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Comments

  • anatamananataman Who needs a title? Where am I? Veteran
    I am deeply disturbed by an intensive care nurse naming a patient she looked after, this is breaching patient confidentiality and unless she has documented proof that she should be brought before a commission that 60-year-old Tom Kennard, who’d been suffering from sepsis after surgery for cancer, gave her written permission to publish his name and diagnosis, she is asking to be struck off, or it is a made up article...

    I am also disturbed that she mentions she is on an intensive care ward and it takes 4 nurses and a good few minutes to get him back into bed, and a doctor to arrive - HELLO - this is INTENSIVE CARE - is this a mid-staffordshire hospital by any chance.

    Crap journalism! Or crap patient confidentiality - this journalist and if the source is really a nurse should be brought before a tribunal. Would you or your family like your name and details displayed to the world if you were critically ill, and unable to prove/disprove these allegations - Tom Kennard - you should contact lawyers4us - and take this nurse and the papers to the cleaners - I think 100 000 000should sit them all up or down.

    Life or death @cvalue - NO - abuse - YES.

    It's a bit like the thread on the supernatural - Occam's razor, cuts deep!

  • BhikkhuJayasaraBhikkhuJayasara Bhikkhu Veteran
    well its no doubt they are REAL... the problem is they are subjective, based on the culture of the person etc. I'm sure as our mind dies we go through all kinds of experiences.
    VastmindInvincible_summer
  • The experiences and life changes are real. The death experience is not very well understood, due to lack of scientific research. The development side, allows us to dismiss interpretations such as 'god created a new soul' or 'they came from a previous life'.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_development

    Hopefully in the future these near death experiences and their function will be understand better than, 'you goes to heaven', 'you goes to new life', which is just ignorance. At the moment we don't know. Death is a science taboo at the moment. Can people 'trust' their minds?

    :buck:

    and now back to Near Life Experiences . . . :p
    Jeongjwa
  • No, it's not even anything new. Anecdotes abound and as they get told, they get embellished as people supply details to add that extra layer of eeriness.
  • anatamananataman Who needs a title? Where am I? Veteran
  • Penn and Teller once did a great takedown of the NDEs. The experiences are actually replicable in fighter pilot training. The nausea-inducing spinning machine often causes trainees to black out and a significant minority experience almost identical out-of-body experiences. When the brain is sufficiently deprived of oxygen, it seems to often produce bizarre visions, blissful experiences, and other-worldly-sights. Occam's Razor would suggest this is a primal survival function of the brain rather than proof of different dimensions.
    lobsterCinorjerEvenThirdNele
  • When the brain is sufficiently deprived of oxygen, it seems to often produce bizarre visions, blissful experiences, and other-worldly-sights.
    Why would it do this? A relaxed being requires less oxygen perhaps . . . Betrayed by our own evolution . . . gosh we can not even trust our malfunctioning, oxygen starved brain . . . tsk tsk . . .
  • vinlynvinlyn Colorado...for now Veteran

    Penn and Teller once did a great takedown of the NDEs. The experiences are actually replicable in fighter pilot training. The nausea-inducing spinning machine often causes trainees to black out and a significant minority experience almost identical out-of-body experiences. When the brain is sufficiently deprived of oxygen, it seems to often produce bizarre visions, blissful experiences, and other-worldly-sights. Occam's Razor would suggest this is a primal survival function of the brain rather than proof of different dimensions.

    I have no idea what NDE's actually mean...although they do appear to be cross-cultural. But what an odd notion -- that one would believe 2 comedians, rather than hundreds or thousands of people who had actually undergone NDEs. That's a good example of one having one's mind made up...no matter what.

    poptartInvincible_summerDakini
  • vinlyn said:

    Penn and Teller once did a great takedown of the NDEs. The experiences are actually replicable in fighter pilot training. The nausea-inducing spinning machine often causes trainees to black out and a significant minority experience almost identical out-of-body experiences. When the brain is sufficiently deprived of oxygen, it seems to often produce bizarre visions, blissful experiences, and other-worldly-sights. Occam's Razor would suggest this is a primal survival function of the brain rather than proof of different dimensions.

