Do you expect NDE's (Near Death Experiences) are valid?

Dying, seeing the white light and the tunnel, making peace with God and them coming back- what do you think?
Answers:
There is no 100% confidence. I suggest you invest some time in philosophy and logic studies to understand my assertion. Certainty does not exist, but conviction does.

The response you question seem logical and has good biochemical basis, but it lacks honest comprehension of the thought process. No person exactly understands the mind / matter interface. That is, we reckon we know how we know, but our knowledge of knowledge is limited by our thinking process, a process to be precise a mystery. That is, knowing depends on a seemingly infinite feedback loop of idea and confirmation that doubles back on itself. Science finds confirmation in mutual agreement, while spirituality finds confirmation surrounded by mutual agreement. I am attempting to summarize the equivalent of a masters degree in cognition in a single paragraph, an in full view impossibility. But, I hope you get the point that certainty does not exist. The concept of knowledge itself is suspect. Thus, adjectives we can be left with is belief and conviction.

I believe in an "afterlife", which I prefer to deem of as an "after-organism". Life exceeds the chemistry it uses to be alive. I believe that physics is manipulated by life to permit physical presence. This is both biblical and "latest age" at the same time. This is my conviction.

Neither the biological or biochemical perspective of the first response nor the spiritual response I present supports the "light in the tunnel" events as solid. Yet, both present plausible explanation of the reports.

In other words, the memories of the folk who have near death experiences can be considered as honest, but the significance of those experiences is still open for debate. My conviction is that no living person enters surrounded by to the presence of God and returns to report it. But, I could be wrong.

You seek conviction. You will not find it in Yahoo Answers.
It is hard to say. Many of destruction phenomena can be scientifically explained but there have been some bizarre things that have not been explained. There have be incidents where the deceased suddenly came hindmost to life in the morgue and explained conversations the doctors and nurses had and strangely they be accurate. The scary thing was that the human being was dead. Other experiences were empire who died in surgery and were brought back to life span through CPR and were able to explain all the Instruments, clothes the doctor and nurses wore, the layout of everything and even what a sticky label said on the side of the overhead lamp that could only be read from the ceiling looking down in the room. Scary adequate the description was right all the way down to what everyone did at what time and the human being not only was dead but could not enjoy known any of that. Not even what the tag said on the lamp limp from the ceiling.
Are NDE's real experiences? Of course they are. But what do they mean?

I'm totally cool beside it if you think you've talked to God, looked down at your still body, or even if it's just that you saw your entire time flash in front of you.

But you might consider what happens to your body, what physical processes are going on during these experiences. Your body is paralyzed, much as it should be during sleep. So the feeling of floating should be expected to be adjectives. And your brain supports a sophisticated and realistic model of what your body is doing. This is that body your brain can't talk to anymore. So a vision of your body isn't surprise. You're designed to have one. Your brain is becoming oxygen starved, and the hungriest part of your brain is that bit which deals next to vision. So one should expect to see a white light, or darkening around the edges. And if you give attention to the end is coming, this is clearly your last chance to review everything.

No one can say-so with certainty that an NDE isn't an experience of God. But i don't happen to believe surrounded by a God that chooses to communicate with me only at the instant of death. There's plenty of time latter. Nor do i believe in an omniscient God that doesn't even know when i'm not really going to die after all. (In truth, my God died last Friday - and we call upon that a Good day! Really - I'm not making this up!) So with the physical evidence, which is evidence that i can check with experiment beside my own eyes and other senses, it's OK with me if you believe it, but i don't.
The tunnel is nothing less then the presence of the other dimension that penetrates this matter one. This happens when one is absolutely certain that he have discovered and achieved the real reason or purpose of his existence, as he know it, at that moment in time. Source(s): Personal experience.
They're TRUE, in the same way that dreams or hallucination are real. They are experienced. They take place in the brain as it loses control over its deep functions, due to oxygen loss or toxic buildup.

My opinion. A simple theory that doesn't require a new, supernatural, undetectable force.

Only fools, fanatic or madmen are 100% certain of anything.
Been there after a reaction from a medication which artificial my breathing. There is that light and tunnel feeling with a diplomatic glow, but it faded when breathing restarted.After that never felt afraid of death again.You get hold of a feeling of accepting what will eventually happen and when other people vote the same thing, you believe them.It's real. Source(s): NJ RN
At, or near, death your neurons (brain cells) fire off their electrical impulse almost at once. Maybe this is a last ditch attempt by your body to get vital organs going again. I don't know. But, this mass electrical discharge results within much more of your neurotransmitters flowing into the synapses than usual. This may be interpreted by your brain as a white light--maybe at the end of a long tunnel--and if dopamine and serotonin predominate in your synapses, then you will experience an almost pleasurable consciousness, like being at peace with the world and yourself--you may interpret this as making peace near god.
This is an inward journey that can be done without having an NDE, or using drugs. Try meditation, or conceivably a 'vision quest' .

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