Just an after burner (I had written this already a few hours ago)
----------
Initially I had planned to write a lengthy response to Max-B’s posts.
But now I think a fairly brief summary will do.
First of all, to consider Keith Augustine*) a real expert in this field is a bit of a 'chutzpah,' because the true experts are the people who operated on Pam Reynolds, i.e. Dr's Robert Spetzler and his assistant (at the time) Karl Greene. They did the hard work, Augustine did not (besides, Augustine is a philosopher, not a physician) nor did Woerlee, and neither of them were involved in the operation.
We in the Netherlands have a saying pertaining to this type of behaviour, which can be translated thus: the best coaches are in the stands. Meaning: there are always people who think they know better than the experts who do the hard work on the ground.
In any case, Augustine doesn't know what he's talking about. Max however, thinks he does, and thus says that it was not known when EEG Burst Suppression occurred. But it was and is known. There is faulty reasoning (Max's) regarding the procedure. It was NOT decided during the operation that Pam’s heart would be stopped using the cooling down procedure, aka “operation standstill”. That decision had already been made long before, after Spetzler et al. had seen the enormous aneurism at the base of her skull, on the CAT scan.
So, from the very beginning of the operation the anaesthesiologist placed her under deep anaesthesia using thiopental to induce burst suppression. Only after Pam had been deeply unconscious could Spetzler open her skull. Somehow Pam 'saw' that (she got out of her body) and next heard what the cardiovascular-surgeon said about a vein/artery in her groin. And Spetzler made it very clear to us that she was then under EEG Burst Suppression, not later!
This is all clearly laid out in our book The Self Does Not Die. I consider this exposé (in the book) the last word on the Pam Reynolds case.
*) Regarding Keith Augustine, he has been given the opportunity to fill three complete issues of the Journal of Near Death Studies to show his ideas about NDE's. His final conclusion? Nothing but elaborate hallucinations. Of course, in an issue afterwards there came proper rebuttals from the real experts in the field. But there are no signs that Augustine changed his mind. Far from it, because he is an ideologist, and ideologists are always right...
Anyway, this extremely large allocation of space in the JNDS shows that NDE-researchers are not suffering from "confirmation bias" as one Dutch skeptic recently told me. We are quite willing to consider sensible arguments, but not arguments of the nature: "I cannot be therefore it is not".
Smithy
(This post was last modified: 2018-04-02, 08:04 PM by Smithy.)
----------
Initially I had planned to write a lengthy response to Max-B’s posts.
But now I think a fairly brief summary will do.
First of all, to consider Keith Augustine*) a real expert in this field is a bit of a 'chutzpah,' because the true experts are the people who operated on Pam Reynolds, i.e. Dr's Robert Spetzler and his assistant (at the time) Karl Greene. They did the hard work, Augustine did not (besides, Augustine is a philosopher, not a physician) nor did Woerlee, and neither of them were involved in the operation.
We in the Netherlands have a saying pertaining to this type of behaviour, which can be translated thus: the best coaches are in the stands. Meaning: there are always people who think they know better than the experts who do the hard work on the ground.
In any case, Augustine doesn't know what he's talking about. Max however, thinks he does, and thus says that it was not known when EEG Burst Suppression occurred. But it was and is known. There is faulty reasoning (Max's) regarding the procedure. It was NOT decided during the operation that Pam’s heart would be stopped using the cooling down procedure, aka “operation standstill”. That decision had already been made long before, after Spetzler et al. had seen the enormous aneurism at the base of her skull, on the CAT scan.
So, from the very beginning of the operation the anaesthesiologist placed her under deep anaesthesia using thiopental to induce burst suppression. Only after Pam had been deeply unconscious could Spetzler open her skull. Somehow Pam 'saw' that (she got out of her body) and next heard what the cardiovascular-surgeon said about a vein/artery in her groin. And Spetzler made it very clear to us that she was then under EEG Burst Suppression, not later!
This is all clearly laid out in our book The Self Does Not Die. I consider this exposé (in the book) the last word on the Pam Reynolds case.
*) Regarding Keith Augustine, he has been given the opportunity to fill three complete issues of the Journal of Near Death Studies to show his ideas about NDE's. His final conclusion? Nothing but elaborate hallucinations. Of course, in an issue afterwards there came proper rebuttals from the real experts in the field. But there are no signs that Augustine changed his mind. Far from it, because he is an ideologist, and ideologists are always right...
Anyway, this extremely large allocation of space in the JNDS shows that NDE-researchers are not suffering from "confirmation bias" as one Dutch skeptic recently told me. We are quite willing to consider sensible arguments, but not arguments of the nature: "I cannot be therefore it is not".
Smithy