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A '''near-death experience''' ('''NDE''') refers to personal experiences associated with impending [[death]], encompassing multiple possible sensations including detachment from the body, feelings of levitation, total serenity, security, warmth, the experience of absolute dissolution, and the presence of a light. These phenomena are usually reported after an individual has been pronounced [[clinical death|clinically dead]] or very close to death. Many NDE reports, however, originate from events that are not life-threatening. With recent developments in [[cardiac resuscitation]] techniques, the number of reported NDEs has increased.<ref>{{cite book|last=Beauregard|first=Mario|title=The Spiritual Brain|year=2007|publisher=HarperOne|isbn=978-0-06-085883-4|pages=368|coauthors=Denyse O'Leary|location=New York|chapter=Toward a Nonmaterialist Science of Mind}}</ref> The experiences have been described in medical journals as having the characteristics of [[hallucination]]s,<ref>Buzzi, Giorgio. "[http://www.chemie.uni-hamburg.de/igtw/Gesundheit/images/pdf/bloodpress_corresp.pdf Correspondence: Near-Death Experiences.]" Lancet. Vol. 359, Issue 9323 (June 15, 2002): 2116-2117.</ref><ref name=Britton&Bootzin>Britton, Willoughby B. and Richard R. Bootzin. "Near-Death Experiences and the Temporal Lobe." Psychological Science. Vol. 15, No. 4 (April 2004): 254-258.</ref><ref>Blackmore, Susan: ''Dying to Live: Near-Death Experiences'' (1993). London, Grafton.</ref> while [[parapsychology|parapsychologists]], religious believers and some scientists have pointed to them as evidence of an [[afterlife]] and [[Dualism (philosophy of mind)|mind-body dualism]].<ref>Grossman, Neil (Indiana University and University of Illinois), ''Who's Afraid of Life After Death? Why NDE Evidence is Ignored'', Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS), 2002</ref><ref>Fontana, David (Cardiff University and Liverpool John Moores University), ''Does Mind Survive Physical Death?'', 2003</ref><ref>London Telegraph, 10/22/2000 article: ''Soul-searching doctors find life after death'', about Drs. [http://www.wie.org/bios/peter-fenwick.asp#prof Peter Fenwick] and Sam Parnia studies of heart attack survivors</ref><ref>Carter, Chris: ''Science and the Near-Death Experience: How Consciousness Survives Death'' (2010). Toronto, Inner Traditions. ISBN 1-59477-356-4</ref> According to the 2013 [[PLOS ONE]] article by Thonnard et al., " near-death experiences cannot be considered as imagined event memories. On the contrary, their physiological origins could lead them to be really perceived although not lived in the reality."<ref>{{cite web | url =http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0057620| title = Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories|publisher =[[PLOS ONE]]|date=2013| accessdate = 14 April 2013}}</ref>
A '''near-death experience''' ('''NDE''') refers to personal experiences associated with impending [[death]], encompassing multiple possible sensations including detachment from the body, feelings of levitation, total serenity, security, warmth, the experience of absolute dissolution, and the presence of a light. These phenomena are usually reported after an individual has been pronounced [[clinical death|clinically dead]] or very close to death. Many NDE reports, however, originate from events that are not life-threatening. With recent developments in [[cardiac resuscitation]] techniques, the number of reported NDEs has increased.<ref>{{cite book|last=Beauregard|first=Mario|title=The Spiritual Brain|year=2007|publisher=HarperOne|isbn=978-0-06-085883-4|pages=368|coauthors=Denyse O'Leary|location=New York|chapter=Toward a Nonmaterialist Science of Mind}}</ref> The experiences have been described in medical journals as having the characteristics of [[hallucination]]s,<ref>Buzzi, Giorgio. "[http://www.chemie.uni-hamburg.de/igtw/Gesundheit/images/pdf/bloodpress_corresp.pdf Correspondence: Near-Death Experiences.]" Lancet. Vol. 359, Issue 9323 (June 15, 2002): 2116-2117.</ref><ref name=Britton&Bootzin>Britton, Willoughby B. and Richard R. Bootzin. "Near-Death Experiences and the Temporal Lobe." Psychological Science. Vol. 15, No. 4 (April 2004): 254-258.</ref><ref>Blackmore, Susan: ''Dying to Live: Near-Death Experiences'' (1993). London, Grafton.</ref> while [[parapsychology|parapsychologists]], religious believers and some scientists have pointed to them as evidence of an [[afterlife]] and [[Dualism (philosophy of mind)|mind-body dualism]].<ref>Grossman, Neil (Indiana University and University of Illinois), ''Who's Afraid of Life After Death? Why NDE Evidence is Ignored'', Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS), 2002</ref><ref>Fontana, David (Cardiff University and Liverpool John Moores University), ''Does Mind Survive Physical Death?'', 2003</ref><ref>London Telegraph, 10/22/2000 article: ''Soul-searching doctors find life after death'', about Drs. [http://www.wie.org/bios/peter-fenwick.asp#prof Peter Fenwick] and Sam Parnia studies of heart attack survivors</ref><ref>Carter, Chris: ''Science and the Near-Death Experience: How Consciousness Survives Death'' (2010). Toronto, Inner Traditions. ISBN 1-59477-356-4</ref> According to the 2013 [[PLOS ONE]] article by Thonnard et al., " near-death experiences cannot be considered as imagined event memories. On the contrary, their physiological origins could lead them to be really perceived although not lived in the reality."<ref>{{cite web | url =http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0057620| title = Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories|publisher =[[PLOS ONE]]|year=2013| accessdate = 14 April 2013}}</ref>


