Evidence for paranormal aspects in NDEs

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(2017-09-01, 10:45 PM)Obiwan Wrote: I understand your point Typoz but it doesn't really move me - even I can extract lessons from failure Smile. What happened to me was still a failure nevertheless Smile

Seriously, I think this is a mistake. (well, ok, perhaps I shouldn't be so dogmatic).

But there are plenty of sceptics willing to claim there is no evidence for any of the things we discuss here. The last thing we need is for an actual veridical report during cardiac arrest to be swept aside as a 'failure'. I think we need to call a spade a spade. There was a successful result.   Let's make sure that is the headline story.
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(2017-09-01, 09:51 PM)Max_B Wrote: That's good, it won't help with leakage claims, but it helps with the 'when'.

You've never understood my ideas... but most of the distant veridical type OBE's seem to be with relatives, friends, loved ones, who I suspect already have similar networks.

So that allows 1) a localised effect from third party strangers who can lay down their own field pattern on an adult patients exposed network, 2) a localised, or distant effect with friends, family, loved ones because the adult patients networks are already similar. 3) a mixed effect in children, where they can experience both strangers and loved ones both localised and distant, because their networks are not fully formed/still forming and because of this, they have greater compatibility (less uniqueness) than an adults network.

Max said "That's good, it won't help with leakage claims, but it helps with the 'when'"

Sorry, I don't understand that statement, Max 

Max said "You've never understood my ideas"

Is this not a reasonable summary ?  You believe that 'brains' (at any distance) are capable of exchanging real time, ultra clear visual information with another brain (that is switched off) by some type of electro magnetic field. And the brain that is switched off can automatically and preferentially harvest the pertinent/relevant "sent" information from the other brains, selecting only what it needs to form a perfect real time view of itself (it's body)...and then when the patient wakes up there is a further fine tuning in that the position of this observation is relocated to the ceiling ?  

Leaving aside the incredible (multiple) "leaps" that are needed to even begin to get one's head around that, bear in mind in doesn't fit the data. 

Patients often report their sense of self leaving behind their physical body through the top of their head. They feel everything that is vital about them (ME, MYSELF) is actually up on the ceiling. They also report that they can pass through walls and see and hear things they couldn't possibly have seen, 'down the hall' and beyond etc.

Naturally, you scoff at the idea of an invisible autonomous self or 'soul.' However, there is indisputable evidence for the self/soul even if it is just confined to the brain. We all have a sense of self a persisting entity that makes us who we are. The question has always been can that 'entity' continue....or not.

Max said >but most of the distant veridical type OBE's seem to be with relatives, friends, loved ones, who I suspect already have similar networks.

My friend also floated above the earth but I have only have his word for that, of course. I should point out he is absolutely not the kind of guy to have invented any of this.
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I'm pretty sure I am right about the experimental protocols and how they work. I could be wrong. My understanding is that, strictly speaking, one has to be very specific about what one is going to do and how one is go to do it. Amongst other things this, is to permit peers to identify any flaws in the protocol and also to facilitate replication.

Now if something happens that's useful, as you descibe, that's great and needs analysis but if it falls outside the terms of the study, the study didn't 'find' it per se. I.e. It wasn't a finding of the study.

There are, as you know, many many examples of veridical NDEs, some of which have been analysed in great detail - this sounds like it may be another one but unless it meets the criteria of the study there may be a bit of a 'so what' from dispassionate reviewers of the study. An advantage might be that in the course of looking for NDEs, there was more likelihood that they would identify veridical elements.

I don't think the AWARE study has found anything much, by its own measures yet, but I agree with tim it's not a failure in the sense that it undermines the veridical nature of NDEs, but in others it is, if it hasn't achieved its stated objectives i.e. It didn't work.

My own view, fwiw, is that the failure of the AWARE study to meet its objectives so far, doesn't affect the current position wrt NDEs. It probably needs to run for a long time. I think the idea behind it is probably the only way we'll see evidence of the veridical nature of some NDEs that will convince a sceptical observer.
(This post was last modified: 2017-09-02, 06:05 PM by Obiwan.)
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(2017-09-01, 07:51 PM)tim Wrote: I'm currently talking to and writing a book based on the experience of someone who not only left his body, he 'walked' about all over the hospital and travelled instantaneously around the United States, checking up on old friends. A fanciful claim, yes but he has witnesses. He saw things he couldn't possibly have seen or known about and confirmed it all later when he recovered. I'm afraid "field theory" wouldn't explain his report.

He went the "Christmas Carol" route on his NDE?
"Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before..."
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(2017-09-02, 01:26 PM)Max_B Wrote: Yeah, your summary is a horrible misunderstanding of my ideas.

Oh well, maybe someone else can have a stab at it and enlighten me.
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(2017-09-02, 01:00 PM)Obiwan Wrote: My own view, fwiw, is that the failure of the AWARE study to meet its objectives so far, doesn't affect the current position wrt NDEs. It probably needs to run for a long time. I think the idea behind it is probably the only way we'll see evidence of the veridical nature of some NDEs that will convince a sceptical observer.

I think that unfortunately it is quite likely that experimental studies like AWARE will never and can never make a conclusive case no matter how long they are continued, and at no matter how many hospitals. Despite a large and convincing body of anecdotal veridical cases that meet a lot of common sense evidential standards, such as are documented in The Self Does Not Die. The problem is, it is as if this phenomenon (along with other forms of dramatic paranormal phenomena) just doesn't want to be pinned down with some form of repeatable laboratory experiments. When it is attempted to pin them down, it just doesn't work - deep veridical NDEs either don't happen at all or always in rooms without the experimental apparatus. It is as if the "powers that be" want to maintain a certain uncertainty, with the phenomena only exhibiting themselves spontaneously in life, in such a way that there is never conclusive scientific proof they actually occurred as reported. It would be interesting to speculate why this should be, whether it is a conscious and deliberate plan, or merely the way things are, like quantum mechanical uncertainty.
(2017-09-03, 08:27 PM)nbtruthman Wrote: I think that unfortunately it is quite likely that experimental studies like AWARE will never and can never make a conclusive case no matter how long they are continued, and at no matter how many hospitals. Despite a large and convincing body of anecdotal veridical cases that meet a lot of common sense evidential standards, such as are documented in The Self Does Not Die. The problem is, it is as if this phenomenon (along with other forms of dramatic paranormal phenomena) just doesn't want to be pinned down with some form of repeatable laboratory experiments. When it is attempted to pin them down, it just doesn't work - deep veridical NDEs either don't happen at all or always in rooms without the experimental apparatus. It is as if the "powers that be" want to maintain a certain uncertainty, with the phenomena only exhibiting themselves spontaneously in life, in such a way that there is never conclusive scientific proof they actually occurred as reported. It would be interesting to speculate why this should be, whether it is a conscious and deliberate plan, or merely the way things are, like quantum mechanical uncertainty.

Could be some cosmic evasion plan, but I suspect it's just the numbers. e.g. (Probability of NDE happening) x (probability that they are remembers) x (probability that they are reported) x (probability that the person experiencing it looks in the right direction) = very small number indeed Smile
(This post was last modified: 2017-09-03, 09:45 PM by Obiwan.)
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(2017-09-01, 07:43 PM)Typoz Wrote: Actually they do count. All outcomes count.

Currently AWARE II is in progress. You can be sure that the outcomes - all of them - from AWARE were used in the design and planning of its successor.

They also count in that the study generated information - it tells us things we didn't know before the study. When investigating areas which are under-researched, all information is of enormous value.

As a shortcut for me having to read all of the literature Horror , I have a question...
Do any of these studies include cases where a person in OBE or NDE, DID see the laptop (or whatever mechanism was created to send the a message), did look at it, and simply got the wrong, or nonsensical information?

I ask because in his book Multidimensional Man,  Jurgen Zewie has documented cases where the information was actually different when viewed from an NDE state. So if this is the case, there really three possibilities: subject didn't notice the note (a Miss), subject read the note and reported correctly (a Hit), and lastly, the subject read the note and reported it incorrectly (a Near Miss?).
(2017-09-14, 08:51 AM)jkmac Wrote: As a shortcut for me having to read all of the literature Horror , I have a question...
Do any of these studies include cases where a person in OBE or NDE, DID see the laptop (or whatever mechanism was created to send the a message), did look at it, and simply got the wrong, or nonsensical information?

I ask because in his book Multidimensional Man,  Jurgen Zewie has documented cases where the information was actually different when viewed from an NDE state. So if this is the case, there really three possibilities: subject didn't notice the note (a Miss), subject read the note and reported correctly (a Hit), and lastly, the subject read the note and reported it incorrectly (a Near Miss?).

No, AWARE I only reported one OBE with veridical information and it happened in a room that wasn't prepared (no target = can't see what isn't there).
"Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before..."

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