(2024-12-12, 09:14 AM)sbu Wrote: The only conclusion I’m drawing is that a resuscitation specialist—someone who resuscitates people in hospitals daily and has spent their entire career searching for NDEs—has not been able to compile his own database of 43 “spectacular” accounts to extract themes and commonalities. This suggests that such spectacular NDEs in cardiac arrest settings are exceedingly rare, likely occurring with decades between them.
While NDERF has some merits as a hypothesis-generating tool, it should not be used as a basis for firm conclusions. I was in contact with Jeffrey Long’s wife over 20 years ago when they were looking for someone to translate a Danish NDE account into English. If they allowed random internet contributors like me to add to their database, it’s inevitable that it would contain numerous errors, exaggerations, and other inaccuracies.
I think you need to think a little further.
Consciousness is by far the biggest scientific question there is. Every other science subject depends on consciousness. Even the humblest experiment - say to test Ohm's law requires someone to understand what he is testing, get the equipment together, perform the measurements of current and voltage across a resistor, and then analyse the results.
Yes, the analysis could be done on a computer, but using one only complicates the issue because the computer and all its software was invented by the human mind. Ohm himself not only had to do the experiment, but conceive of the hypothesis in the first place.
Every bit of science has been established by conscious beings.
The standard scientific theory of consciousness is (roughly) that nerve cells send pulses to each other, some of which trigger more signals and various other chemicals. How that produces consciousness is still a total mystery.
You might think that in that situation scientists would realise they were on shaky ground, and would seize on any evidence relating to the fundamental nature of consciousness - because all of science depends on it.
The difficulties that Sam Parnia has in proving beyond any scintilla of doubt (not reasonable doubt) that a person undergoing an NDE concern the question of whether a person being resuscitated can actually observe the scene around him without using his physical eyes.
This question has been to all intents and purposes answered by the fact that some people, blind from birth, have experienced NDE's in which they can see.
You blame the fact that NDERF accepts submissions using the internet. That may introduce some mistakes, but given the vital nature of this evidence, where are the funds to send out researchers to contact these people and conduct more formal interviews? I suppose you may say that the witnesses are contaminated by their use of the internet!
Let me remind you of one further fact. Ramanujan came from a poor region of India. Despite no training in advanced maths, he was able to impress Hardy with assertions that neither he nor Hardy were able to prove. Gradually others have proved that some of his assertions are in fact true theorems. He said that he received the theorems from an Indian goddess, but of course that concept is not 'scientific' and is thus ignored.
Perhaps the most amazing thing is that I am pretty sure you know all of this, but it doesn't seem to matter to you.
To all intents and purposes I think science has gone crazy.
David