    I have no idea what NDE's actually mean...although they do appear to be cross-cultural. But what an odd notion -- that one would believe 2 comedians, rather than hundreds or thousands of people who had actually undergone NDEs. That's a good example of one having one's mind made up...no matter what.


    The alternative is to believe in a supernatural occurrence that is unverifiable. How many people have seen ghosts, ghouls, black magic, and other specters? I'm made up on those things. I actually believe Near Death Experiences (NDEs) happen, but they are happening in the brain, not as the result of gods and angels.

    The experiences have been replicated in brains under extreme duress in an observable setting. I don't know why the brain does it, but it probably is some desperate conforting mechanism when a brain starts to die.
  • VastmindVastmind Memphis, TN Veteran
    edited January 2014
    I had some neurological problems year before last....and would
    see white spots....but the 'weirdest' thing for me was my 'thinking'
    not matching my 'doing'. I witnessed by body going floppy and
    I said/heard my words in my head....but it came out like baby talk.
    I'm here to report....while my brain was breaking down I saw
    nothing spiritual. I wasn't looking for it, either.
    My arm would move by itself....does that count?

    Who knows.....
    lobster
  • If you exercise the body, you feel the world is a better place. Has the world changed?
    The Buddha once as an ascetic practice, before enlightenment, withheld his breath, he reported headaches. Oops.
    These NDE's exist, real experiences, transformative, usually for the betterment of the individual and society. They should be explored, just as the benefits of yoga and meditation can be distanced and investigated separately from cultural mythology and interpretations. Anyway that is my delusion . . .

    A delusion is not a bad thing. We can use it. Watching a film or reading a novel is a form of 'delusional' thinking . . . and . . . [lobster wanders off into the land of waffle] . . . :wave:
    pegembara
  • In my career, I have witnessed only 'one' such instance. It was an amazing thing he was gone for at least forty five minutes; what occurred was he regained his senses backwards, with the last being his sight. We shocked him numerous times, lots of drugs, and CPR so every one of his ribs was separated from the cartilage. The only thing he knew was. His chest hurt, and why is there burn marks!?
  • I had an NDE in 2007 (heart attack)- I didn't see lights, hear choirs, or see any long gone loved ones but I did shit my pants.

    Emptiness is form, form is emptiness.
  • howhow Veteran Veteran
    Kenshos can have some similarities to NDE. (minus lamaramadingdong's pant shit). I hope!
    They are sometimes referred to as "a dry run on death".

    Of course now that I've read frozen-paratrooper's posts on spin training, perhaps that's just how awful Zen training can be, that our brains get spun quickly enough to achieve escape velocity.
    Invincible_summerEvenThird
  • edited January 2014
    One thing I did notice during my "NDE" was that I went from feeling the most panic I had ever felt in my life to complete calm and acceptance of whatever was going to happen to me.
    Invincible_summerherberto
  • http://www.sciencedump.com/content/michael-shermer-out-body-experiment-persingers-gods-helmet

    Not directly about NDE's, but about out of body experiences. I'd love to give this a try.
  • lobster said:

    The death experience is not very well understood, due to lack of scientific research.

    Anyone who thinks there is a lack of scientific research into NDE should read The Art of Dying by Peter and Elizabeth Fenwick. Peter Fenwick is, according to the back blurb, "an internationally renowned neuropsychiatrist and Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrisists. He is Britain's leading clinical authority on near-death experiences".
    cvalueDakini
  • DairyLamaDairyLama Veteran Veteran

    I had an NDE in 2007 (heart attack)- I didn't see lights, hear choirs, or see any long gone loved ones but I did shit my pants.

    When I was working as an electrician I got several electric shocks at mains voltage. No wierd experiences, but they certainly woke me up. :D
  • CinorjerCinorjer Veteran
    edited January 2014
    poptart said:

    lobster said:

    The death experience is not very well understood, due to lack of scientific research.

