To start out, my apologies here. I started a thread with the same intent and name as this one in the Extended Consciousness section of the forum, totally unaware that the member whose ideas I was challenging or hoping to start discussion over couldn't post in it. Whoops :
Originally Laird was just going to move the thread to one she could respond in, but I felt I needed to reword things and maybe add some more quotes to show exactly what I'm bringing up a little better. I'm definitely a guy who goes back and edits the hell out of his posts within the first five minutes of originally putting it up because I start backtracking usually on my wording or something. Grammar, etc.
Anyways, to my point: I've been reading the Skeptiko forums and this one for well over a year now regularly, long before I ever actually got the idea I wanted to partake in the discussions. And although I'm not very convinced by the "skeptic" crowd, I am still very interested in their arguments.
Even though most proponents here kind of seem to get sick of the same old approaches they claim some skeptics here resort to again and again, they do seem still willing in the face of it all to keep on discussing things with them. So I expect plenty of participation from them too in this, even though they may have already. I just haven't found where.
Linda seems to be a pretty prominent poster here and has been since the mind-energy forum days. One argument I've seen recently pop up again, and I am intrigued by, is this constant assertion that there is a bias amongst certain researchers of NDEs and "mainstream" ones
Linda, you seem to always reference the same paper by Penny Sartori as being a study that is closer to a study design you'd favor using. Is this the only evidence you have of what you say above? As I see Sartori definitely not holding the same conclusions as you over it, or the same opinion of other researchers' study methods in NDE literature.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15267166
Anyways, to get to the bottom of what I'm asking of Linda, and once she clarifies her position and statements from the thread "a skeptic and a NDE proponent go to a magic show" from the Philosophy Discussion Forum I'd love to see others jump in too:
Is the distinction between NDEs and 'ordinary' 'hallucinations' a somewhat arbitrary one as Linda alleges, and is there any scientific basis to this allegation as she claims there is? If so, what is that scientific basis, with reference to specific papers and the specific methods/findings in them?
Apparently I'm not the only one (Laird has already voiced his interest) here who would like to see these ideas challenged and discussed. I must say, it is one of the more original criticisms towards NDE literature from a skeptic online I've seen. Amongst the usual "ancedotes, fraud, wishful thinking" junk I've seen thrown up before I started frequenting here, and it deserves an audience.
And to clarify, I do think the Greyson scale could be better, but to say it's created a bias and a noticeable problem with definition amongst proponents who investigate NDEs is pretty far out to me
Originally Laird was just going to move the thread to one she could respond in, but I felt I needed to reword things and maybe add some more quotes to show exactly what I'm bringing up a little better. I'm definitely a guy who goes back and edits the hell out of his posts within the first five minutes of originally putting it up because I start backtracking usually on my wording or something. Grammar, etc.
Anyways, to my point: I've been reading the Skeptiko forums and this one for well over a year now regularly, long before I ever actually got the idea I wanted to partake in the discussions. And although I'm not very convinced by the "skeptic" crowd, I am still very interested in their arguments.
Even though most proponents here kind of seem to get sick of the same old approaches they claim some skeptics here resort to again and again, they do seem still willing in the face of it all to keep on discussing things with them. So I expect plenty of participation from them too in this, even though they may have already. I just haven't found where.
Linda seems to be a pretty prominent poster here and has been since the mind-energy forum days. One argument I've seen recently pop up again, and I am intrigued by, is this constant assertion that there is a bias amongst certain researchers of NDEs and "mainstream" ones
Quote:Outside the field of parapsychology, these experiences would be regarded as hallucinations ("a hallucination is a perception in the absence of external stimulus that has qualities of real perception"). However, my point was just that NDE researchers separate the collection of "vivid, substantial, and are perceived to be located in external objective space" experiences which people have in association with medical crises, into "hallucination" or "NDE" based on those questions. That is, it's an NDE if you meet Jesus, but a hallucination if you meet some business associates.
Quote:What I'm referring to are the investigation of these same experiences which have been undertaken by mainstream researchers, but without the "NDE selection process" which parapsychologists undertake. If NDEs were a unique experience were which different from the hallucinations, dreams and unreal experiences which are reported by people under the same kinds of medical conditions, then they would be noticeable to the researchers who look at the details of these experiences in terms of quality, vividness, themes, etc. Yet we don't find this in their reports. Instead, what parapsychologists would select out as "NDEs" seems to simply represent some of the themes which are found among the unreal experiences which are otherwise indistinguishable from NDEs.
Linda, you seem to always reference the same paper by Penny Sartori as being a study that is closer to a study design you'd favor using. Is this the only evidence you have of what you say above? As I see Sartori definitely not holding the same conclusions as you over it, or the same opinion of other researchers' study methods in NDE literature.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15267166
Anyways, to get to the bottom of what I'm asking of Linda, and once she clarifies her position and statements from the thread "a skeptic and a NDE proponent go to a magic show" from the Philosophy Discussion Forum I'd love to see others jump in too:
Is the distinction between NDEs and 'ordinary' 'hallucinations' a somewhat arbitrary one as Linda alleges, and is there any scientific basis to this allegation as she claims there is? If so, what is that scientific basis, with reference to specific papers and the specific methods/findings in them?
Apparently I'm not the only one (Laird has already voiced his interest) here who would like to see these ideas challenged and discussed. I must say, it is one of the more original criticisms towards NDE literature from a skeptic online I've seen. Amongst the usual "ancedotes, fraud, wishful thinking" junk I've seen thrown up before I started frequenting here, and it deserves an audience.
And to clarify, I do think the Greyson scale could be better, but to say it's created a bias and a noticeable problem with definition amongst proponents who investigate NDEs is pretty far out to me