Latest from Dr Sam Parnia
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(2018-12-28, 09:42 PM)Max_B Wrote: I won't bother with a response, lol I do understand why it's unwelcome on your radar, Max but it's simply what the data tells us. Patients report separating from their physical bodies, the literature is packed with case reports. The driver in the car analogy fits with what they tell us.
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(2018-12-29, 12:18 AM)Max_B Wrote: It's not unwelcome, it just didn't address the first original point I thought needed an explanation... Well if I explain why that is, will you drop your theory, Max ? (2018-12-28, 06:42 PM)Max_B Wrote: Verifiable NDE OBE recollections are far more frequently set around the immediate vicinity of the experient's body, and become far less frequent the further away they are set from the experients body. But although less frequent, the proportion of those set further away which involve loved ones/familiy/partners rises compared with those involving strangers. That needs explanation. Is the lipstick example just an example, or is that from an NDE case?
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Sam Parnia's presentation "Conscious Awareness, Mental and Cognitive Experiences During Cardiac Arrest" on DailyGrail:
Looking for Consciousness Beyond the Threshold of Death Apparently AWARE II had similar problems as AWARE: Quote:He runs through the numbers: of 3668 cardiac arrests so far, 2266 of them were out of the working hours of his teams. Of the 1402 patients who had cardiac arrest during working hours, only 371 of them were able to be recruited (that is, they were resuscitated before the team arrived, or the team was not notified of the cardiac arrest, etc.). Of those 371 patient who were ‘recruited’, 200 died during resuscitation, and of the remaining 171, 133 died afterward in hospital. This left just 38 patients, from 3668 cardiac arrests in total, who were able to be interviewed (roughly 10% of the recruited patients, 1% of all cardiac arrests). (2018-12-28, 06:42 PM)Max_B Wrote: Verifiable NDE OBE recollections are far more frequently set around the immediate vicinity of the experient's body, and become far less frequent the further away they are set from the experients body. But although less frequent, the proportion of those set further away which involve loved ones/familiy/partners rises compared with those involving strangers. That needs explanation. (2019-01-17, 06:56 AM)Max_B Wrote: A hospital NDE OBE case, Tim might remember it... the experient recalled seeing a lipstick inside a nurses pocket... there is a vague idea that it might have been French... and perhaps taken from a research paper. Yes, I do remember that, Max. I'll see if I can find it.
A recent interview with Dr Sam Parnia. Nothing new, but the journalist who 'got it', confirmed it was very recent (I emailed her). Typical responses from mainstream neurologists such as Adrian Owen were...(summary) consciousness is produced by the brain and that's it, anything else is BS.
(Owen) “If you take that organ away or kill that organ or that organ dies, you cannot be conscious.” It's quite obvious that this statement cannot be correct, simply because of the vast amount of veridical OBE cases during and after many minutes of cardiac arrest. Owen is simply ignoring persuasive data and toeing the party line. https://theprovince.com/news/canada/life...7d523bd34f
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This short interview with Dr Sam Parnia was conducted today (19 April). Unfortunately, the host doesn't do a very good job, mainly because Parnia isn't given enough time, even to properly finish an anecdote he was recollecting about his colleague, Dr Richard Mansfield (and a patient of his that described events that occurred whilst he was dead)
So, I wondered if I should or shouldn't post it and I thought...maybe it's better than nothing for the time being. http://www.iheartradio.ca/newstalk-1010/...de=Article |
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