Popular interest in near-death experiences was initially sparked by Weiss's 1972 ''The Vestibule'', followed by [[Raymond Moody]]'s 1975 book ''[[Life After Life]]''<ref name="Moody, R. 1975">Moody, R. (1975) ''Life After Life: The Investigation of a Phenomenon - Survival of Bodily Death''. New York: Bantam</ref><ref>Duane S. Crowther (2005). [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=G0Fz0IgWS9oC&pg=PA19&lpg=PA19&dq=%22life+after+Life%22+moody+review&source=bl&ots=Z8abpUrG0K&sig=_1dslDkjuzLmOpaf31_6nMTzhbY&hl=en&ei=VHdrTOODHJDSuwPZseQW&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBMQ6AEwADiaAw#v=onepage&q=%22life%20after%20Life%22%20moody%20review&f=false Life Everlasting] Cedar Fort, p. 19.</ref> and the founding of the [[IANDS|International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS)]] in 1981.<ref name= "iands.org">IANDS. "Near-Death Experiences: Is this what happens when we die?" Durham: International Association for Near-Death Studies. Informational brochure available at www.iands.org</ref> According to a [[Gallup poll]], approximately eight&nbsp;million Americans claim to have had a near-death experience.<ref>Mauro, James "Bright lights, big mystery".''Psychology Today'', July 1992.</ref> Some commentators, such as Simpson,<ref>Simpson SM. (2001) ''Near death experience: a concept analysis as applied to nursing.'' Journal of Advanced Nursing. Nov;36(4):520-6. [[PubMed]] abstract PMID 11703546</ref> claim that the number of near-death experiencers may be underestimated. People who have had a near-death experience may not be comfortable discussing the experience with others, especially when the NDE is understood as a paranormal incident. NDEs are among the phenomena studied in the fields of [[psychology]],<ref name="Lange R 2004">Lange R, Greyson B, Houran J. (2004) "A Rasch scaling validation of a 'core' near-death experience". ''British Journal of Psychology'', Volume: 95 Part: 2 Page: 161-177</ref> [[psychiatry]],<ref>Greyson, Bruce (2003), "Near-Death Experiences in a Psychiatric Outpatient Clinic Population", ''Psychiatric Services'', Dec., Vol. 54 No. 12. The American Psychiatric Association.</ref> and [[hospital medicine]].<ref name="Lommel 2003">van Lommel, Pim (Hospital Rijnstate),"A Reply to Shermer: Medical Evidence for NDEs" in ''Skeptical Investigations'', 2003. [http://www.skepticalinvestigations.org/Mediaskeptics/vanLommel.html]</ref><ref name="Lommel P 2001">van Lommel P, van Wees R, Meyers V, Elfferich I. (2001) "Near-Death Experience in Survivors of Cardiac Arrest: A prospective Study in the Netherlands" in ''The Lancet'', December 15; 358(9298):2039-45. [http://www.pentathon.talktalk.net/lancet.pdf PDF version of article]</ref>
Popular interest in near-death experiences was initially sparked by Weiss's 1972 ''The Vestibule'', followed by [[Raymond Moody]]'s 1975 book ''[[Life After Life]]''<ref name="Moody, R. 1975">Moody, R. (1975) ''Life After Life: The Investigation of a Phenomenon - Survival of Bodily Death''. New York: Bantam</ref><ref>Duane S. Crowther (2005). [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=G0Fz0IgWS9oC&pg=PA19&lpg=PA19&dq=%22life+after+Life%22+moody+review&source=bl&ots=Z8abpUrG0K&sig=_1dslDkjuzLmOpaf31_6nMTzhbY&hl=en&ei=VHdrTOODHJDSuwPZseQW&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBMQ6AEwADiaAw#v=onepage&q=%22life%20after%20Life%22%20moody%20review&f=false Life Everlasting] Cedar Fort, p. 19.</ref> and the founding of the [[IANDS|International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS)]] in 1981.<ref name= "iands.org">IANDS. "Near-Death Experiences: Is this what happens when we die?" Durham: International Association for Near-Death Studies. Informational brochure available at www.iands.org</ref> According to a [[Gallup poll]], approximately eight&nbsp;million Americans claim to have had a near-death experience.<ref>Mauro, James "Bright lights, big mystery".''Psychology Today'', July 1992.</ref> Some commentators, such as Simpson,<ref>Simpson SM. (2001) ''Near death experience: a concept analysis as applied to nursing.'' Journal of Advanced Nursing. Nov;36(4):520-6. [[PubMed]] abstract PMID 11703546</ref> claim that the number of near-death experiencers may be underestimated. People who have had a near-death experience may not be comfortable discussing the experience with others, especially when the NDE is understood as a paranormal incident. NDEs are among the phenomena studied in the fields of [[psychology]],<ref name="Lange R 2004">Lange R, Greyson B, Houran J. (2004) "A Rasch scaling validation of a 'core' near-death experience". ''British Journal of Psychology'', Volume: 95 Part: 2 Page: 161-177</ref> [[psychiatry]],<ref>Greyson, Bruce (2003), "Near-Death Experiences in a Psychiatric Outpatient Clinic Population", ''Psychiatric Services'', Dec., Vol. 54 No. 12. The American Psychiatric Association.</ref> and [[hospital medicine]].<ref name="Lommel 2003">van Lommel, Pim (Hospital Rijnstate),"A Reply to Shermer: Medical Evidence for NDEs" in ''Skeptical Investigations'', 2003. [http://www.skepticalinvestigations.org/Mediaskeptics/vanLommel.html]</ref><ref name="Lommel P 2001">van Lommel P, van Wees R, Meyers V, Elfferich I. (2001) "Near-Death Experience in Survivors of Cardiac Arrest: A prospective Study in the Netherlands" in ''The Lancet'', December 15; 358(9298):2039-45. [http://www.pentathon.talktalk.net/lancet.pdf PDF version of article]</ref>
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==Research==
==Research==
Because the study of NDEs is a topic that addressed multiple possible feelings, sensations and their origins, research on NDE should be conducted primarily by researchers with credentials in cognitive [[neuroscience]]. Cognitive neuroscience addresses the questions of how psychological functions (for example, human feelings and sensations) are produced by neural circuitry (including the human brain). Modern contributions to the research on near-death experiences, however, have come from several academic disciplines that generally do not include [[neuroscience]].<ref name="Harris, Sam. ">[http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/this-must-be-heaven#sthash.kDgYPQk5.dpuf Harris, Sam. "]</ref> There are multiple reasons for this trend.<ref name="Harris, Sam. "/> For example, brain activity scans are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation.<ref>Mobbs,D. "Response to Greyson et al.: there is nothing paranormal about near-death experiences", Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Volume 16, Issue 9, September 2012, Page 446</ref> Claiming that there is no measurable brain activity without having a variety of different [[EEG]], [[catSCAN]], [[FMRI]], etc. is not considered a good scientific practice.<ref name="Harris, Sam. "/><ref>Mobbs,D. "Response to Greyson et al.: there is nothing paranormal about near-death experiences", Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Volume 16, Issue 9, September 2012, Page 446</ref> Existing research is mainly in the disciplines of medicine, psychology and psychiatry.
Because the study of NDEs is a topic that addressed multiple possible feelings, sensations and their origins, research on NDE should be conducted primarily by researchers with credentials in cognitive [[neuroscience]]. Cognitive neuroscience addresses the questions of how psychological functions (for example, human feelings and sensations) are produced by neural circuitry (including the human brain). Modern contributions to the research on near-death experiences, however, have come from several academic disciplines that generally do not include [[neuroscience]].<ref name="Harris, Sam. ">[http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/this-must-be-heaven#sthash.kDgYPQk5.dpuf Harris, Sam. "]</ref> There are multiple reasons for this trend.<ref name="Harris, Sam. "/> For example, brain activity scans are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation.<ref name="Mobbs,D 2012, Page 446">Mobbs,D. "Response to Greyson et al.: there is nothing paranormal about near-death experiences", Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Volume 16, Issue 9, September 2012, Page 446</ref> Claiming that there is no measurable brain activity without having a variety of different [[EEG]], [[catSCAN]], [[FMRI]], etc. is not considered a good scientific practice.<ref name="Harris, Sam. "/><ref name="Mobbs,D 2012, Page 446"/> Existing research is mainly in the disciplines of medicine, psychology and psychiatry.


Individual cases of NDEs in literature have been identified into ancient times.<ref name="HandBook-Field">{{cite book |title =The Handbook of Near-Death Experiences: Thirty Years of Investigation | editor-last = Holden | editor-first =Janice Miner|editor2-last = Greyson |editor2-first =Bruce| editor3-last = James | editor3-first = Debbie| publisher =Greenwood Publishing Group |date =Jun 22, 2009 | pages = 1–16 | chapter =The Field of Near-Death Studies: Past, Present and Future | chapterurl = | url =http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Handbook_of_Near_Death_Experiences.html?id=9MdUPgAACAAJ | isbn = 978-0-313-35864-7}}</ref> In the 19th century a few efforts moved beyond studying individual cases - one privately done by Mormons and one in Switzerland. Up to 2005, 95% of world cultures have been documented making some mention of NDEs.<ref name="HandBook-Field"/>
Individual cases of NDEs in literature have been identified into ancient times.<ref name="HandBook-Field">{{cite book |title =The Handbook of Near-Death Experiences: Thirty Years of Investigation | editor-last = Holden | editor-first =Janice Miner|editor2-last = Greyson |editor2-first =Bruce| editor3-last = James | editor3-first = Debbie| publisher =Greenwood Publishing Group |date =Jun 22, 2009 | pages = 1–16 | chapter =The Field of Near-Death Studies: Past, Present and Future | chapterurl = | url =http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Handbook_of_Near_Death_Experiences.html?id=9MdUPgAACAAJ | isbn = 978-0-313-35864-7}}</ref> In the 19th century a few efforts moved beyond studying individual cases - one privately done by Mormons and one in Switzerland. Up to 2005, 95% of world cultures have been documented making some mention of NDEs.<ref name="HandBook-Field"/>
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A recent non-peer reviewed study by Sam Parnia suggests that such patients are "effectively dead", having no neural activity of those necessary for dreaming or hallucination; additionally, to rule out the possibility that near-death experiences resulted from lack of oxygen, Parnia rigorously monitored the concentrations thereof in the patients’ blood, and found that none of those who underwent the experiences had low levels of oxygen. He was also able to rule out claims that unusual combinations of drugs were to blame because the resuscitation procedure was the same in every case, regardless of whether they had a near-death experience or not. According to Parnia, "Arch sceptics will always attack our work. I’m content with that. That’s how science progresses. What is clear is that something profound is happening. The mind – the thing that is ‘you’ – your ‘soul’ if you will - carries on after conventional science says it should have drifted into nothingness." These findings, however, have not been peer-reviewed and as such should not be considered scientifically evaluated.<ref>[http://www.newsmonster.co.uk/paranormal-unexplained/near-death-experiences-are-real-and-we-have-the-proof-say-scientists.html Near Death Experiences are Real and We have the Proof, say Scientists] ''[[News Monster]]''</ref><ref>[http://www.near-death.com/evidence.html The Trigger of Seizure]</ref>
A recent non-peer reviewed study by Sam Parnia suggests that such patients are "effectively dead", having no neural activity of those necessary for dreaming or hallucination; additionally, to rule out the possibility that near-death experiences resulted from lack of oxygen, Parnia rigorously monitored the concentrations thereof in the patients’ blood, and found that none of those who underwent the experiences had low levels of oxygen. He was also able to rule out claims that unusual combinations of drugs were to blame because the resuscitation procedure was the same in every case, regardless of whether they had a near-death experience or not. According to Parnia, "Arch sceptics will always attack our work. I’m content with that. That’s how science progresses. What is clear is that something profound is happening. The mind – the thing that is ‘you’ – your ‘soul’ if you will - carries on after conventional science says it should have drifted into nothingness." These findings, however, have not been peer-reviewed and as such should not be considered scientifically evaluated.<ref>[http://www.newsmonster.co.uk/paranormal-unexplained/near-death-experiences-are-real-and-we-have-the-proof-say-scientists.html Near Death Experiences are Real and We have the Proof, say Scientists] ''[[News Monster]]''</ref><ref>[http://www.near-death.com/evidence.html The Trigger of Seizure]</ref>


A few people feel that research on NDEs occurring in the blind can be interpreted to support an argument that consciousness survives bodily death. Kenneth Ring claims in the book ''Mindsight: Near-Death and Out-of-Body Experiences in the Blind'' that up to 80% of his sample studied reported some visual awareness during their NDE or out of body experience.<ref>Ring, Cooper, 1999</ref> Dr. [[Raymond Moody]], an NDE researcher, documented several cases of patients who had become blind regaining their vision in out-of-body (OBE) and near-death experiences, and who were able to accurately describe the instruments and techniques used during their rescitation by medical staff.<ref>Dr. Raymond Moody, <i>People See Verified Events While Out-of-body: Dr. Raymond Moody's Groundbreaking Research</i>, http://www.near-death.com/experiences/evidence02.html</ref>
A few people feel that research on NDEs occurring in the blind can be interpreted to support an argument that consciousness survives bodily death. Kenneth Ring claims in the book ''Mindsight: Near-Death and Out-of-Body Experiences in the Blind'' that up to 80% of his sample studied reported some visual awareness during their NDE or out of body experience.<ref>Ring, Cooper, 1999</ref> Dr. [[Raymond Moody]], an NDE researcher, documented several cases of patients who had become blind regaining their vision in out-of-body (OBE) and near-death experiences, and who were able to accurately describe the instruments and techniques used during their rescitation by medical staff.<ref>Dr. Raymond Moody, ''People See Verified Events While Out-of-body: Dr. Raymond Moody's Groundbreaking Research'', http://www.near-death.com/experiences/evidence02.html</ref>


The karmic or purgatorial-like nature of a [[life review]] experienced by those who have had an NDE has so far not received a convincing scientific explanation. According to [[IANDS]], near-death experiencers often have a life review, where they re-view or see every moment of their lives. During the life review, the near-death experiencer (NDEr) fully experiences being every other person with whom they have interacted. The NDEr feels what it was like to be on the receiving end of their actions, including those that caused others pain, as well as those that caused others joy.<ref>"http://iands.org/support/grief-and-loss.html</ref>
The karmic or purgatorial-like nature of a [[life review]] experienced by those who have had an NDE has so far not received a convincing scientific explanation. According to [[IANDS]], near-death experiencers often have a life review, where they re-view or see every moment of their lives. During the life review, the near-death experiencer (NDEr) fully experiences being every other person with whom they have interacted. The NDEr feels what it was like to be on the receiving end of their actions, including those that caused others pain, as well as those that caused others joy.<ref>"http://iands.org/support/grief-and-loss.html</ref>
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There are three arguments in support of such criticism. First, the NDE could just as easily have occurred before or after any state resembling brain death. There is no way to verify the timing of memory formation relative to brain scans when the patient is not conscious.<ref>Mobbs D, Watt C.. [http://www.koestler-parapsychology.psy.ed.ac.uk/Documents/MobbsWattNDE.pdf 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.] Trends Cogn Sci. 2011 Oct;15(10):447-9.</ref> Second, it is very difficult to verify that there was in fact no measurable brain activity. There are many types of brain activity and they require different types of tests to verify them. Most of these types of tests are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation. It is entirely possible, for example, that a patient showing no activity on an [[EEG]] scan could still have brain activity that would appear on an [[FMRI]], [[Positron emission tomography|PET]], or [[catSCAN]]. In the words of Dr. Mark Cohen, a [[neuroimaging]] researcher at [[UCLA]]: "The EEG can appear flat even in the presence of high activity, when that activity is not synchronous. For example, the EEG flattens in regions involved in direct task processing. This phenomenon is known as event-related desynchronization."<ref>[http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/this-must-be-heaven#sthash.kDgYPQk5.dpuf Sam, Harris. "]</ref> Third, the experiences reported by NDE subjects have also been reported by other patients whose experiences had known triggers (mostly chemicals of a psychedelic nature.) The chemical processes that happen in a brain under oxygen deprivation are known to share some characteristics with the effects of psychoactive substances.
There are three arguments in support of such criticism. First, the NDE could just as easily have occurred before or after any state resembling brain death. There is no way to verify the timing of memory formation relative to brain scans when the patient is not conscious.<ref>Mobbs D, Watt C.. [http://www.koestler-parapsychology.psy.ed.ac.uk/Documents/MobbsWattNDE.pdf 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.] Trends Cogn Sci. 2011 Oct;15(10):447-9.</ref> Second, it is very difficult to verify that there was in fact no measurable brain activity. There are many types of brain activity and they require different types of tests to verify them. Most of these types of tests are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation. It is entirely possible, for example, that a patient showing no activity on an [[EEG]] scan could still have brain activity that would appear on an [[FMRI]], [[Positron emission tomography|PET]], or [[catSCAN]]. In the words of Dr. Mark Cohen, a [[neuroimaging]] researcher at [[UCLA]]: "The EEG can appear flat even in the presence of high activity, when that activity is not synchronous. For example, the EEG flattens in regions involved in direct task processing. This phenomenon is known as event-related desynchronization."<ref>[http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/this-must-be-heaven#sthash.kDgYPQk5.dpuf Sam, Harris. "]</ref> Third, the experiences reported by NDE subjects have also been reported by other patients whose experiences had known triggers (mostly chemicals of a psychedelic nature.) The chemical processes that happen in a brain under oxygen deprivation are known to share some characteristics with the effects of psychoactive substances.


