Near Death experiences- the scoop by CNN

by kelsey007 21 Replies latest jw friends

  • kelsey007
    kelsey007

    AP) -- A study suggests the oft-reported sensation of leaving the body during a brush with death may have a simple explanation in the body itself.

    These "out-of-body" and "near-death" experiences -- in which people resuscitated on the operating table speak of being drawn toward a brilliant light, or looking down on their own bodies -- may be influenced by a portion of the brain misfiring under stress, the study suggests.

    The paper describes one patient's visions while she was being evaluated for epilepsy and does not wrestle with issues of the soul. And researchers noted that the brain-mapping results may not entirely explain the phenomenon.

    The study focuses on a processing center in the brain known as the angular gyrus, thought to play an important role in the way the brain analyzes sensory information to give us a perception of our own bodies. When it misfires, they speculate, the result can be visions of floating outside of ourselves.

    The findings were published in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.

    "We do not fully understand the neurological mechanism that causes OBEs," conceded the study's lead researcher, neurologist Dr. Olaf Blanke at the University Hospitals of Geneva and Lausanne in Switzerland.

    Skeptics of out-of-body experiences said the experiment goes a long way toward providing a scientific explanation for what some believe is a paranormal phenomenon, even if the study is based on only one patient.

    "It's another blow against those who believe that the mind and spirit are somehow separate from the brain," said psychologist Michael Shermer, director of the Skeptic Society, which seeks to debunk alien abductions and other paranormal claims. "In reality, all experience is derived from the brain."

    Other researchers described the experiment as modest but interesting.

    Neurologist Dr. Bruce Greyson of the University of Virginia said the experiment does not necessarily prove that all out-of-body experiences are illusions.

    "We cannot assume from the fact that electrical stimulation of the brain can induce OBE-like illusions that all OBEs are therefore illusions," Greyson said.

    The Swiss researchers mapped the brain activity of a 43-year old woman who had been experiencing seizures for 11 years. They implanted electrodes to stimulate portions of her brain's right temporal lobe.

    The temporal lobe, which includes the angular gyrus structure, is associated with perception of sound, touch, memory and speech.

    Blanke suspects that the right angular gyrus integrates signals from the visual system, as well as information on touch and balance.

    When electrical stimulation was applied, the patient reported seeing herself "lying in bed, from above, but I only see my legs and lower trunk." She also described herself as "floating" near the ceiling.

    Millions of people have reported OBEs, but relatively few have been clinically analyzed.

    Last December, the British medical journal Lancet published a Dutch study in which 344 cardiac patients were resuscitated from clinical death. About 12 percent reported seeing light at the end of a tunnel, or speaking to dead relatives.

    Other researchers have suggested that OBEs occur as brain cells die from lack of oxygen, or when the brain releases pain-reducing chemicals called endorphins.

  • TheOldHippie
    TheOldHippie

    Mighty interesting - and mighty scary to persons like me, who so desperately hope for paranormal phenomena to be true, and seem therein the proof for souls, spirits, the departed and - Afterlife ..........

    One questions, though, is of course if it is not possible for spirits of some kind to stimulate areas in the body, and thus produce such phenomena? If some doctor theu electrical stimula can do that, surely a spirit can also?

    I don't know.

  • YoursChelbie
    YoursChelbie

    ..

    Edited by - YoursChelbie on 19 September 2002 7:30:23

  • Gopher
    Gopher

    Here's the link to the published story: http://www.cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/09/19/out.of.body.ap/index.html

    The headline said:

    Study: Brain misfires may cause 'out-of-body experiences'

    This seems to illustrate that certain phenomena attributed to spiritual experiences are actually physical ones. Our own mind contains the images of our body, and when certain traumatic events occur, such images are drawn out because of the way our minds are wired.

  • greven
    greven

    Hi,

    "Last December, the British medical journal Lancet published a Dutch study in which 344 cardiac patients were resuscitated from clinical death. About 12 percent reported seeing light at the end of a tunnel, or speaking to dead relatives. "

    I know of simular studies with grown-up as well as children being resuscitated from clinical death and telling about the other side of the tunnel. interesting was that the mature people were telling about talking to dead relatives while the children also told about fantasy figures like pikachu being in heaven. this suggests near-death experiences are visions from the brain instead of paranormal experiences -unless you believe pikachu lives in heaven ofcourse-

    interesting post!

    greven.

  • Navigator
    Navigator

    Some of you may recall the tests done on Swami Rama at a prestigious research institute. They were investigating his ability to control his own heart rate and blood pressure. One of the experimenters causually asked him if was able to stop his heart completely. Instead of answering, he actually stopped his heart completely. That created a panic as he was clinically dead for several minutes. When he restarted his heart (on his own), he was able to describe quite accurately the activity going on on the floor above and next door. I rather doubt that the explanation for this could be "brain misfiring".

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    I rather doubt that the explanation for this could be "brain misfiring".

    I rather doubt that it happened at all.

  • funkyderek
    funkyderek
    One questions, though, is of course if it is not possible for spirits of some kind to stimulate areas in the body, and thus produce such phenomena? If some doctor theu electrical stimula can do that, surely a spirit can also?

    Presumably, if we postulate malevolent spirits with supernatural powers, they can do this too, but it seems completely unnecessary if these phenomena have a physical explanation. It's like saying that spirits use the cold virus to cause colds. The whole process works just as well without bringing spirits into the picture.

  • funkyderek
    funkyderek
    Some of you may recall the tests done on Swami Rama at a prestigious research institute.

    Have you got a source for that, Navigator?

  • Crazy151drinker
    Crazy151drinker

    Its the DEAMONZ I TELL YOU!!!

    It was a very interesting article. If they could repeat it in other patients it would gain some substantial credibility. The question arrises, why would the brain 'fire' at that location when at deaths door???

    If you want to read some REALLY TRIPPY SHIT, do a search on HIGGS FIELD/PARTICLE.

    George Lucas was right about the FORCE.

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit