[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Religion See other Religion Articles Title: Near-Death Experiences Explained by Science Near-death experiences are often thought of as mystical phenomena, but research is now revealing scientific explanations for virtually all of their common features. The details of what happens in near-death experiences are now known widelya sense of being dead, a feeling that one's "soul" has left the body, a voyage toward a bright light, and a departure to another reality where love and bliss are all-encompassing. Approximately 3 percent of the U.S. population says they have had a near-death experience, according to a Gallup poll. Near-death experiences are reported across cultures, with written records of them dating back to ancient Greece. Not all of these experiences actually coincide with brushes with deathone study of 58 patients who recounted near-death experiences found 30 were not actually in danger of dying, although most of them thought they were. Recently, a host of studies has revealed potential underpinnings for all the elements of such experiences. "Many of the phenomena associated with near-death experiences can be biologically explained," says neuroscientist Dean Mobbs, at the University of Cambridge's Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit. Mobbs and Caroline Watt at the University of Edinburgh detailed this research online August 17 in Trends in Cognitive Sciences. For instance, the feeling of being dead is not limited to near-death experiencespatients with Cotard or "walking corpse" syndrome hold the delusional belief that they are deceased. This disorder has occurred following trauma, such as during advanced stages of typhoid and multiple sclerosis, and has been linked with brain regions such as the parietal cortex and the prefrontal cortex"the parietal cortex is typically involved in attentional processes, and the prefrontal cortex is involved in delusions observed in psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia," Mobbs explains. Although the mechanism behind the syndrome remains unknown, one possible explanation is that patients are trying to make sense of the strange experiences they are having. Out-of-body experiences are also now known to be common during interrupted sleep patterns that immediately precede sleeping or waking. For instance, sleep paralysis, or the experience of feeling paralyzed while still aware of the outside world, is reported in up to 40 percent of all people and is linked with vivid dreamlike hallucinations that can result in the sensation of floating above one's body. A 2005 study found that out-of-body experiences can be artificially triggered by stimulating the right temporoparietal junction in the brain, suggesting that confusion regarding sensory information can radically alter how one experiences one's body. A variety of explanations might also account for reports by those dying of meeting the deceased. Parkinson's disease patients, for example, have reported visions of ghosts, even monsters. The explanation? Parkinson's involves abnormal functioning of dopamine, a neurotransmitter that can evoke hallucinations. And when it comes to the common experience of reliving moments from one's life, one culprit might be the locus coeruleus, a midbrain region that releases noradrenaline, a stress hormone one would expect to be released in high levels during trauma. The locus coeruleus is highly connected with brain regions that mediate emotion and memory, such as the amygdala and hypothalamus. In addition, research now shows that a number of medicinal and recreational drugs can mirror the euphoria often felt in near-death experiences, such as the anesthetic ketamine, which can also trigger out-of-body experiences and hallucinations. Ketamine affects the brain's opioid system, which can naturally become active even without drugs when animals are under attack, suggesting trauma might set off this aspect of near-death experiences, Mobbs explains. Finally, one of the most famous aspects of near-death hallucinations is moving through a tunnel toward a bright light. Although the specific causes of this part of near-death experiences remain unclear, tunnel vision can occur when blood and oxygen flow is depleted to the eye, as can happen with the extreme fear and oxygen loss that are both common to dying. Altogether, scientific evidence suggests that all features of the near-death experience have some basis in normal brain function gone awry. Moreover, the very knowledge of the lore regarding near-death episodes might play a crucial role in experiencing thema self-fulfilling prophecy. Such findings "provide scientific evidence for something that has always been in the realm of paranormality," Mobbs says. "I personally believe that understanding the process of dying can help us come to terms with this inevitable part of life." One potential obstacle to further research on near-death experiences will be analyzing them experimentally, says cognitive neuroscientist Olaf Blanke at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne in Switzerland, who has investigated out-of-body experiences. Still, "our work has shown that this can be done for out-of-body experiences, so why not for near-death-experience-associated sensations?"
Poster Comment: Sorry Heysus, back to the drawing board
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 13.
#9. To: FWIW, thread (#0)
My sister had a near death experience while on the operating table in a hospital. She was pregnant and losing the baby. I hadn't spoken with her for quite some time. We were reunited at the hospital when our dad had a stroke and the first thing she says to me is let's go outside and smoke a cigarette I want to tell you something. She then went on to say that she'd had a near death experience. She told me that she floated up to the ceiling and watched everything that happened. A group of medical students were brought in to view her and she listened in as they spoke of her death. She then entered into a light filled tunnel where there was nothing but peace and beauty. She said she didn't want to return but did. She had been pronounced dead. She told me that she no longer feared death. She ended up killing herself a few years later, shooting herself. She was the sweetest, funniest and kindest person you could ever know. She wouldn't ever lie to me.
rebirth
I was in the hospital after falling 43 feet to the pavement while doing a tree- sit. At some point in my coma I 'woke up' and the hospital roomhad fallen leaves and other material that could not be there realistically. I felt myself pulling free from myself at the navel area of my belly and I rose above the bed and moved toward a light. I remember looking back at my body and was very shocked. The black eyes and soft casts on my arms and the tubes in my shoulder were exactly like I saw them when I was awake later and did the series of questions they always ask to see just how awake and 'here' they are. What was shocking was to see me as another would, not as one sees oneself in the mirror as a mirror image. I remember communicating with the light and knowing I could leave or stay. And after all these years the experiance is indelibly embedded in my mind as one of the most unique and strangest things ever to happen to me. I also nearly died at birth. I was in an incubator for many weeks after birth and had had the Catholic last rites read over me. So this was not the first time I had been expected to die in a hospital. There is more to it then 'oxygen starvation.' Of that I am extremely sure of. If it was, why did the light talk to me? I was extremely physically fit and didn't smoke, drink of drug asround in 1998 an still don't. I am also very much not a Christian nor do I obsess about spiritual matters. 'Bizarre bizarre' as the French would say.
#17. To: Ferret (#13)
because jesus loves you and wanted to give you another chance to love him, and to spend eternity with Him and Chris (?).
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|