The NDE is often cited as evidence for the existence of the human [[soul]] and [[afterlife]]. However, the imagery in the experiences varies within cultures.<ref>[http://anthropology.uwaterloo.ca/WNB/NearDeath.html Near-Death and Out-of-Body Experiences in a Melanesian Society] by Dorothy E. Counts]</ref><ref>[http://www.globalideasbank.org/natdeath/ndh3.html#SECTION72 Varieties of NDE]</ref><ref>[http://altered-states.net/barry/newsletter224/ndethai1.htm Eleven Thai Near-Death Experiences]</ref> Some view NDEs as a proof for [[heaven]] and [[hell]], which appear in Christian and Islamic religious traditions, but those concepts do not apply to all religions. For example, [[Placide Tempels]] (a Belgian missionary) states that "most African peoples believe that rewards and punishments come to people in this life and not in the hereafter. In the land of the departed, what happens there happens automatically, irrespective of a person's earthly behavior".<ref>Placide Tempels. "http://www.deathreference.com/A-Bi/African-Religions.html"</ref>
The NDE is often cited as evidence for the existence of the human [[soul]] and [[afterlife]]. However, the imagery in the experiences varies within cultures.<ref>[http://anthropology.uwaterloo.ca/WNB/NearDeath.html Near-Death and Out-of-Body Experiences in a Melanesian Society] by Dorothy E. Counts</ref><ref>[http://www.globalideasbank.org/natdeath/ndh3.html#SECTION72 Varieties of NDE]</ref><ref>[http://altered-states.net/barry/newsletter224/ndethai1.htm Eleven Thai Near-Death Experiences]</ref> Some view NDEs as a proof for [[heaven]] and [[hell]], which appear in Christian and Islamic religious traditions, but those concepts do not apply to all religions. For example, [[Placide Tempels]] (a Belgian missionary) states that "most African peoples believe that rewards and punishments come to people in this life and not in the hereafter. In the land of the departed, what happens there happens automatically, irrespective of a person's earthly behavior".<ref>Placide Tempels. "http://www.deathreference.com/A-Bi/African-Religions.html"</ref>


==Personal experiences (self-reported)==
==Personal experiences (self-reported)==

Revision as of 07:56, 8 June 2013

A near-death experience (NDE) refers to personal experiences associated with impending death, encompassing multiple possible sensations including detachment from the body, feelings of levitation, total serenity, security, warmth, the experience of absolute dissolution, and the presence of a light. These phenomena are usually reported after an individual has been pronounced clinically dead or very close to death. Many NDE reports, however, originate from events that are not life-threatening. With recent developments in cardiac resuscitation techniques, the number of reported NDEs has increased.[1] The experiences have been described in medical journals as having the characteristics of hallucinations,[2][3][4] while parapsychologists, religious believers and some scientists have pointed to them as evidence of an afterlife and mind-body dualism.[5][6][7][8] According to the 2013 PLOS ONE article by Thonnard et al., " near-death experiences cannot be considered as imagined event memories. On the contrary, their physiological origins could lead them to be really perceived although not lived in the reality."[9]

Popular interest in near-death experiences was initially sparked by Weiss's 1972 The Vestibule, followed by Raymond Moody's 1975 book Life After Life[10][11] and the founding of the International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS) in 1981.[12] According to a Gallup poll, approximately eight million Americans claim to have had a near-death experience.[13] Some commentators, such as Simpson,[14] claim that the number of near-death experiencers may be underestimated. People who have had a near-death experience may not be comfortable discussing the experience with others, especially when the NDE is understood as a paranormal incident. NDEs are among the phenomena studied in the fields of psychology,[15] psychiatry,[16] and hospital medicine.[17][18]

Characteristics

Ascent of the Blessed by Hieronymus Bosch is associated by NDE researchers with aspects of the NDE[19][20]

The earliest accounts of NDE can be traced to the Myth of Er, recorded in the 4th century BC by Plato's The Republic (10.614-10.621), wherein Plato describes a soldier telling of his near-death experiences.

The cognate French term expérience de mort imminente (experience of imminent death) was proposed by the French psychologist and epistemologist Victor Egger as a result of discussions in the 1890s among philosophers and psychologists concerning climbers' stories of the panoramic life review during falls.[21][22] These experiences were popularized with the work of psychiatrist Raymond Moody in 1975 as the Near-Death Experience (NDE). We don't know if Moody was aware of the expression earlier used by Egger.

Researchers have identified the common elements that define near-death experiences.[23] Bruce Greyson argues that the general features of the experience include impressions of being outside one's physical body, visions of deceased relatives and religious figures, and transcendence of egotic and spatiotemporal boundaries.[24] Many different elements have been reported, though the exact elements tend to correspond with the cultural, philosophical, or religious beliefs of the person experiencing it:

The traits of a classic NDE are as follows:

  • A sense/awareness of being dead.[23][25]
  • A sense of peace, well-being and painlessness. Positive emotions. A sense of removal from the world.[23][25][26]
  • An out-of-body experience. A perception of one's body from an outside position. Sometimes observing doctors and nurses performing medical resuscitation efforts.[23][25][26][27]
  • A "tunnel experience". A sense of moving up, or through, a passageway or staircase.[23][25][27]
  • A rapid movement toward and/or sudden immersion in a powerful light. Communication with the light.[25][26]
  • An intense feeling of unconditional love.[26]
  • Encountering "Beings of Light", "Beings dressed in white", or similar. Also, the possibility of being reunited with deceased loved ones.[23][26][27]
  • Receiving a life review.[23][25][26]
  • Receiving a "life preview" in the cases of George Ritchie and Betty Eadie, which Ring calls an NDE "Flash Forward".[28]
  • Receiving knowledge about one's life and the nature of the universe.[26]
  • A decision by oneself or others to return to one's body, often accompanied by a reluctance to return.[23][26][27]
  • Approaching a border.[25]
  • The notice of unpleasant sound or noise (claimed by R. Moody).[10]
  • Connection to the cultural beliefs held by the individual, which seem to dictate the phenomena experienced in the NDE and the later interpretation thereof (Holden, Janice Miner. Handbook of Near-Death Experiences. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publishing Data, 2009.).
  • Hearing music. According to a study conducted by Dr. Joel Funk, Psychology professor at Plymouth State College in New Hampshire, close to fifty percent of people who have had a NDE remember hearing music.[29]
  • Telepathic conversations with beings of light or angels, deceased relatives and pets, or religious figures such as Jesus Christ for example in pleasant near death experiences (NDE's), or with demons or fallen angels in distressing NDEs.[30]