    Anyone who thinks there is a lack of scientific research into NDE should read The Art of Dying by Peter and Elizabeth Fenwick. Peter Fenwick is, according to the back blurb, "an internationally renowned neuropsychiatrist and Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrisists. He is Britain's leading clinical authority on near-death experiences".
    I love book blurbs. I've written some for my own books and love the marketing language. "Internationally renowned" means people know his name (Oh, he's that psychiatrist who publishes books on near death experiences) and being the "leading clinical authority" simply means he's the only neuropsychiatrist who cares enough about a non-scientific subject to devote a lot of time to collecting anecdotes about it. It's not like there are specialists in NDE.

    Research means doing things like setting up a controlled experiment, taking people into near-death state and seeing what happens compared to people you just knock out with drugs, that sort of thing. Only sadistic Nazi doctors would do something so dangerous. Collecting stories is simply collecting stories, not research.

    Back when I first joined the military in the 1970s I used to work in a regional stateside hospital as an EMT, ambulance and emergency room. It had a large retired and dependent family community around it, and I worked about a half dozen clinical "deaths" where CPR and emergency medical care were used to bring back people who had heart attacks, etc. There was about a 50 percent success rate, since sometimes the person was too far gone for our help. On top of that we had an active surgery I rotated through. Nothing like open heart operations, but sometimes things went wrong.

    We also were involved in follow-up care since we were a small hospital, and usually I got to shake hands and talk to the person whose life we saved. Not one of those people reported anything like an NDE full of people giving sage advice, loved ones waiting, floating around and watching the body being worked on, etc.

    Does this disprove the existence of NDEs? No. But why not? I bet almost all surgeons out there will tell you none of their patients said their spirits floated around the operating room.

    Doesn't the absence of something prove it doesn't exist? Of course not. Nothing can disprove it, because we can't even define what it is we're trying to prove. That a few people report strange visions when their brains are injured or starved of oxygen to the point of near death? Of course they do. Does this prove we have a soul that leaves the body and continues on after death? Of course not.

    Interesting, my time in the Air Force did show me that many of the pilots believed in UFOs and had stories of strange things they saw up there while joyriding in their expensive fighter jets, even the pilots who claimed they started off skeptical. This was when the whole UFO and Bermuda Triangle thing hit the culture and bookstores were full of that sort of thing. Flight surgeons at the hospital said it was due to the brain being stressed by g-forces causing visions and people being hardwired to believe what their brain tells them they saw.

    Or maybe the skies are filled with flying saucers. Can't prove they are not there, can we?
    lobster
  • Cinorjer said:


    Research means doing things like setting up a controlled experiment, taking people into near-death state and seeing what happens compared to people you just knock out with drugs, that sort of thing. Only sadistic Nazi doctors would do something so dangerous. Collecting stories is simply collecting stories, not research.

    You have a very narrow view of research.

    Have you read the book?
  • poptart said:

    Cinorjer said:


    Research means doing things like setting up a controlled experiment, taking people into near-death state and seeing what happens compared to people you just knock out with drugs, that sort of thing. Only sadistic Nazi doctors would do something so dangerous. Collecting stories is simply collecting stories, not research.

    You have a very narrow view of research.

    Have you read the book?
    Not that one. I'll see if it's at the library. But we run into the same problem with people who collect anecdotes about children and their past life memories. Collecting anecdotes after the fact can point to the possibility of something being there, but cannot actually prove anything to the degree needed, or even refine our knowledge of what's happening. Our humanity cannot allow us to proceed to the next scientific step, which is conducting experiments. That's research.

  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    Regarding research. Here's a good interview with Dr. Sam Parnia a resuscitation doctor and lead researcher into NDE.

    http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/04/consciousness-after-death/all/

    His research uses double blinds and neutral interviewers, he doesn't say that there is a next life or anything but "The evidence we have so far is that human consciousness does not become annihilated... It continues for a few hours after death, albeit in a hibernated state we cannot see from the outside.”
    cvalueDandelion
  • cvaluecvalue Veteran
    edited January 2014
    Thanks @person for this link, it's very interesting!
    http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/04/consciousness-after-death/all/
    Parnia: When you die, there’s no blood flow going into your brain. If it goes below a certain level, you can’t have electrical activity. It takes a lot of imagination to think there’s somehow a hidden area of your brain that comes into action when everything else isn’t working.

