A Note on Anesthetically-Induced Frightening "Near-Death Experiences" (open access)

A Note on Anesthetically-Induced Frightening "Near-Death Experiences"

This article speculates that anesthetics can influence the kind of NDE that someone has, and cause a potentially life-long negative view about life after the NDE occurs.
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Ring, Kenneth
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Journal of Near-Death Studies, Volume 15, Number 1, Fall 1996 (open access)

Journal of Near-Death Studies, Volume 15, Number 1, Fall 1996

Quarterly journal publishing papers related to near-death experiences, including research reports; theoretical or conceptual statements; expressions of a scientific, philosophic, religious, or historical perspective on the study of near-death experiences; cross-cultural studies; individual case histories; and personal accounts of experiences or related phenomena.
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Greyson, Bruce
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hedonic Deactivation: A New Human Value for an Advanced Society (open access)

Hedonic Deactivation: A New Human Value for an Advanced Society

"Comatose subjects experience pleasant unaroused affects such as tranquility, serenity, peacefulness, and relaxation, more frequently and more intensely than they experience aroused feelings or differentiated emotions. I suggest that consciousness is not disconnected by coma, but rather is potentiated following complete blockage of the brain's information channels" (abstract).
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Tiberi, Emilio
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Death Dream and Near-Death Darwinism (open access)

The Death Dream and Near-Death Darwinism

This paper proposes that "based upon very repeatable computer simulations of dying neural networks, the phenomena of both near-death experiences (NDEs) and a virtual afterlife are plausible and can be expected to occur in traumatized neurobiological systems" (abstract). The author then speculates three societal implications based on this conclusion.
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Thaler, Stephen L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Letter to the Editor: Review of Raising the Dead (open access)

Letter to the Editor: Review of Raising the Dead

Letter written to the editor of the Journal of Near-Death Studies where Richard Abanes expresses his disappointment in Mary S. Edwards' review of Raising the Dead by Robert Selzer. Abanes believes the population, as well as researchers, need to be more skeptical about near-death experiences.
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Abanes, Richard
Object Type: Letter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Letter to the Editor: Measuring Biomagnetic Effects of NDEs (open access)

Letter to the Editor: Measuring Biomagnetic Effects of NDEs

Letter written to the editor of the Journal of Near-Death Studies about P.M.H. Atwater devoting "an entire chapter of her book to the physiological aftereffects of near-death experiences (NDEs)" (abstract). This letter discusses healers that use lay-on-hands, as well as fraudulent healers, and how healers might be explained through science.
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Wiener, David
Object Type: Letter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Guest Editorial: Children and the Near-Death Phenomenon: Another Viewpoint (open access)

Guest Editorial: Children and the Near-Death Phenomenon: Another Viewpoint

"Children who brush death, nearly die, or who are pronounced clinically dead but later revive have a much higher incidence of near-death experiences (NDEs) than do adults. Although excellent research now exists on children's cases, there have been discrepancies. I suggest that we need to broaden the range of observations on children's NDEs and reconsider what is known about children and the near-death phenomenon" (abstract).
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Atwater, P. M. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Questions for the "Dying Brain Hypothesis" (open access)

Questions for the "Dying Brain Hypothesis"

Abstract: I pose four questions for the "dying brain hypothesis" as propounded by Susan Blackmore in her book Dying to Live (1993). The first calls into question Blackmore's reductionist explanation of the "bird's-eye view" for a near-death experience (NDE) and asks why out-of-body perception from a supine position is not reported, given her theory. The second inquires as to how the materialist view explains NDErs' feelings of unconditional love, while the third ponders whether the variance among NDEs noted by Blackmore is not more consistent with the "afterlife hypothesis" than with the "dying brain hypothesis." The final question queries whether neural disinhibition, described by Blackmore, might be a possible release mechanism for an NDE. I suggest that these four questions pose a challenge to the "dying brain hypothesis."
Date: Autumn 1996
Creator: Serdahely, William J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library