Kenneth Ring (1980) subdivided the NDE on a five-stage continuum. The subdivisions were:[31]

  1. Peace
  2. Body separation
  3. Entering darkness
  4. Seeing the light
  5. Entering the light

He stated that 60% experienced stage 1 (feelings of peace and contentment), but only 10% experienced stage 5 ("entering the light").[32]

Clinical circumstances associated with near-death experiences include cardiac arrest in myocardial infarction (clinical death); shock in postpartum loss of blood or in perioperative complications; septic or anaphylactic shock; electrocution; coma resulting from traumatic brain damage; intracerebral hemorrhage or cerebral infarction; attempted suicide; near-drowning or asphyxia; apnea; and serious depression.[33] In contrast to common belief, Kenneth Ring argues that attempted suicides do not lead more often to unpleasant NDEs than unintended near-death situations.[34]

The distressing aspects of some NDEs are discussed more closely by Greyson and Bush.[35]

Cultural variances

Karlis Osis and his colleague Erlendur Haraldsson argued that the content of near death experiences does 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.[36] However, Yoshi Hata and his team reported NDEs with substantially different contents than those described above.[37]

Research

Because the study of NDEs is a topic that addressed multiple possible feelings, sensations and their origins, research on NDE should be conducted primarily by researchers with credentials in cognitive neuroscience. Cognitive neuroscience addresses the questions of how psychological functions (for example, human feelings and sensations) are produced by neural circuitry (including the human brain). Modern contributions to the research on near-death experiences, however, have come from several academic disciplines that generally do not include neuroscience.[38] There are multiple reasons for this trend.[38] For example, brain activity scans are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation.[39] Claiming that there is no measurable brain activity without having a variety of different EEG, catSCAN, FMRI, etc. is not considered a good scientific practice.[38][39] Existing research is mainly in the disciplines of medicine, psychology and psychiatry.

Individual cases of NDEs in literature have been identified into ancient times.[40] In the 19th century a few efforts moved beyond studying individual cases - one privately done by Mormons and one in Switzerland. Up to 2005, 95% of world cultures have been documented making some mention of NDEs.[40]

Contemporary interest in this field of study was originally spurred by the writings of Jess Weiss (popular literature author), Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (psychiatrist), George Ritchie (psychiatrist), and Raymond Moody Jr. (psychologist and M.D.). Moody's book Life After Life, which was released in 1975, brought public attention to the topic of NDEs.[23] This was soon to be followed by the establishment of the International Association for Near-death Studies (IANDS) in 1981. IANDS is an international organization that encourages scientific research and education on the physical, psychological, social, and spiritual nature and ramifications of near-death experiences. Among its publications are the peer-reviewed Journal of Near-Death Studies and the quarterly newsletter Vital Signs.[12]

Bruce Greyson (psychiatrist), Kenneth Ring (psychologist), and Michael Sabom (cardiologist), helped to launch the field of Near-Death Studies and introduced the study of near-death experiences to the academic setting. From 1975 to 2005, some 2500 self reported individuals in the US had been reviewed in retrospective studies of the phenomena[40] with an additional 600 outside the US in the West,[40] and 70 in Asia.[40] Prospective studies, reviewing groups of individuals and then finding who had an NDE after some time and costing more to do, had identified 270 individuals.[40] In all close to 3500 individual cases between 1975 and 2005 had been reviewed in one or another study. And all these studies were carried out by some 55 researchers or teams of researchers.[40] The medical community has been reluctant to address the phenomenon of NDEs, and grant money for research has been scarce.[12] Nevertheless, both Greyson and Ring developed tools usable in a clinical setting. Major contributions to the field include Ring's construction of a "Weighted Core Experience Index"[41] to measure the depth of the near-death experience, and Greyson's construction of the "Near-death experience scale"[42] to differentiate between subjects that are more or less likely to have experienced an NDE. The latter scale is also, according to its author, clinically useful in differentiating NDEs from organic brain syndromes and nonspecific stress responses.[42] The NDE-scale was later found to fit the Rasch rating scale model.[15] Greyson[43] has also brought attention to the near-death experience as a focus of clinical attention, while Melvin Morse, head of the Institute for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, and colleagues[27][44] have investigated near-death experiences in a pediatric population.

Neurobiological factors in the experience have been investigated by researchers in the field of medical science and psychiatry.[45] Among the researchers and commentators who tend to emphasize a naturalistic and neurological base for the experience are the British psychologist Susan Blackmore (1993), with her "dying brain hypothesis",[46] and the founding publisher of Skeptic magazine, Michael Shermer (1998). More recently, cognitive neuroscientists Jason Braithwaite (2008)[47] from the University of Birmingham and Sebastian Dieguez (2008)[48] and Olaf Blanke (2009)[49] from the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland have published accounts presenting evidence for the brain-based nature of near death experiences.

In September 2008, it was announced that 25 U.K. and U.S. hospitals would examine near-death studies in 1,500 heart attack patient-survivors. The three-year study, coordinated by Sam Parnia at Southampton University, hopes to determine if people without heartbeat or brain activity can have an out-of-body experience with veridical visual perceptions.[50] This study follows on from an earlier 18-month pilot project.[51] On a July 28, 2010 interview about a recent lecture at Goldsmiths,[52] Parnia (internal medicine physician by training with specialty in pulmonology, critical care, and sleep medicine) asserts that "evidence is now suggesting that mental and cognitive processes may continue for a period of time after a death has started" and describes the process of death as "essentially a global stroke of the brain. Therefore like any stroke process one would not expect the entity of mind / consciousness to be lost immediately". He also expresses his disagreement with the term 'near death experiences' because "the patients that we study are not near death, they have actually died and moreover it conjures up a lot of imprecise scientific notions, due to the fact that [death] itself is a very imprecise term".[53]

Researcher Lakhmir Chawla, an Associate Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine and Medicine at George Washington University medical centre in Washington D.C. argues that near-death experiences are caused by a surge of electrical activity as the brain runs out of oxygen before death. Levels were similar to those seen in fully conscious people, even though blood pressure was so low as to be undetectable, and could generate vivid images and feelings. The gradual loss of brain activity had occurred in the approximate hour before death, and was interrupted by a brief spurt of action, lasting from 30 seconds to three minutes. Sam Parnia disputed this explanation, claiming that Lakhmir Chawla had not provided proof that the electrical surges he recorded were linked to near-death experiences, saying: "Since all the patients died, we cannot tell what they were experiencing".[54] Ironically, critics of Dr. Parnia's work on NDEs have mentioned the lack of evidence of recording brain activity via a combination of EEG, FMRI, catSCANS, etc. in his own studies.