    These observations raise a question about our current concept of how brain and mind interact. The historical idea is that electrochemical processes in the brain lead to consciousness. That may no longer be correct, because we can demonstrate that those processes don’t go on after death.

    There may be something in the brain we haven’t discovered that accounts for consciousness, or it may be that consciousness is a separate entity from the brain.

    Wired: This seems to verge on supernatural explanations of consciousness.

    Parnia: Throughout history, we try to explain things the best we can with the tools of science. But most open-minded and objective scientists recognize that we have limitations. Just because something is inexplicable with our current science doesn’t make it superstitious or wrong. When people discovered electromagnetism, forces that couldn’t then be seen or measured, a lot of scientists made fun of it.
    I guess those scientists who made fun when people discovered electromagnetism, had to eat their words after. :D
    Dakinipoptart
  • Just as real as my day at work today.

    It happened no doubt about that.

    Where is it? ::shrugs::

    certainty and doubt co-arise.

    and then those are put to rest. well then.
    poptart
  • DakiniDakini Veteran
    edited January 2014
    You might be able to explain away people seeing a tunnel and a light, accompanied by feelings of bliss or Divine love....maybe. But what about the part where they see their deceased loved ones welcoming them, and then at some point the Light, or one of the loved ones, says they have to go back, it's not their time yet?

    And what about the changes in some people's electromagnetic fields, newly acquired clairvoyant or other psi abilities, etc.?

    More study needs to be done on these cases. Instead of dismissing them out of hand, they need to be studied. Writing stuff off isn't science. Testing, measuring, recording findings, and analyzing is the practice of science.
    vinlynpoptartcvalue
  • CinorjerCinorjer Veteran
    edited January 2014
    Dakini said:

    You might be able to explain away people seeing a tunnel and a light, accompanied by feelings of bliss or Divine love....maybe. But what about the part where they see their deceased loved ones welcoming them, and then at some point the Light, or one of the loved ones, says they have to go back, it's not their time yet?

    And what about the changes in some people's electromagnetic fields, newly acquired clairvoyant or other psi abilities, etc.?

    More study needs to be done on these cases. Instead of dismissing them out of hand, they need to be studied. Writing stuff off isn't science. Testing, measuring, recording findings, and analyzing is the practice of science.

    Here's the thing. IF the stories can be taken literally and something like a spirit exists, then it is neither energy nor matter because it obeys none of the laws of the universe. It is not effected by gravity and can pass through physical matter without being affected and in spite of the so-called ghost hunting fake shows, cannot be detected because even photons go right through it. In none of the NDE cases did the doctor and nurses start screaming they saw a ghost floating around near the ceiling, so light does not interact with the spirit. But to anyone who knows basic physiology and physics, that means the invisible spirit must be blind also or you'd see at least a pair of disembodied eyeballs floating around.

    Yet the person reports seeing the doctors and their body, as if their spirit eyes could receive photons, which stimulated the spirit optic nerves to create memory pathways in a spirit brain in spite of us knowing exactly how memories are created, and that is through electrochemical pathways created in the physical brain. This is not debatable. We can stimulate one pathway and cause you to relive a memory. We can destroy a pathway and your memory is gone forever. Are spirit brains composed of little ghost neurons that when you re-enter the body, instantly move the cells around to match the new configuration?

    So it is literally impossible for a spirit to create memories. Even if spirit existed and returned to a body, it is impossible for you to remember anything the spirit experienced outside the brain.

    People who believe in NDE and ghosts and such stuff want it both ways. Either the spirit does not obey the laws of physics or it does. Either photons interact and we can see the ghost and it can see us, or we are both invisible to each other all the time. Anything else is just wishful thinking and saying "Oh, it's magic."

