JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
When I die the bartender at the end of the tunnel had better know the difference between an Aviation and a Blue Moon.
Near death experiences take my fear of death away. They show that there is more to life. Life continues on. It's nothing but love on the other side.
People who experienced an N"D"E did not, in fact, die. Calling an N"D"E an example of what it will be like to be dead is like calling a prom date an example of what it will be like to be married...
The key about "near-death" experiences is that people who experience them and live to tell of it have never died. They are not near-death experiences at all- they are near-unconcious experiences. Which create certain memories due to the physical effects on brain function of oxygen deprivation, etc.
At best "near-death" experiences might lessen your fear of dying, not of death. It is likely that if one falls into unconsciousness before dying one will have these illusions. But as to showing that life continues on after death (an odd phrasing, yes?)- absolute crap. That would require documentation that someone who had actually died (fully died, as in the Monty Python parrot sketch), and came back, could tell tales of "the other side."
So many of the people who report NDE's have met the definition of clinically dead that semantically quibbling over the meaning of "near death" is ridiculous. When your heart stops beating, the only difference between you and a corpse is whether someone gets to you in time and the heroic measures used on you work or not. To claim that you're not "near death" when you're in cardiac arrest and the code blue team is racing to your room is absurd.
So many of the people who report NDE's have met the definition of clinically dead that semantically quibbling over the meaning of "near death" is ridiculous. [...]
But that still isn't, you know, dead.
By what definition? Have clinically dead people been successfully resuscitated? Of course. There have been people fished out of cold water who were submerged for over an hour and were revived. Did they die? Under that definition, they did. They obviously didn't stay dead, but they were clinically dead:
"When rescuers finally pulled her from the water, 62 minutes after her mother's call, she was very cold and blue. She had no pulse and was not breathing. Her pupils were fixed and widely dilated, as they would be with severe brain damage or death. A monitor detected no heartbeat."
http://www.nytimes.com/1988/07/26/s...-and-a-miraculous-revival.html?pagewanted=all
A near-death experience is not death. Pretending that the two are indistinguishable is ridiculous.
I don't believe for a moment you expect to convince us otherwise.![]()
"Severe brain damage or death".
No, that is still near death, not dead.
This is a decent treatment of the differences between clinically dead, and ... dead.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_death
"Death was historically believed to be an event that coincided with the onset of clinical death. It is now understood that death is a series of physical events, not a single one, and determination of permanent death is dependent on other factors beyond simple cessation of breathing and heartbeat."
Near death experiences take my fear of death away. They show that there is more to life. Life continues on. It's nothing but love on the other side.
I very nearly died. My heart stopped for a full minute. I have the rhythm strip and everything. And I saw and heard absolutely nothing. It wasn't even black ... it was as though time itself simply ceased to exist.
So, that's my anecdote. Please set it against one of yours so that they cancel each other out.
We know that depriving brains of oxygen produces exactly these symtoms (having the impression of floating above your body, tunnel vision, lights, etc.)
He didn't say however, that everyone experiences it every time, now did he? So no, it does not invalidate his claim.Well, this seems to invalidate Argumemnon's claim:
Your brain was deprived of oxygen and you had none of these symptoms.
He didn't say however, that everyone experiences it every time, now did he? So no, it does not invalidate his claim.
We know that deprivingbrains of oxygenhearts of blood flow produces exactly these symtoms (having the impression of floating above your body, tunnel vision, lights, etc.heart attack).
NDEs do not appear to have anything to do with actually being "near death". For example, people who are actually near death, say from a random gunshot, do not report having an NDE just before the the shot is fired. Shouldn't they have an NDE since, after all, they are on the brink of the after-life?
It's probably best to respond to what was actually said, though, rather than what you read into it.It was certainly implied. For example, if I switch a few words around...
A heart attack isn't a symptom, though. Chest pains, radiating down the arms, shortness of breath, dizziness, sweating, clammy skin… those are symptoms of a heart attack. And yet, we all know that not everyone who has a heart attack experiences these symptoms. Some people don't experience any at all.Would you expect to experience a heart attack if blood flow to your heart was interrupted? Of course you would. I didn't have to say "everyone" in order for that claim to be understood that it's universal.
If anoxia was the cause of NDE's, we would expect people with anoxia to experience NDE's. Since this clearly doesn't happen all the time, there's more to the story than just anoxia.
It's probably best to respond to what was actually said, though, rather than what you read into it.
A heart attack isn't a symptom, though. Chest pains, radiating down the arms, shortness of breath, dizziness, sweating, clammy skin… those are symptoms of a heart attack. And yet, we all know that not everyone who has a heart attack experiences these symptoms. Some people don't experience any at all.
Anyway, perhaps every single person who has an NDE (which is still pretty vague, unlike a heart attack) as a result of anoxia, but perhaps they don't remember it. That's a possibility, is it not? After all, everyone dreams, but many, like me, rarely remember them upon waking. I don't think that's the case, but it's a legitimate possibility.
It was certainly implied.
Of course, no one is claiming this. The point is, were many of the people who have reported NDE's near death? Yes, in fact, many met the clinical definition for dead, which necessitates that they were near-death at some point (that point being when cardiac arrest first happened). Did the NDE happen at the time they were clinically dead? Who knows.