The top peer-reviewed journals in neuroscience, such as Nature Reviews Neuroscience, Brain Research Reviews, Biological Psychiatry, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience are generally not publishing research on NDEs. Among the scientific and academic journals that have published, or are regularly publishing, new research on the subject of NDEs are Journal of Near-Death Studies, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, British Journal of Psychology, American Journal of Disease of Children, Resuscitation, The Lancet, Death Studies, and the Journal of Advanced Nursing. Some researchers have complained about the resistance of the scientific establishment to the implications of NDEs.[55]

Variance in NDE studies

The prevalence of NDEs has been variable in the studies that have been performed. According to the Gallup and Proctor survey in 1980-1981, of a representative sample of the American population, data showed that 15% had an NDE.[56] Knoblauch in 2001 performed a more selective study in Germany and found that 4% of the sample population had an NDE.[57] The information gathered from these studies may nevertheless be subject to the broad timeframe and location of the investigation.

Perera et al., in 2005, conducted a telephone survey of a representative sample of the Australian population, as part of the Roy Morgan Catibus Survey, and concluded that 8.9% of the population had an NDE.[58] In a more clinical setting, van Lommel et al. (2001), a cardiologist from Netherlands, studied a group of patients who had suffered cardiac arrests and who were successfully revived. They found that 62 patients (18%) had an NDE, of whom 41 (12%, or 66% of those who had an NDE) described a core experience.

According to Martens[59] the only satisfying method to address the NDE-issue would be an international multicentric data collection within the framework for standardized reporting of cardiac arrest events. The use of cardiac-arrest criteria as a basis for NDE research has been a common approach among the European branch of the research field.[18][60]

Biological analysis and theories

The first formal neurobiological model for NDE was presented in 1987 by Chilean scientists Juan Sebastián Gómez-Jeria (who holds a PhD in Molecular Physical Chemistry) and Juan Carlos Saavedra-Aguilar (M.D.) from the University of Chile.[61] In the 1990s, Rick Strassman conducted research on the psychedelic drug dimethyltryptamine (DMT) at the University of New Mexico.[62][63][64] Strassman advanced the theory that a massive release of DMT from the pineal gland prior to death or near-death was the cause of the near-death experience phenomenon. Only two of his test subjects reported NDE-like aural or visual hallucinations, although many reported feeling as though they had entered a state similar to the classical NDE. His explanation for this was the possible lack of panic involved in the clinical setting and possible dosage differences between those administered and those encountered in actual NDE cases. All subjects in the study were also very experienced users of DMT and/or other psychedelic/entheogenic agents. Some speculators consider that if subjects without prior knowledge on the effects of DMT had been used during the experiment, more volunteers would have reported NDE. Critics have argued that neurobiological models often fail to explain NDEs that result from close brushes with death, where the brain does not actually suffer physical trauma, such as a near-miss automobile accident. Such events may however have neurobiological effects caused by stress.

Whether or not these experiences are hallucinatory, they have a profound impact on the observer. Many psychologists not necessarily pursuing the paranormal, such as Susan Blackmore, have recognized this, and seek its biological cause.[65]

According to Engmann (medical doctor),[66] near-death experiences of people who are clinically dead are psychopathological symptoms caused by a severe malfunction of the brain resulting from the cessation of cerebral blood circulation. An important question is whether it is possible to "translate" the bloomy experiences of the reanimated survivors into psychopathologically basic phenomena, e.g. acoasms, central narrowing of the visual field, autoscopia, visual hallucinations, activation of limbic and memory structures according to Moody's stages. The symptoms suppose a primary affliction of the occipital and temporal cortices under clinical death. This basis could be congruent with the thesis of pathoclisis—the inclination of special parts of the brain to be the first to be damaged in case of disease, lack of oxygen, or malnutrition—established eighty years ago by Cécile and Oskar Vogt.[67] According to that thesis, the basic phenomena should be similar in all patients with near-death experiences. But a crucial problem is to distinguish these basic psychopathological symptoms from the secondary mental associated experiences which may result from a reprocessing of the basic symptoms under the influence of the person's cultural and religious views.

Research released in 2010 by University of Maribor, Slovenia had put near-death experiences down to high levels of carbon dioxide in the blood altering the chemical balance of the brain and tricking it into 'seeing' things.[54] Of the 52 patients, 11 reported NDEs.[68][69]

An article by Netherlands researchers Pim van Lommel (cardiologist) et al., argues, "With a purely physiological explanation such as cerebral anoxia for the experience, most patients who have been clinically dead should report one."[18] Accordingly, a lack of predictable experiences should cast doubt on wholesale explanations of NDEs. According to Southampton University researcher Sam Parnia (critical care doctor), "Death starts when the heart stops beating, but we can intervene and bring people back to life, sometimes even after three to four hours when they are kept very cold. It could be that a far higher proportion of people have near-death experiences but don't remember them."[54]

Christopher C. French (psychologist) has summarized psychological and organic theories that provide an existing scientific explanation for NDEs. Psychological include the proposal that the NDE is a dissociative defense mechanism that occurs in times of extreme danger. A wide range of organic theories of the NDE has been put forward including those based upon cerebral hypoxia, anoxia, and hypercarbia; endorphins and other neurotransmitters; and abnormal activity in the temporal lobes.[70] NDE subjects have increased activity in the left temporal lobe.[3] In an experiment with one patient, electrical stimulation at the left temporoparietal junction lead to an illusion of another person close to her.[71][72]

A 2012 study by Renemane (neuroradiologist) et al. leads to conclusion that the NDE is considered as a state of unconsciousness resembling of oneiroid syndrome.[73]

REM state

It is suggested that the extreme stress caused by a life threatening situation triggers brain states similar to REM sleep and that part of the near death experience is a state similar to dreaming while awake.[74] People who have experienced times when their brains behaved as if they were dreaming while awake are more likely to develop the near death experience. Further stimulation of the Vagus nerve during the physical and/or psychological stress of a life threatening situation, or the product of the imperiled brain, and may trigger brain conditions where the person is in a dream-like state while awake.[75][76][77][78]

Lucid dreaming

Some sleep researchers, such as Timothy J. Green, Lynne Levitan and Stephen LaBerge, have noted that NDE experiences are similar to many reported of lucid dreaming, where in the individual realizes he is in a dream. Often these states are so realistic as to be barely distinguishable from reality.

In a study of fourteen lucid dreamers performed in 1991, people who perform wake-initiated lucid dreams (WILD) reported experiences consistent with aspects of out-of-body experiences such as floating above their beds and the feeling of leaving their bodies.[79] Due to the phenomenological overlap between lucid dreams, near-death experiences, and out-of-body experiences, researchers say they believe a protocol could be developed to induce a lucid dream similar to a near-death experience in the laboratory.[80]

Other similarities include seeing oneself from the outside (an out of body experience), floating or flying, heightened awareness, and feelings of joy or peace. Some researchers believe this is caused when the mind is deprived of the majority of its senses and relies on the expectational processing. In this regard one experiences what one would expect to happen in their current circumstance. This could explain experiences caused by mental trauma such as a near miss accident in which the mind may close itself off at least partially to the senses and ones caused by physical trauma in which again the mind closes itself off to the world.[citation needed] At present, there exists no clear physiological or psychological basis for any relationship between lucid dreaming and NDEs.

Computational psychology

Modeling of NDEs using artificial neural networks has shown that some aspects of the core near-death experience can be achieved through simulated neuron death.[81][82][83][84] In the course of such simulations, the essential features of the NDE, life review, novel scenarios (i.e., heaven or hell), and OBE are observed through the generation of confabulations or false memories, as discussed in Confabulation (neural networks). The key feature contributing to the generation of such confabulatory states are a neural network's inability to differentiate dead from silent neurons.[85] Memories, whether related to direct experience, or not, can be seeded upon arrays of such inactive brain cells.

