Debunk my experience
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One of Sartori's papers coming out of that study (2006) is available here for free:
(This post was last modified: 2019-04-21, 03:16 AM by Ninshub.)
https://www.researchgate.net/publication...ed_Healing (hit download full-text PDF button) But apparently it's the study of just one of those patients. Two studies were published prior that perhaps also contain some of the relevant details, although I can't find them online: Sartori, P. (2004). A prospective study of NDEs in an intensive therapy unit. Christian Parapsychologist, 16, 34–40. Sartori, P. (2006, Spring). A long-term prospective study to investigate the incidence and phenomenology of near-death experiences in a Welsh intensive therapy unit. Network Review, No. 90, pp. 23–25. (2019-04-21, 03:16 AM)Ninshub Wrote: Sartori, P. (2006, Spring). A long-term prospective study to investigate the incidence and Actually this one is online, reprinted by IANDS here: https://iands.org/research/nde-research/...study.html It summarizes the study but I don't see any details about patient 17. (2019-04-21, 02:20 AM)fls Wrote: I think she is referring to Patient 10 and Patient 11 - Patient 11 made the statement she quotes, and Patient 10 reported seeing the top of the monitor (where the picture would have been placed), but did not see a picture. I don't think there was a specific report of Patient 17 seeing the top of the monitor (the transcript of his interview is not in the Appendix, afaict). This is an example of Linda's deliberate (I believe) misrepresentation of facts to try to discredit the data. I've bolded the erroneous information. This is what actually happened : Penny: On the monitor next to your bed was something hidden on top. Could you see what it was? (Patient 10) No, I’ll be honest with you, Pen, I didn’t look. I didn’t twist my head back that way; I was just looking at my side. I could see you and the doctor and two to three others around me. Pen, if that’s death, it’s wonderful, there’s no pain at all. Patient 10 did not see the top of the monitor (where the target was). Linda has deliberately invented this scenario so that she can cast doubt on the validity/reality of this patient's out of body experience.
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(2019-04-21, 03:38 AM)Ninshub Wrote: Actually this one is online, reprinted by IANDS here: There aren't many details about patient 17, even in the book, because he wouldn't have been particularly relevant to the study (he didn't have an NDE, nor did his experiences happen when he was in a coma or cardiac arrest (rather, just the trance-like state described in the part I quoted)) except for his OBE experiences. I only brought it up because Mediochre was talking about veridical OBEs, and I brought up hidden targets, and it happened to be an example of an OBE taking place in a room with hidden targets. Linda ETA: Added last sentence, in case everyone had forgotten by now that my post and the post I was responding to wasn't about NDEs. (2019-04-21, 03:38 AM)Ninshub Wrote: Actually this one is online, reprinted by IANDS here: No and I don't remember reading anything about a patient who kept having OBE's. (2019-04-21, 02:20 AM)fls Wrote: I think she is referring to Patient 10 and Patient 11 - Patient 11 made the statement she quotes, and Patient 10 reported seeing the top of the monitor (where the picture would have been placed), but did not see a picture. I don't think there was a specific report of Patient 17 seeing the top of the monitor (the transcript of his interview is not in the Appendix, afaict). Sartori tried to interview each subject 3 times. The part where Patient 10 makes this report (in Interview 2) goes as follows: (P is Penny, 10 is Patient 10) (Parts in square brackets are information asides from Penny.) P: I've asked you this before. You didn't notice the monitor did you? At the bedside, the one that registers that heart rate and blood pressure. 10: I saw that yes but I was up there looking down. [In the first interview he said that he did not notice it.] I could see everybody working there. My body was laying out...(irrelevant stuff) P: Did you see any brightly coloured paper on top of the monitor with a picture on it? 10: No. P: Because it would have stood out. 10: No, the only thing I saw was a monitor, I didn't see any words. P: What did the monitor look like when you were up there, what shape was it? 10: Come to think of it ... no words ... it was a ... the thing about the monitor, it seemed to be ... it wasn't square, it was longer, oblong. On top ... it was a bit ... the only thing I think was on top of it was more of a pinky colour. Everything seemed to be pinky. [The symbol above his bed area was surrounded by a Day-Glo orange colour.] Linda (2019-04-21, 01:29 PM)fls Wrote: There aren't many details about patient 17, even in the book, because he wouldn't have been particularly relevant to the study (he didn't have an NDE, nor did his experiences happen when he was in a coma or cardiac arrest (rather, just the trance-like state described in the part I quoted)) except for his OBE experiences. So, irrelevant....but as usual for you, you thought you'd participate in a little bit of mischief, to see how many neutrals you can persuade to disregard the data as crap. (2019-04-21, 01:15 PM)Max_B Wrote: Mainly because of my own childhood experience, I doubt your explanation necessarily holds in all NDE OBE cases. I agree. Which is why I suggested earlier (and on numerous previous occasions ) that it would be useful to prospectively document all OBE/NDE memories prior to feedback, in hopes of finding even a single case in which that explanation doesn't hold. Linda |
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