0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
While discussing possibilities of an after life the question came up of how to explain people's reporting of out of body experiences while under treatment at in surgery etc. and reports of experiments being done showing the person could report views of things that were placed in the room out of normal sight. How can someone 'see' things without physical apparatus? I am reluctant to allow explanations via supernatural/religious models but find them difficult to challenge without evidence to contradict them.
A sort of dream while at the same time awake. I once had an out of body experience where I was still seeing out ahead through my eyes, but felt much more strongly as if I was looking in at myself from the side instead. This is perhaps an experiment that could be recreated, though I don't recommend it as it involves destroying a child. Take a nine-year-old boy who's never done anything bad in his life and spank him in public on the bare bottom. Then sit back and watch as he goes into a state of shock in which he shakes violently for an hour. During that time, there's just a chance that he will suddenly detatch and find himself looking in from the side, not feeling the upset at all for ten seconds or so, but instead feel completely calm while he watches the animal that he normally resides in continue to shake violently. Then he gets flung back in again and immediately feels the full upset of it again.
is it just me, or...?
Quote from: Omaughuntinaser on 02/04/2014 19:54:34is it just me, or...?I did say I don't recommend it. I only mentioned it because the experiment has been done and it resulted in an out of body experience. I think that is sufficiently scientifically interesting to be worth mentioning. Unfortunately it makes no sense to try to explain it if the context is left out. You'll probably find that rape victims have experienced this too, but they'll be even less keen to make such data available.I wasn't looking for sympathy, but I don't expect to be made fun of by someone who thinks a victim of an assault who eventually gets up the courage to speak out about it must be a weirdo.
There are some physiological explanations for out of body experiences. It is sometimes connected to extreme fear and trauma. One theory is that is that in those circumstances, an alternative reaction to fight or flight is a possum-like freeze reaction that cuts one off from sensation and movement to the point of feeling "not really there, inside my body" and watching as if an outside observer.ps I don't know whether the theory a person was re that really outside their body have been scientifically supported. I have heard stories of surgeons placing weird objects or messages on the tops of high objects in the operating room, but to my knowledge it never resulted in data showing that people are actually floating around the room during near death experiences.There are also drugs (ketamine?) that can induce the experience, and test pilots sometimes report them during or shortly after heavy G forces. You can even induce those experiences with cameras linked to virtual reality simulations. If you're interested in the neurology of it, VS Ramachandran has some interesting experiments that induce out of body or altered body sensation (things being a different size or in a different place) in normal people. Much of this research extends from work helping amputees deal with phantom limb pain, and has to do with how the body is mapped to the brain. If you alter that map, it can seem to the conscious individual as if they are located outside the body.
Quote from: annie123 on 01/04/2014 20:53:02While discussing possibilities of an after life the question came up of how to explain people's reporting of out of body experiences while under treatment at in surgery etc. and reports of experiments being done showing the person could report views of things that were placed in the room out of normal sight. How can someone 'see' things without physical apparatus? I am reluctant to allow explanations via supernatural/religious models but find them difficult to challenge without evidence to contradict them.I think it is very simple,.we don´t look with our eyes, but with our consciousness.that is key.when we die, consciousness, leaves the body, because consciousness can´t die.
no one seems to have been able, nevertheless, to analyse how the people who see things in operating rooms where objects have been placed out of sight, as I originally asked about, can be 'seen'.
yes, I have heard people say this but since we don't know what consciousness is and attempts to pin it down scientifically are inconclusive, this reply doesn't help much. How can it be measured? Verified? When we lose it as in sleep, or under anesthetic, or in dementia, where does it go? And what is the 'subconscious' as opposed to the conscious? Unless these questions can be answered then it doesn't seem valid to say it is independent of our physical bodies. no one seems to have been able, nevertheless, to analyse how the people who see things in operating rooms where objects have been placed out of sight, as I originally asked about, can be 'seen'. I know we don't 'see' with our eyes, but with our brains, but that doesn't help explain the latter phenomenon.
“The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence.
as Tesla said:
The nozzle would send concentrated beams of particles through the free air, of such tremendous energy that they will bring down a fleet of 10,000 enemy airplanes at a distance of 200 miles from a defending nation's border and will cause armies to drop dead in their tracks.
"science" is now a big joke wit lots of bollocks and bullshit and it doesn't work at all.
Difficult to tell if that was madness* or a scam to obtain funds, but either way it Nikola was making incorrect statements.
He communicated via the internet :
a medium only made possible by multiple branches of science.
[ Invalid Attachment ]
as Tesla said:“The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence."
... we don't know what consciousness is and attempts to pin it down scientifically are inconclusive, this reply doesn't help much.
How can it be measured? Verified?
When we lose it as in sleep, or under anesthetic, or in dementia, where does it go?
what is the 'subconscious' as opposed to the conscious?
... it doesn't seem valid to say it is independent of our physical bodies.
... no one seems to have been able, nevertheless, to analyse how the people who see things in operating rooms where objects have been placed out of sight, as I originally asked about, can be 'seen'. I know we don't 'see' with our eyes, but with our brains, but that doesn't help explain the latter phenomenon.