I cite the evidence of
near-death experiences with some trepidation, because there are many books
written on this subject which are not scientific or based on any clinical,
cross-cultural, long term study, but rather on a few anecdotes taken to the
extreme. Some of these nonscientific books have rather manipulative agendas,
and some are quite cultic in character. These problematic accounts do not
mitigate the excellent longitudinal studies that have been carried out by von
Lommel et al, reported in the prestigious British medical journal The
Lancet,[1] the two studies carried out by Kenneth
Ring on near-death experiences[2] and his later study of near-death
experiences of the blind,[3] Dr. Melvin Morse’s study of
near-death experiences of children (reported in two articles in the American
Medical Association’s American Journal of Diseases of Children),[4] and Raymond Moody’s
second (more comprehensive) 1988 study.[5]There are additional longitudinal and methodologically
careful studies reported in the Journal of Near-Death Studies published by the
International Association for Near-Death Studies (peer-reviewed).[6]
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario