(2018-01-11, 03:36 PM)Smithy Wrote: Excellent stuff, Tim! Where did you get it? And was it already in English? - smithy
Der Tod ist nicht das Ende (Death is not the end)
(2018-01-11, 03:36 PM)Smithy Wrote: Excellent stuff, Tim! Where did you get it? And was it already in English? - smithy Der Tod ist nicht das Ende (Death is not the end) (2018-01-11, 08:11 PM)nbtruthman Wrote: Experiencers are forced to utilize various rationalizations to somehow deal with them, categorized as including "I needed that to turn my life around", "It was only a problem in my brain", and "I must have done something bad". It's a sobering paper, isn't it. I don't know what to think; it seems unlikely that the people who reported those particular negative/hellish NDE's deserved that (if that's how it works). We could speculate forever but if there is another world (And I believe there is) I certainly don't think 'sainthood' is a requirement to get there (I'm not saying you think that BTW) but I don't think it's (is there a hell, who goes and why ?) an answerable question. (2018-01-11, 08:11 PM)nbtruthman Wrote: Anyway, Barbara Rommer may be somewhat simplistic and pollyanaish when considering this type of NDE. It doesn't look like there is yet any plausible agreed-to reassuring interpretation of hellish NDEs. I agree with the second sentence but I don't think Barbara Rommer was like that. You can see her here. http://ndeinfo.wmthost.com/#NDEmovies click on movies and scroll down to the second from the bottom A and E Special "Beyond death" part 1 April 2000, NDE interviews. go to 44.30. Just before that, there's a nice interview with Pam Reynolds (and Dr Michael Sabom). Pam's grandmother Marie was a wild woman (according to a report from Judy Bacharach) who was married seven times but she was 'there' waiting for Pam (apparently). And it certainly didn't seem like hell. (2018-01-12, 02:36 PM)Doug Wrote: Der Tod ist nicht das Ende (Death is not the end) I have looked into the German version. My impression is that is has been translated pretty correctly. It comes across as a genuine, positive view about NDE's. Cheers - Smithy Quote:Nickell, the paranormal skeptic, says stories of shared-death experiences also rest on a flimsy foundation. Going way back to a post in this thread by Karmaling in late November, which obviously I'm very late seeing, but I had to dig up this quote by Mr. Nickell. Really? A "hand-wave" away of the evidence on the old "ancedotes" ground is the best this guy had to say? I mean he's got a point, but only that they don't lead to conclusive proof on their own. Nobody's disagreeing there. However, he goes a step further and just tosses any predictive power behind them as a growing area of evidence straight out the window! (2018-01-21, 03:24 PM)tim Wrote: Near-death experience: In heaven you don't need shoes Excellent stuff, Tim! Thanks so much! Smithy (2018-01-21, 09:27 PM)tim Wrote: Thanks, Smithy unfortunately I have had to delete the post maybe permanently as I can't find the source (I thought I'd made a note of it but I must not have) As a suggestion, you can enter in large enough snippets of text from the article into a search engine, perhaps in quotes? That way, you can see what websites the have the same exact snippets of text, allowing you to eventually track down the source webpage.
“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.”
~ Carl Jung
From http://www.skeptiko-forum.com/threads/ee...ost-121499:
Wormwood, post: 121499, member: 3941 Wrote:Reasons why the hallucination theory fails horribly
“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.”
(This post was last modified: 2018-01-26, 10:46 AM by Valmar.)
~ Carl Jung
[To eliminate confusion after moving this post to the commentary thread, leadville was responding to this post of tim's in the original thread --Laird]
(This post was last modified: 2020-03-22, 10:53 AM by Laird.)
"This occurred again as he arrived at the hospital on the helipad (when he was dead) and finally in the operating room where he was able to observe events and read the thoughts of the doctors (they were not vocalised) which he later was able to verify (apparently)" When he appeared to be clinically dead. (2018-01-26, 07:16 PM)leadville Wrote: "This occurred again as he arrived at the hospital on the helipad (when he was dead) and finally in the operating room where he was able to observe events and read the thoughts of the doctors (they were not vocalised) which he later was able to verify (apparently)" Edited : He did say he was dead, Leadville. He had to be defibrillated in the OR which meant his heart had stopped. Clinically dead, really dead, very dead, does it matter as regards the state of the person's consciousness ? |
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