I thought twice about posting this here, it may not belong only in the NDE subforum; it could be placed at some broader level perhaps.
A paper from 2012, entitled
Near-Death-Like Experiences without Life-Threatening Conditions or Brain Disorders: A Hypothesis from a Case Report
authors: Enrico Facco and Christian Agrillo
Available as a pdf.
Quote:
For myself, I think this area has been somewhat neglected, it doesn't have the drama of life-and-death experiences (in the physical sense) but it is that which actually makes it important. Unless we include these experiences in our view when trying to explain such phenomena as NDEs, we may waste much time exploring blind alleys such as chemical or certain other hypotheses which can be eliminated when we take the broader view, thus removing some irrelevant distractions about which much noise is often made.
A paper from 2012, entitled
Near-Death-Like Experiences without Life-Threatening Conditions or Brain Disorders: A Hypothesis from a Case Report
authors: Enrico Facco and Christian Agrillo
Available as a pdf.
Quote:
Quote:Some features of NDEs have occasionally been observed in people who are not in life-threatening conditions, in whom there can be no expectations about the hereafter or neurotransmitter disorders involved.
Quote:As far as we know, there have been few reports of profound NDE-like experiences in people who were not in life-threatening conditions, but their repeated occurrence would challenge both the neurobiological and the psychological hypotheses advanced to explain the pathophysiology of NDEs.
Quote:Case Report(see the linked article to read the description of the experience.)
The subject was an electrotechnician who came under our observation because he was trying to understand the meaning of a strange experience he had had a few years earlier, when he was divorcing from his wife.
For myself, I think this area has been somewhat neglected, it doesn't have the drama of life-and-death experiences (in the physical sense) but it is that which actually makes it important. Unless we include these experiences in our view when trying to explain such phenomena as NDEs, we may waste much time exploring blind alleys such as chemical or certain other hypotheses which can be eliminated when we take the broader view, thus removing some irrelevant distractions about which much noise is often made.