Always found this an interesting article about the evolutionary explanation for NDEs, and it's mutual shortcomings with other hallicination explanations for the experiences. Off of Michael Prescott's blog: http://michaelprescott.typepad.com/micha...-ndes.html
To me, the evolutionary explanation doesn't solve much more then the usual "dying brain" excuse. Just because you chuck it all up to being random, it doesn't help in figuring out what the mechanism is behind the experience. You still gotta find something to produce it, no matter how it came around.
Plus, any hallicination explanation is going to fall flat on it's face for other reasons. But that's another story
(This post was last modified: 2018-05-18, 06:31 AM by Desperado.)
Quote:Some skeptics, acknowledging this issue, speculate that somehow the brain is hardwired to produce this experience under stress. There is no evidence to support this speculation. Nor is it clear how such a capability could have evolved in the first place, since it has no clear survival value and only kicks in when the person is dying (or very near death, or in a severe crisis). How could such a capability even be passed on from one generation to another, and what would be the point of it? Are we supposed to assume that, every once in a great while, a human being had a near-death experience but survived, and then produced offspring whose brains were similarly wired, and that this mutation was sufficiently valuable that it persisted and spread throughout the entire population? In what way would such a mutation have any biological utility? How would it increase any individual's chance of survival and reproduction?
Or perhaps we are supposed to assume that this hardwiring is a mere fluke, a random development that somehow took hold across our species even though it offers no particular evolutionary advantage. There are evolutionary developments that seem to be essentially pointless and random, yet persist for no clear reason. But it strains credulity to think that an experience as rich, elaborate, and meaningful as an NDE is a purely random byproduct of evolutionary change. If the experience were indeed random and arbitrary, then its content could be almost anything; yet, as we see, the content tends to be reasonably consistent and to follow the same general pattern or structure. What is more, the content and pattern are consistent with our highest spiritual yearnings and aspirations.
To me, the evolutionary explanation doesn't solve much more then the usual "dying brain" excuse. Just because you chuck it all up to being random, it doesn't help in figuring out what the mechanism is behind the experience. You still gotta find something to produce it, no matter how it came around.
Plus, any hallicination explanation is going to fall flat on it's face for other reasons. But that's another story