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I've just finished a book that nicely debunks that. Ha! Take that!
This is the third time I've posted this (although not in here, thank you to someone for the star!). It's a good book. Consciousness Beyond Life: The Science of the Near-Death Experience. It's by a Dutch cardiologist, Pim van Lommmel. He spends endless chapters demonstrating, scientifically, that NDEs happen when people are indeed clinically dead, without a heartbeat and with no brain activity. You can't see a tunnel with no brain activity, even if deprived of oxygen. At least, not in your MIND. Because apparently people do see those things. His point is that oxygen deprivation cannot be causing all of the things that take place during NDEs typically.
Another common element of NDEs is the out-of-body portion, where people see and recount things that THEY COULD NOT HAVE SEEN AT ALL, unconscious, with their eyes closed, even, say had they not been clinically dead at the time. One such incident was of a patient, in cardiac arrest, who was being intubated. This person had left their body and was looking down, from up near the ceiling, watching what was happening to his body. Apparently his dentures got in the way, and the person doing the intubating removed them and put them in a drawer in a cart.
Later on, the patient, now recovered, asked someone to retrieve his teeth from the drawer in the cart, which he described. ANd, lo and behold, someone went looking and found his teeth in the drawer in the cart, wherever it was.
The point of the whole book is to refute that stuff about oxygen deprivation. It is also about, I think -- if I remember this correctly -- the first study of NDEs where they actively asked all patients who had had cardiac arrests if they remembered anything from the time they were unconscious, and recorded the stories of those that did. USually, it's done the other way around; stories are recorded of people who volunteer such information. And apparently most people to whom NDEs happen do not volunteer this information, for fear of being ridiculed.
So, it's a good read, and it's full of good facts, good ammunition. I Really should do a decent post using some of those facts for those ***es out there who behave so badly. You know who I mean. Mr. *id *ithers? Is it against the rules for me to name anyone?
Funny, it seems to me some of them are the same folks who are always debunking stolen elections. Hmmm.
Some regulars from in here just got royally shoved around out there. I did not jump in, thought I'd rather come in here. There's just no point in trying to change the minds of people like that. I started reading Lisa Williams' book in Barnes and Noble the other day (couldn't afford to buy both books), and she talked about the same problem -- proving she was legit to confirmed skeptics. She said, forget about it, you can't change them. Don't bother. Let it go. At least, I think that's what she said.
ETM
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