    We do know, though, that our brains can create false memories and trigger false emotions because this vastly complicated physical process is imperfect. The fact that your mind remembers something does not mean it happened, necessarily, or happened the way you remember. Every time you dream, your brain is turning a messy jumble into a false narrative. No, you're not actually floating off a seaside cliff, even though when you first wake up you remember doing so.

    So we have a known, common, likely explanation for the phenomenon, and theories that involve basically magic. For some of us, the second set of theories require a lot more evidence than we have so far.

    lobsterVastmindYik_Yis_Yii
  • So, NDE tells something about what it's like to be near death, but nothing about what it is like to be dead.
    You know you are not dead when you remember things.
    Maybe more study has not been done because science has better things to do.
    Vastmind
  • Maybe more study has not been done because science has better things to do.
    Maybe so. The infrastructure has to be right. We still have mythology and ignorance and the emotional impact of dying. Maybe atheists will 'donate' their dying to science.
    We can as mentioned stimulate the brain to have visions, maybe the purpose of NDE will throw knowledge on the processing that happens during death. I feel it is a neglected study but that will change. Then the cry will go up . . . 'ah yes, that is what happens when you die but what happens after you die . . .'
    Oh boy.
    Spooky stuff? Some sort of magical holding and then the trauma of being a sperm and egg cell?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_of_the_gaps

    Buddhism, common sense required?

    Vastmind
  • I don't think I'm dead yet, but I'm pretty sure I found out where heaven is.
    It's at Koh Kho Khao.
    Will that help?

    image
    Vastmind
  • VastmindVastmind Memphis, TN Veteran
    edited January 2014
    Now, we're talking......most people want to know what happens
    AFTER death. The actual dying process is different! NDE's are
    not confirmation of the after and what's 'there' and who's there...
    NDE's are the process of the form breaking down.....

    However, If you believe in an afterlife...wouldn't you be
    looking/expecting one? If you spent your whole life believeing
    you would see your loved ones again....wouldn't that be the first
    thing you would grasp onto?..... Just wondering/noodling ...... :)

    robot
  • @Vastmind, I believe in afterlife. No question about that. But I don't care whether I will see my loved ones again or not because they are only my loved ones of this life. I have many other loved ones from many other previous lives. Lots of relative, you know. :)
  • VastmindVastmind Memphis, TN Veteran
    edited January 2014
    ^^^ Gotcha. What do you believe is taking place during the
    NDE? The transition/moving? ....I understand where your coming
    from....I do. ;) I think when NDE threads are started, it helps to
    know where the OP is starting from...AFA afterlife or not....
    It can help others' understand the need for an explanation/reason....
  • What got me excited is many of NDE reports are from different background and they reported seeing very bright light, extremely bright but it doesn't hurt their eyes (of course) because they don't have eyes any more. And this corresponds to what I've learnt.

    Before, some people said but nobody ever come back from death to tell us what happened to them so we just trusted the book of death blindly. Not anymore, thanks to CPR, doctors can call the death back.

    @Vastmind asked:
    What do you believe is taking place during the NDE? The transition/moving?
    Since I am a big believer of Amida's Pure Land. I expect to see the bright light from Amitabha Buddha as soon as I die. And when I see that light, I will say Namo Amitabha Buddha and I hope to be able to merge into his light.
    Vastmind
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    What science is increasingly understanding is the correlation between brain activity and our conscious experience.

    What science yet has no explanation for is how neurochemical and electrical activity in the brain actually produce the phenomena of conscious experience.

    Yes, when certain things are done to the brain certain correlated events happen in our consciousness. Correlation is not necessarily causation though.

    Until it can be shown how brain activity causes conscious experience it is only an assumption of causation, albeit a reasonable one.

    There are several other possibilities besides

    Brain (A) -> Consciousness (B)

    There is

    B -> A

    It could be both causing each other through some interaction

    A <-> B

    Or it could be a third force causing both

    C -> B and A

    Or even something like no causation but more like the convex and concave sides of a semi circle

    image


    Consciousness seems to be a unique type of phenomena in the universe so it doesn't seem that far fetched to me that it could have unique properties.


