a priori philosophical grounds (i.e., that it's "woo"). And then get banned for a 3rd-time reversal. 2600:1700:A790:63B0:7473:46A4:CCC7:90E4 (talk) 21:15, 5 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Endogenous DMT

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Should include information re:DMT and Dr Rick Strassman’s 1990s study. I've been reading through his book "The Spirit Molecule", and there is strong evidence that NDEs could be triggered by release of endogenously produced DMT in cases of extreme stress. 142.169.16.217 (talk) 16:14, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

We need to decide if this is appropriate to add. The question to ask is this WP:FRINGE. Wikipedia pages to look at are Rick Strassman and DMT: The Spirit Molecule. There is also N,N-Dimethyltryptamine#Near-death experience, that unfortunately was added by a blocked user [1][2]. So while the connection between DMT and NDE may be notable enough for the DMT article, it may not be notable enough or mainstream enough for this article. Richard-of-Earth (talk) 21:40, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]