Science Wants To Understand What Clinical Death Is (Part 1) - Alternative View

Science Wants To Understand What Clinical Death Is (Part 1) - Alternative View
Science Wants To Understand What Clinical Death Is (Part 1) - Alternative View

Video: Science Wants To Understand What Clinical Death Is (Part 1) - Alternative View

Video: Science Wants To Understand What Clinical Death Is (Part 1) - Alternative View
Video: When are you officially dead? Quran Answered before science - There Is No Clash 2024, May
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Recently, the issue of clinical death has received increased attention. For example, the 2014 film Heaven Is for Real tells the story of a young man who told his parents that he was on the other side of death during surgery. The film grossed $ ninety-one million during the US release.

The book, which appeared in 2010 and served as the basis for the script, sold well, selling ten million copies, and remained on the New York Times bestseller list for 206 weeks. There were also two more new books. The first is Eben Alexander's Proof of Heaven; in it, the author describes the state of clinical death in which he himself was when he lay for two weeks in a coma due to meningitis.

The second book is To Heaven and Back by Mary C. Neal. The author herself was in a state of clinical death due to an accident while traveling by kayak. Both books lasted 94 and 36 weeks respectively on the bestseller list. True, the character of another 2010 book, The Boy Who Came Back From Heaven, recently admitted that he made it all up.

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The stories of these authors resemble dozens, if not hundreds, of other testimonies and thousands of interviews with those who have been in a state of clinical death over the past twenty years (these people call themselves "witnesses"). Although clinical death is viewed differently in different cultures, all of these eyewitness accounts are, by and large, very similar.

The most extensively studied evidence of clinical death in Western culture. Many of these stories describe similar cases: a person is freed from the body and watches as doctors scurry around his unconscious body.

In other testimonies, the patient is fascinated with the other world, sees spiritual beings on his way (some patients call them "angels") and is immersed in an atmosphere of love (some call it God); meets with long-dead relatives and friends; recalls some episodes from his life; realizes how he merges with the universe, experiencing a feeling of all-consuming and supernatural love.

However, in the end, the patient witnesses are forced to reluctantly return back from the magical otherworldly realm to the mortal body. Many of them did not consider their state to be a dream and a hallucination; instead, they sometimes claimed to be in a state of "more real than real life." After that, their outlook on life changed radically, and so much so that it was difficult for them to adapt to ordinary life. Some changed jobs and even divorced their spouses.

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Over time, a sufficient body of literature has accumulated that studies the phenomenon of clinical death, which is the result of physical changes in an injured or dying brain. Among the causes of clinical death are oxygen starvation, imperfection of anesthesia techniques, as well as neurochemical processes that arose as a reaction to traumatic effects.

However, those who have experienced clinical death reject such purely physiological explanations as inadequate. They argue the following: since the conditions under which clinical death occurred are very different, it is not possible to explain with their help all the various manifestations of clinical death.

A book by two doctors, Sam Parnia and Pim van Lommel, was recently published. They rely on articles published in reputable journals, in which the authors, on the basis of experimental data, try to thoroughly understand the question of the nature of clinical death. In October, Parnia and his colleagues published the results of a recent study, which describes more than two thousand testimonies of patients who went to intensive care after cardiac arrest.

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Authors such as Mary Neal and Eben Alexander, in their books, talked about what they had to observe while in a state of clinical death, and presented this mysterious state in a new light.

For example, Mary Neal, being a physician herself, several years before experiencing clinical death, served as head of the department of spinal surgery at the University of Southern California (she is currently in private practice).

Eben Alexander is a neurosurgeon who has taught and performed surgeries at prestigious clinics and medical schools such as Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) and Harvard University.

It was Alexander who raised the scientific stakes, so to speak. He studied his medical history and came to the following conclusion: being in a state of clinical death, he was in a deep coma, and his brain was completely disabled, so his sensory experience can only be explained by the fact that his soul completely left his body and prepared for the journey in the other world, in addition, one must accept that angels, God, and the other world are as real as the world around us.

Alexander did not publish his findings in medical journals and, already in 2013, an investigative article appeared in Esquire magazine, in which the author partly questioned some of Alexander's conclusions. In particular, he was skeptical about the key claim that Alexander's sensations were occurring at the very moment when his brain was showing no signs of activity.