Van Lommel studies

The first clinical study of near-death experiences (NDEs) in cardiac arrest patients was by Pim van Lommel, a cardiologist from the Netherlands, and his team (The Lancet, 2001).[18] Of 344 patients who were successfully resuscitated after suffering cardiac arrest, 62 (18%) expressed an intraoperative memory and among these, 41 (12%) experienced core NDEs, which included out-of-body experiences. According to Lommel, the patients remembered details of their conditions during their cardiac arrest despite being clinically dead with flatlined brain stem activity. Van Lommel concluded that his findings supported the theory that consciousness continued despite lack of neuronal activity in the brain. Van Lommel conjectured that continuity of consciousness may be achievable if the brain acted as a receiver for the information generated by memories and consciousness, which existed independently of the brain, just as radio, television and internet information existed independently of the instruments that received it. There is a major flaw in the research methodology: patients who had undergone successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) were considered clinically dead, established mainly by electrocardiogram records. However, brain activity was not measured and as a result the study fails to establish exact timing of the experiences as related to the period of clinical death. That is, the experiences could have occurred right before or after flat-line ECG establishing clinical death.[17]

Van Lommel et al., reported that 62 of the 344 patients with cardiac arrest reported some recollection. Of these 62, 50% reported an awareness or sense of being dead, 24% said that they had had an out-of-body experience, 31% recalled moving through a tunnel, whilst 32% described meeting with deceased people. Moreover, while near-death experiencers commonly report feelings of peace and bliss, only 56% associated the experience with such positive emotions. No patients reported a distressing or frightening NDE.[25]

Effects

NDEs are also associated with changes in personality and outlook on life.[23] Kenneth Ring (professor of psychology) has identified a consistent set of value and belief changes associated with people who have had a near-death experience. Among these changes one finds a greater appreciation for life, higher self-esteem, greater compassion for others, a heightened sense of purpose and self-understanding, desire to learn, elevated spirituality, greater ecological sensitivity and planetary concern, and a feeling of being more intuitive. Changes may also include increased physical sensitivity; diminished tolerance of light, alcohol, and drugs; a feeling that the brain has been "altered" to encompass more; and a feeling that one is now using the "whole brain" rather than a small part.[23] However, not all after-effects are beneficial[86] and Greyson[87] describes circumstances where changes in attitudes and behavior can lead to psychosocial and psychospiritual problems.[88] Often the problems are those of the adjustment to ordinary life in the wake of the NDE.

Afterlife viewpoints

NDE as proof that consciousness can function outside the brain

Many view the NDE as the precursor to an afterlife experience, claiming that the NDE cannot be adequately explained by physiological or psychological causes, and that the phenomenon demonstrates that human consciousness can function independently of brain activity.[89] Many NDE-accounts seem to include elements which, according to several theorists, can only be explained by an out-of-body consciousness. Michael Sabom reports a woman who underwent surgery for an aneurysm, and who reported an out-of-body experience that she claimed continued through a brief period of the absence of any EEG activity.[90][90] In another account, from a prospective Dutch NDE study,[18] a nurse removed the dentures of an unconscious heart attack victim, and was identified by him as the one who removed them, although patient was in a coma and undergoing cardio-pulmonary resuscitation at the time. After the patient was resuscitated, he also identified a drawer where the nurse had placed the dentures despite the fact that the nurse had forgotten.

NDE as proof of the concept of afterlife

Many individuals who experience an NDE see it as a verification of the existence of an afterlife, although there is no evidence.[91] There are examples of ex-atheists, such as the Reverend Howard Storm,[92] adopting a more spiritual viewpoint after their NDEs. Storm's NDE may also be characterized as a distressing near-death experience.[93]

Jeffrey Long, a scientist practicing the specialty of radiation oncology, has claimed after his own study that life does indeed unequivocally exist after death, arguing that medicine simply cannot account for the consistencies in the accounts reported by people all over the world having experiences, which he cites as "generally lucid" and "highly organized", and saying that his work is an important step toward bringing science and religion together.[94] Likewise, some individuals who do not experience an NDE after cardiac arrest lost interest in spirituality, although their fear of death also decreased.[18] Both processes, like most of the psychological transformations associated with a close brush with death, take place over several years.[18]

Greyson claims that: "No one physiological or psychological model by itself explains all the common features of NDE. The paradoxical occurrence of heightened, lucid awareness and logical thought processes during a period of impaired cerebral perfusion raises particular perplexing questions for our current understanding of consciousness and its relation to brain function. A clear sensorium and complex perceptual processes during a period of apparent clinical death challenge the concept that consciousness is localized exclusively in the brain."[95]

A recent non-peer reviewed study by Sam Parnia suggests that such patients are "effectively dead", having no neural activity of those necessary for dreaming or hallucination; additionally, to rule out the possibility that near-death experiences resulted from lack of oxygen, Parnia rigorously monitored the concentrations thereof in the patients’ blood, and found that none of those who underwent the experiences had low levels of oxygen. He was also able to rule out claims that unusual combinations of drugs were to blame because the resuscitation procedure was the same in every case, regardless of whether they had a near-death experience or not. According to Parnia, "Arch sceptics will always attack our work. I’m content with that. That’s how science progresses. What is clear is that something profound is happening. The mind – the thing that is ‘you’ – your ‘soul’ if you will - carries on after conventional science says it should have drifted into nothingness." These findings, however, have not been peer-reviewed and as such should not be considered scientifically evaluated.[96][97]

A few people feel that research on NDEs occurring in the blind can be interpreted to support an argument that consciousness survives bodily death. Kenneth Ring claims in the book Mindsight: Near-Death and Out-of-Body Experiences in the Blind that up to 80% of his sample studied reported some visual awareness during their NDE or out of body experience.[98] Dr. Raymond Moody, an NDE researcher, documented several cases of patients who had become blind regaining their vision in out-of-body (OBE) and near-death experiences, and who were able to accurately describe the instruments and techniques used during their rescitation by medical staff.[99]

The karmic or purgatorial-like nature of a life review experienced by those who have had an NDE has so far not received a convincing scientific explanation. According to IANDS, near-death experiencers often have a life review, where they re-view or see every moment of their lives. During the life review, the near-death experiencer (NDEr) fully experiences being every other person with whom they have interacted. The NDEr feels what it was like to be on the receiving end of their actions, including those that caused others pain, as well as those that caused others joy.[100]

Cross-cultural reseach

Recent research into afterlife conceptions across cultures by religious studies scholar Gregory Shushan [101] analyzes the afterlife beliefs of five ancient civilizations (Old and Middle Kingdom Egypt, Sumerian and Old Babylonian Mesopotamia, Vedic India, pre-Buddhist China, and pre-Columbian Mesoamerica) in light of historical and contemporary reports of near-death experiences, and shamanic afterlife "journeys". It was found that despite numerous culture-specific differences, the nine most frequently recurring NDE elements also recur on a general structural level cross-culturally, as if to suggest that the authors of these ancient religious texts were familiar with NDE or similar. Cross-cultural similarity, however, can be used to support both religious and physiological theories, for both rely on demonstrating that the phenomenon is universal. Others dispute in favor of cultural similarities;[102] and others suggest that the experience is essentially universal, but altered in detail by cultural bias.[103]

Criticism of NDE as proof for "afterlife" or "a soul" outside the brain

Skeptics argue that what some scientists regard as NDEs is based on the false deduction that the brain of a patient is inactive, while no proper brain activity scans have been performed. They view NDEs as poorly studied biological and chemical phenomena occurring in the brain. They argue that NDE can be explained by purely physiological and neurobiological mechanisms that could be better understood through advances in neuroimaging and neuroscience in general.

There are three arguments in support of such criticism. First, the NDE could just as easily have occurred before or after any state resembling brain death. There is no way to verify the timing of memory formation relative to brain scans when the patient is not conscious.[104] Second, it is very difficult to verify that there was in fact no measurable brain activity. There are many types of brain activity and they require different types of tests to verify them. Most of these types of tests are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation. It is entirely possible, for example, that a patient showing no activity on an EEG scan could still have brain activity that would appear on an FMRI, PET, or catSCAN. In the words of Dr. Mark Cohen, a neuroimaging researcher at UCLA: "The EEG can appear flat even in the presence of high activity, when that activity is not synchronous. For example, the EEG flattens in regions involved in direct task processing. This phenomenon is known as event-related desynchronization."[105] Third, the experiences reported by NDE subjects have also been reported by other patients whose experiences had known triggers (mostly chemicals of a psychedelic nature.) The chemical processes that happen in a brain under oxygen deprivation are known to share some characteristics with the effects of psychoactive substances.

The NDE is often cited as evidence for the existence of the human soul and afterlife. However, the imagery in the experiences varies within cultures.[106][107][108] Some view NDEs as a proof for heaven and hell, which appear in Christian and Islamic religious traditions, but those concepts do not apply to all religions. For example, Placide Tempels (a Belgian missionary) states that "most African peoples believe that rewards and punishments come to people in this life and not in the hereafter. In the land of the departed, what happens there happens automatically, irrespective of a person's earthly behavior".[109]

Personal experiences (self-reported)

  • Return from Tomorrow by George G. Ritchie with Elizabeth Sherrill (1978). At the age of 20, George Ritchie died in an army hospital. Nine minutes later he returned to life. Ritchie's story was the first contact Raymond Moody (who was studying at the University of Virginia, as an undergraduate in Philosophy, at the time) had with NDEs. It inspired Moody to investigate over 150 cases of near-death experiences, in his book Life After Life, and two other books that followed.
  • Embraced by the Light by Betty Eadie (1992). One of the most detailed near-death experiences on record.
  • Saved by the Light by Dannion Brinkley. Brinkley's experience documents one of the most complete near death experiences, in terms of core experience and additional phenomena from the NDE scale. Brinkley claims to have been clinically dead for 28 minutes and taken to a hospital morgue, but some of his claims are disputed.
  • Placebo by Howard Pittman (1980). A detailed record of Pittman's near-death experience.
  • The Darkness of God by John Wren-Lewis (1985). Bulletin of the Australian Institute for Psychical Research No 5. An account of the effects of his NDE after going through the death process several times in one night.
  • Two have associated their experiences with their decision to join the Bahá'í Faith. Reinee Pasarow has presented her experiences and an extended talk which was filmed Part 1, Part2, with a partial transcript, analyzed from a religious point of view in a commentary and analyzed as part of the paper The Exploration of Life After Death. Pasarow was interviewed by Kenneth Ring. The second is Ricky Bradshaw whose story has been reviewed in several books.[110][111][112]
  • Anita Moorjani, an ethnic Indian woman from Hong Kong, experienced a NDE which has been documented on the Near Death Experience Research Foundation (NDERF) website as one of the most exceptional accounts on their archives. She had end-stage cancer and on February 2, 2006, doctors told her family that she only had a few hours to live. Following her NDE, Anita experienced a remarkable recovery of her health.[113]
  • Goldie Hawn, while giving a speech at the Buell Theater in Denver, Colorado, reflected upon her near-death experience. When she was younger, and starting out as an actress, she and a group of friends were in a severe car crash together. While she was unconscious, she remembers looking over herself while the paramedics were trying to revive her. She also mentioned seeing a bright light and being told it was not her time soon before she awoke.
  • Kiki Carter, a.k.a. Kimberli Wilson, an environmental activist and singer/songwriter, reported a near-death experience in 1983. The day after the experience, her mother, Priscilla Greenwood, encouraged her to write it down. Priscilla Greenwood published the story in September 1983 in a local metaphysical journal. For 24 hours after the experience, Kimberli had an aftervision which was a catalyst for her interest in quantum physics and holograms.[114]
  • 90 Minutes in Heaven by Don Piper, is Piper's account of his own near-death experience. EMTs on the scene determined Piper had been killed instantly after a tractor-trailer had swerved into his lane, crushing his car. Piper survived, however, and later claimed that he saw loved ones and friends as well as magnificent light; he felt a sense of pure peace. Piper had a very difficult and painful recovery, undergoing 34 surgeries.[115]
  • Heaven Is for Real by Todd Burpo, is a father's account of his son, Colton, and Colton's trip to heaven and back. After discovering that Colton's appendix has ruptured, he was rushed to the hospital. Unconscious, Colton alleges to have met Jesus, God, his great-grandfather whom he had never met, and his older sister lost in a miscarriage.[116]
  • Parallel Universes, a Memoir from the Edges of Space and Time by Linda Morabito Meyer is a NASA scientist's account of several near death experiences at the hands of her parents and William Franklin Mosley of the Temple of the More Abundant Life in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The author claimed that during these experiences, she visited Heaven, saw Jesus, and was in the presence of God.[117]
  • Eben Alexander, M.D., born December, 1953, author of Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife, which made The New York Times Best Seller list for nonfiction.[118]
  • The Friend From Mexico, a True Story of Surviving an Intensive Care Unit (2012) by Apostolos Mavrothalassitis is the author’s near-death experience account. Following a mid-air collision while participating in the 2009 Paragliding World Championships, he suffered extensive blood loss during surgery and was put under induced coma for two weeks. During these two weeks he lived a different life, and was not aware of his predicament. The experiences during this period are described in the book.[119]
  • Howard Storm. In 1985, Storm travelled to Europe with his wife and university students. After suffering from severe stomach pain, he ended up in a hospital in Paris, where he had a near death experience.
  • In the 1983 film Brainstorm a team of scientists invents "the Hat", a brain/computer interface that allows sensations to be recorded from a person's brain and converted to tape so that others can experience them. One of the scientists, Lillian, suffers a heart attack while working alone, realizing that help cannot reach her in time, she dons the Hat and records her experience as she dies. When another scientist, Michael, accesses the final part of the death tape, after the point of Lillian's physical death, he sees "memory bubbles" and experiences Lillian's memories. To his awe, Michael bears witness to the Afterlife; Lillian experiences a brief vision of Hell before travelling away from Earth and through the universe, even after the tape ends, ultimately witnessing visions of angels and departed souls flying into a great cosmic Light. Michael then collapses in an apparent coma. Awakening from the experience, he weeps with joy.
  • The 2001 novel Passage (hardcover, ISBN 0-553-11124-8), by Connie Willis, follows the efforts of Joanna Lander, a research psychologist, to understand the phenomenon of NDEs by interviewing hospital patients after they are revived following clinical death. She becomes the partner of Dr. Richard Wright, a neurologist who has discovered a way to chemically induce an artificial NDE. Their studies lead Joanna to the discovery of the biological purpose of NDEs.

See also

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References

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