Personalised accounts of out-of-body (OBE) and near-death (NDE) experiences are frequently interpreted as offering evidence for immortality and an afterlife. Since most OBE/NDE follow severe curtailments of cerebral circulation with loss of consciousness, the agonal brain supposedly permits mind, soul or consciousness to escape neural control and provide glimpses of the afterlife.Michael Marsh critically analyses the work of five key writers who support this so-called dying brain hypothesis. He firmly disagrees with such otherworldly mystical or psychical interpretations, ably demonstrating how they are explicable in terms of brain neurophysiology and its neuropathological disturbances. The original basis and thrust of Marshs claim sees the recorded phenomenology as reflections of brains rapidly reawakening to full conscious-awareness, consistent with otherreported phenomenologies attending recovery from antecedent states of unconsciousness:: the re-awakening brain hypothesis. From this basis, Marsh also offers a re-classification of NDE into early and late phase sequences, thereby dismantling the untenable concepts of core and depth experiences.Marsh further provides a detailed examination of the spiritual and quasi-religious overtones accorded OBE/NDE, highlighting their inconsistencies when compared with classical accounts of divine disclosure, and the eschatological precepts of resurrection belief as professed credally. In assessing the implications of anthropological, philosophical, and theological concepts of personhood and soul as arguments for personal survival after death, Marsh celebrates the role of conventional faith inappropriating the expectant biblical promises of a New Creation.
Introduction: Prospects For Life After Death; Getting a Sense of the Other-Worldly Domain; Surveying Past Horizons; Authors Interpretations of ECE Phenomenology; Objective Analyses Into ECE Subjectivity; Conscious-Awareness: Lifes Illusory Legacy; The Temporo-Parietal Cortex: The Configuring of Ego/Paracentric Body Space; Falling Asleep, Perchance to Dream - Thence to Re-awaken; ECE & the Temporal Lobe: Assassin or Accomplice?; Other Neurophysiological Aspects Pertinent to ECE Phenomenology; Anthropological & Eschatological Considerations of ECE Phenomenology; ECE, Revelation and Spirituality; Subjects Interpretations of their Experiences; Overview and Recapitulation;
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