For skeptics, Alexander's memories and The Boy Who Came Back From Heaven were on a par with all sorts of fables, for example, about people abducted by aliens, paranormal abilities, poltergeist and other stories - in other words, they began to be considered food for charlatans, the desire to cheat the ignorant and amenable to suggestions.

But even notorious skeptics, as a rule, do not believe that people who have experienced clinical death made it all up. We do not argue, maybe some of the patients really fantasized something, but all the same we cannot dismiss all the evidence we have, since there are a lot of them and they are well documented. In addition, it is difficult to ignore the testimony of recognized medical professionals. Even if life after death does not exist, it still seems as if it exists.

There is something mysterious in the very phenomenon of clinical death that makes this phenomenon an attractive object for scientific research. There is no need to talk about any abductions by aliens or about the existence of spiritual entities and the like, since these phenomena are not recorded in laboratory conditions. Clinical death is another matter - it can be recorded using various kinds of equipment that measure the activity of the human body.

Moreover, medical technology is constantly being improved, which allows "pumping out" the patient, pulling him out of the embrace of death. Modern medicine has already learned how to return a person from the "other world" after he spent "there" for several hours, say, lying in the snow or choking.

True, sometimes doctors have to deliberately enter a patient into a state of clinical death in order to carry out very complex operations; for this purpose, anesthesia is used and the patient's heart is stopped. For example, recently, with the help of a similar technique, surgeons began to operate on patients who had suffered severe injuries, keeping them between life and death until the end of the surgical intervention.

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Thus, clinical death is probably the only kind of spiritual experience that can be thoroughly investigated with the help of science and thereby test the claims of the ancients, who argued that man is more than flesh; it will be possible to gain a deeper understanding of the work of consciousness - one of the greatest mysteries of our world, and even the most inveterate materialists will not deny this.

… And so, last summer, I found myself in Newport Beach, California, at the annual conference of the International Association for the Study of Clinical Death (IANDS), which in 1981 became an independent organization. I wanted to know, for what reasons a person begins to assert that he has been “in the next world”? Why are the descriptions of the state of clinical death in different patients so similar? Can science somehow explain all this?

The conference was held in a warm and friendly atmosphere and, rather, resembled a meeting of old friends. Many of the members have known each other over the years. Each of them wore a ribbon of one color or another with the words "Speaker", "Participant of the discussion", "Volunteer". There were also those who had on the ribbon it was written "Suffered clinical death." The conference program included meetings and seminars on a wide range of issues, for example: "Study of clinical death in the framework of neuroscience", "Sacred geometry of dance: a vortex that opens the way to the Divine", "Shared memories of a past life."

Opening the discussion, IANDS President Diane Corcoran was clearly addressing first-time newcomers to the conference. First, she spoke about a number of conditions under which a person enters into a state of clinical death - a heart attack, an accident on the water, an electric shock, an incurable illness, post-traumatic pathology. After that, Corcoran listed the characteristic features of clinical death.

She referred to Bruce Greyson, one of those physicians who pioneered the serious study of clinical death and developed a sixteen-point scale to describe the experience of a patient in a state of near-death.

This also includes such, for example, characteristics: a feeling of joy, a meeting with spiritual beings, a feeling of separation from one's body, etc. Each point is assigned its own weight (0, 1, 2). At the same time, the maximum score is 32 points; the state of clinical death corresponds to 7 points and above. According to one scientific study, patients who experienced clinical death have an average score of 15.

Nevertheless, the long-term consequences of clinical death are an equally important indicator, Corcoran emphasized. According to her, many people even after a few years do not realize at all that they were in this state. And patients begin to realize this only after they pay attention to its consequences, for example, such as: increased sensitivity to light, sounds and certain chemicals; increased, sometimes excessive, attentiveness and generosity; inability to properly manage your time and finances; the manifestation of unconditional love in relation to family and friends; and strange effects on electrical equipment. So, for example, Corcoran recalls, at one of the conferences where four hundred people who had been in a state of clinical death gathered, the computer system in the hotel where the conference took place,suddenly out of order.

Corcoran itself had two badges. One has her name and surname written on it; attached to the badge are colored ribbons with the words: “35 years old”, “Ask me”, “I am here to serve” (she stated the following about the addition of ribbons: “It started as a joke, but has become a tradition”).

