That's an extreme scenario...
Okay, fine, I'll come back to that. My question really meant to ask why we're spending so much time on NDEs. It wasn't really part of the discussion to start with, and now it's taken over. I'm just curious where you plan to take it.
That's an extreme scenario where the soul doesn't interact with the body during life and only interacts with it at the end by downloading memories from the brain, which results in the experience of life review. A more general scenario is that the soul interacts with the body during life, and the experience of life review at the end is a result of experiencing the memories in an altered state of mind for the first time.
Which scenario are you advocating? Or is it not an either-or dilemma for you?
Regarding the first scenario, we sort of stalled on the issue of the low rate of occurrence as it appears in the data. You argue from silence in a way that suggests you believe the numbers can only go up from there, but I pointed out that's not how arguments from silence work. Greyson also points out a few relevant things there too. I think we converged on the issue of people who die sudden deaths that don't afford a transfer. The degree to which it would be considered a poor system design depends on the degree to which one believes it is a designed system.
Regarding the second, general scenario, you made a comment that's gotten a lot of attention: that this appears to be the soul leaving the body. You're not making that statement now, so it's not clear whether you intend the life review in "an altered state of mind" to refer in any way to a soul. Others have argued that the dying or distressed brain would easily qualify as an altered mind. It matters because even if we grant you that the soul exists and that it communicates undetectably with the organism, why does the life review have to implicate a soul? Can it just be a function of the organism? The more fanciful properties, interactions, and roles you assign speculatively to the soul without reasons or evidence why, the less
prima facie probable your soul hypothesis becomes.
But more importantly, you've been asked several times how the purported similarity among NDE reports means they must have a supernatural origin. That's a giant leap of logic that you have yet to explain.