  • person said:



    Consciousness seems to be a unique type of phenomena in the universe so it doesn't seem that far fetched to me that it could have unique properties.


    I got lost in all those As and Bs but this is spot on.

    What people call the Laws of The Universe are nothing of the kind. They are man-made theories, attempts to explain how things work. They are considered laws until something better comes along. Everyone thought Newton had it nailed until Einstein came up with Relativity. Today quantum mechanics is making physicists question long held theories about causation.


    cvalue
  • howhow Veteran Veteran
    Mankind has been forever trying to find proof that death is not the end for his/her Ego.
    If my ego passed beyond deaths door intact, then good luck in trying to get it to shut up about such a miraculous self affirming trip.
    If consciousness/ soul did the trip, then our lack of memory of our last life is wiped so clean as to make the connection between the before and after..irrelevant.

    It does make sense to me that in the dying process where the body/mind starts falling apart, that our conditioning which has had us see the world the way that we do, might also change.
    It is reasonable to expect such views within such a transition to be unique from what we formally had, and folks fortunate enough to survive near death experiences might remember some of that.

    From a practice perspective though, it is just more phenomena to not fiddle with.
    CinorjerlobsterVastmind
  • DakiniDakini Veteran
    edited January 2014
    Cinorjer said:

    But to anyone who knows basic physiology and physics, that means the invisible spirit must be blind also or you'd see at least a pair of disembodied eyeballs floating around.

    Yet the person reports seeing the doctors and their body, as if their spirit eyes could receive photons, which stimulated the spirit optic nerves to create memory pathways in a spirit brain in spite of us knowing exactly how memories are created, and that is through electrochemical pathways created in the physical brain. This is not debatable.

    Cool post, Cinorjer (I'm saving space here by not reproducing the whole thing). But here's the thing: blind people have had NDE's and they've reportedly seen the same tunnel, hovered over their bodies and viewed the surgeons, etc. So what kind of sight is involved in NDE's? And what about the NDE cases where the patient saw objects that couldn't be seen from the perspective of people standing in the room or lying on the operating table?

    Obviously the "spirit" or "consciousness" or whatever doesn't have physical eyes, so what kind of sight is involved? If it exists (if reports are true), it's not dependent on physical systems. What kind of sight is involved when we see something "in our mind's eye", as the expression goes? What kind of sight is involved when clairvoyants view something at a distance that they've never seen before? (I had someone perfectly describe the interior of my house (from a continent away), and I've done something similar at a psi workshop.) These "viewings", btw, typically take place with the practitioner's eyes closed, in my experience. It's easier to focus that way. No distractions.

    Also, though these "spirits" (whatever) can't be seen, in some haunting cases, there do seem to be some kind of electromagnetic phenomena associated with them, to which animals react.

    More study needed.

    :)

  • @Dakini Some very good questions. My answer to them all must be, "I don't know." I don't know if any of that phenomenon actually exists, leave alone how it can be explained if it does. But to me, the universe is full of wonderous, mind boggling things and the miracle of our conscious, intelligent mind is the most wonderous thing of all. I am always ready to be amazed.
    Dakini
  • DakiniDakini Veteran
    edited January 2014
    Cinorjer said:

    @Dakini Some very good questions. My answer to them all must be, "I don't know." I don't know if any of that phenomenon actually exists, leave alone how it can be explained if it does. But to me, the universe is full of wonderous, mind boggling things and the miracle of our conscious, intelligent mind is the most wonderous thing of all. I am always ready to be amazed.

    Exactly! I love waiting and watching the next discovery unfold, the next bit of research, the grand adventure of it all! I hope to live to see some of these things explained. Each year brings something new.

    Stay tuned for further developments. ;)

    lobster
  • DairyLamaDairyLama Veteran Veteran
    person said:


    It could be both causing each other through some interaction
    A <-> B

    That seems to be how it's described in the suttas, where in dependent origination consciousness and form are mutually dependent.
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