Another badge reads “Colonel,” as she has held a number of senior positions in the Army Nurse Corps during her long career; in addition, Corcoran holds a doctorate in nursing. She first experienced clinical death in 1969, when she worked as an assistant nurse at the largest American military base, Long Binh in Vietnam.

“Nobody ever talked about clinical death, until one young man told me about it,” Corcoran told me over breakfast. "However, at that time I had no idea what he was trying to explain to me so emotionally." Since then, she has been trying to draw the attention of doctors to clinical death, so that they still take this phenomenon more seriously.

“The fact is that most doctors do not attach much importance to the phenomenon of death and the process of a person leaving life,” says Diana. “Therefore, as soon as you start talking about how the soul leaves the body and begins to see and hear everything that happens next to it, then in response they tell you that, they say, all these cases are beyond the competence of doctors.”

And more recently, Diana Corcoran, not without difficulty, found among the war veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, those who were in a state of clinical death and are ready to tell about it. “During my service in the ranks of the armed forces, I was fully convinced that this issue was purely medical. And I told [the doctors] that they would have to get used to this idea, since there are many patients who have been in clinical death, and for their further treatment this information is simply necessary."

Written evidence of clinical death or a condition similar to it appears, according to some scientists, already in the Middle Ages, and according to others, even in the days of Antiquity. More recently, the medical journal Resuscitation reported that clinical death was first described in the eighteenth century by a French military doctor.

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However, in our time, serious interest in the study of clinical death arose only in 1975 after Raymond A. Moody, Jr. published his famous book Life After Life, which provides evidence fifty people.

After the appearance of Moody's book, as if from a cornucopia, a flood of other evidence gushed forth; they began to be talked about everywhere - both on TV shows and in the press. Even a small community of like-minded people has emerged, uniting psychiatrists, psychologists, cardiologists and other specialists.

They all agreed with Moody, who argued that consciousness (you can call it the word "soul" or "spirit") can exist in some immaterial form separately from the brain, but in interconnection with it, as evidenced by the phenomenon of clinical death. Leading members of this community of scholars have long worked in prestigious universities and hospitals. They carefully review each other's books and discuss the essence of spirituality and the nature of consciousness.

Perhaps the best review is the anthology, The Handbook of Near-Death Experiences: Thirty Years of Investigation, published in 2009. Its authors argue that by 2005, about 600 scientific articles had appeared, based on the testimonies of nearly 3,500 people who reported being in a state of cynical death.

Many of the papers have been published in the Journal of Near-Death Studies, a journal that speaks to the interests of the IANDS and is proudly peer-reviewed by the association. Lots of other evidence appears in other prestigious medical publications. So, as of February, the PubMed database, which is maintained by the National Library of Medicine (and which, however, does not index the IANDS journal), had only 240 scientific articles on clinical death.

Note that most of the work on clinical death is retrospective, that is, here we mean the fact that scientists rely on the testimony of people who have been in such a state in the past. From a scientific point of view, there are some difficulties here. And since the patients themselves took the initiative and offered their own memories, their testimony can hardly be considered representative.

It may turn out that people for whom the state of clinical death appears negatively colored, accompanied by phobias and fears, are in no hurry to talk about it, unlike those whose memories of this condition were colored positively. (One argument for the fact that clinical death is not at all a hallucination experienced by a fading mind is that many of the testimonies contain similar details.

It is noteworthy that negatively stained memories account for 23% of all [over a dozen] patient testimonies. Specialists pay much less attention to these cases, and in books, apparently, such cases are not considered at all.) Since many certificates of clinical death were recorded in writing only a few years after its onset, they themselves may be questionable. And, most importantly, as a result of post facto studies, it is impossible to obtain reliable data on what exactly happened to the patient's body and brain at the moment when his soul “separated from the body”.

About a dozen promising works have been published, and only in recent years have several studies at once. In them, scientists tried to interview each of the patients who were in a state of clinical death (for example, in intensive care after cardiac arrest) as quickly as possible. The patients were asked questions about how they felt at the moment when the doctors tried to get them out of the coma.

If they reported anything unusual, then scientists began to carefully study their medical history, as well as interview the attending physicians, thus trying to explain their "vision" and show that the patient's brain had indeed been disconnected for some time. Thus, a total of just under three hundred people were interviewed.

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