ChaplainMCH said:
Lots and lots of stories like this out there. Enough to make the most skeptic stop and think, if they were to ponder the enormous amount.
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I think you have to count NDEs from all cultures and religions or you need good reason for dismissing NDEs of conflicting meaning.
Certainly. Great point. I think that if I were to communicate with a certain culture, I would have to do it in a way they would understand. Assuming for a moment that there is a Creator of All Things, would not that creator do the same thing?Quote:
American / Western experiences are different from Indian experiences which are different from Chinese experiences which are different from African experiences and so on. And then there is overlap in categories of seeing their own respective religious figures or seeing deceased family members.
I totally get this. I appreciate your thought here. So you would see it as confirmation of what, if anything?Quote:
I struggle to see them as confirmation of anything specific.
Just curious Chaplain, do you have any patient near death experiences?ChaplainMCH said:
Thanks for sharing! I added it to my amazon wish list.
ChaplainMCH said:
I totally get this. I appreciate your thought here. So you would see it as confirmation of what, if anything?
I gotcha. Thanks for the response. Confirmation biased is certainly a real danger. I'm glad you mention that.kurt vonnegut said:ChaplainMCH said:
I totally get this. I appreciate your thought here. So you would see it as confirmation of what, if anything?
I wouldn't go so far as to call it confirmation of anything. I don't think we fully understand what they are. They may be completely a product of our brain or confirmation of God and an afterlife or something else entirely. Its too easy with topics like this to fall into patterns of confirmation bias - the atheist thinks its hallucination and the religious thinks its God. My own bias tells me its hallucination, but there are enough stories and enough similarities to where I tell myself to keep an open mind.
I have heard a few stories and even been with families that talk about how their loved one had just recently had an experience. I don't recall being in the room at the same time though.dermdoc said:Just curious Chaplain, do you have any patient near death experiences?ChaplainMCH said:
Thanks for sharing! I added it to my amazon wish list.
I believe that is the Holy Spirit.ChaplainMCH said:I gotcha. Thanks for the response. Confirmation biased is certainly a real danger. I'm glad you mention that.kurt vonnegut said:ChaplainMCH said:
I totally get this. I appreciate your thought here. So you would see it as confirmation of what, if anything?
I wouldn't go so far as to call it confirmation of anything. I don't think we fully understand what they are. They may be completely a product of our brain or confirmation of God and an afterlife or something else entirely. Its too easy with topics like this to fall into patterns of confirmation bias - the atheist thinks its hallucination and the religious thinks its God. My own bias tells me its hallucination, but there are enough stories and enough similarities to where I tell myself to keep an open mind.
I can't help but think about the peace it seems to bring to so many...or at the least perhaps a poignant thought (dare I say message?) Despite so many being scared of death, NDE seems to bring peace. The big question, is this self preservation (salve for the dying body) or the comforting embrace of something higher? It seems to me that fear of death, which I tend to think is prevalent even among the faithful, would create visions of fear, sort of how nightmares sometimes manifest from stressful events. But it generally is counter...visions of peaceful things despite the impeding passing.
This is the most academic, thought out, rigorous exercise in documenting people being able to see, move and interact with others during NDEs.Jabin said:
Very, very interesting, Kurt. Is there a collection of NDEs from around the world. Book, website, anything? That would be fascinating to read and analyze.
I particularly drawn to this doctor's NDE because he is a neurologist. And he can specifically point to times where he should have had no brain function at all, but he was in the midst of an extremely vivid experience.kurt vonnegut said:ChaplainMCH said:
I totally get this. I appreciate your thought here. So you would see it as confirmation of what, if anything?
I wouldn't go so far as to call it confirmation of anything. I don't think we fully understand what they are. They may be completely a product of our brain or confirmation of God and an afterlife or something else entirely. Its too easy with topics like this to fall into patterns of confirmation bias - the atheist thinks its hallucination and the religious thinks its God. My own bias tells me its hallucination, but there are enough stories and enough similarities to where I tell myself to keep an open mind.
Great responseChaplainMCH said:Quote:
I think you have to count NDEs from all cultures and religions or you need good reason for dismissing NDEs of conflicting meaning.
Absolutely!Certainly. Great point. I think that if I were to communicate with a certain culture, I would have to do it in a way they would understand. Assuming for a moment that there is a Creator of All Things, would not that creator do the same thing?Quote:
American / Western experiences are different from Indian experiences which are different from Chinese experiences which are different from African experiences and so on. And then there is overlap in categories of seeing their own respective religious figures or seeing deceased family members.I totally get this. I appreciate your thought here. So you would see it as confirmation of what, if anything?Quote:
I struggle to see them as confirmation of anything specific.
one MEEN Ag said:This is the most academic, thought out, rigorous exercise in documenting people being able to see, move and interact with others during NDEs.Jabin said:
Very, very interesting, Kurt. Is there a collection of NDEs from around the world. Book, website, anything? That would be fascinating to read and analyze.
https://www.amazon.com/Self-Does-Not-Die-Experiences/dp/0997560800
I read it, its a great book. There are things in it that are beyond human ability to have access to. They purposefully remove the religious outcomes to try to focus on the academic pursuit of NDEs.
Just downloaded it. Near death experiences are consistent with my Christian faith. God is so much bigger than we believe.ChaplainMCH said:one MEEN Ag said:This is the most academic, thought out, rigorous exercise in documenting people being able to see, move and interact with others during NDEs.Jabin said:
Very, very interesting, Kurt. Is there a collection of NDEs from around the world. Book, website, anything? That would be fascinating to read and analyze.
https://www.amazon.com/Self-Does-Not-Die-Experiences/dp/0997560800
I read it, its a great book. There are things in it that are beyond human ability to have access to. They purposefully remove the religious outcomes to try to focus on the academic pursuit of NDEs.
That's on my reading list now, also! Thanks!