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Atheists
have deathbed
experiences and near-death experiences just like everyone else does. The philosophy of Positivism, founded by
the famous atheist named A. J.
Ayer, is the philosophy that anything not verifiable by the senses is nonsense. Because NDEs mark the end of the senses, Positivists believe the survival of the senses after death is nonsense. But this philosophy has been challenged by its founder A. J. Ayer himself. Later in life, Ayer had a NDE where he saw a red light. Ayer's NDE
made him a changed man: "My recent experiences, have slightly weakened my
conviction that my genuine death ... will be the end of me, though I
continue to hope that it will be." (Ayer, 1988 a,b)(Read more about it from
an article in the National Post and an article below by Gerry Lougrhan:
Can there be life after
life? Ask the atheist!
by Gerry Lougrhan, Letter_From_London, March 18, 2001
When the famous English novelist, Somerset Maugham, was expiring in France,
aged 91, he summoned the world-class atheist, A.J. Ayer, like a priest to
his deathbed, to reassure him that there was no afterlife. Professor Ayer
duly delivered the words of consolation Maugham longed to hear.
But when Ayer himself was dying two decades later, he wasn't so sure. Having
choked on a piece of smoked salmon that stopped his heart for at least four
minutes, the famed philosopher saw, and heard things he had spent a lifetime
denying.
On his return from he knew not where, Ayer wrote a chagrined but enigmatic
account of what has become known in Britain and beyond as Near Death
Experience.
Millions of people say they have had an NDE, as it is now commonly known,
while many more are thought to have had the experience but are too
embarrassed to talk about it. A Gallup poll in the United States indicated
8-12 million people (approximately the population of New York City) claimed
experience of life beyond the grave; in Britain, a Mori poll showed seven
people out of 10 believed NDEs happened and constituted evidence of an
afterlife.
An intriguing aspect of the claims is their similarity: a tunnel, a rushing
sound, a brilliant light, a feeling of ecstasy and being told it is not yet
time to die. Also frequent are: the out-of-the-body experience in which a
person appears to observe his body from above - often watching medics trying
frantically to revive his corpse; an instantaneous review of a person's
whole life; and sometimes seeing dead friends and family. One woman said she
met a brother she did not know she had. Her father told her later: "You did
have a brother. I am the only one alive who knew about him."
Of the many testaments on record, that of Jack Foreman, a US naval
technician, combines most of the common elements. Foreman was "cooked" by a
radar leak and had major surgery for a large hole in his diaphragm. Several
days later, he appeared to die. "I could look down on my whole body," he
later reported. "One medic was applying electric paddles to my chest to
shock me back and shouting �Breathe, you sonofabitch, breathe.'" They
stabbed needles into his lungs to extract fluid and injected adrenaline
direct into the heart.
Foreman says he saw his entire life pass in seconds: being in the womb, the
ceremony of his Christening, an embarrassing incident as a small boy when he
soiled his pants. He heard a loud rushing noise and appeared to be speeding
through a dark tunnel with a light of unbearable brightness at the end. This
light took human form and he received a message, though not in words, "You
must go back." The tunnel experience happened in reverse.
Because of its radioactive status, Foreman's body had been taken to a
cleaning room. He had a feeling that he re-entered painfully through his
toes and when he spoke, the medics were totally shocked.
The majority of recorded claims link NDEs to feelings of joy and comfort. A
statistician calculated that 69 per cent of the thousands of cases he
investigated reported a feeling of overwhelming love. When he broke his
subjects down by belief (Christian, Religious but non-Christian,
Non-religious, New Age, etc) he found 100 per cent of people calling
themselves atheists had experienced "tremendous ecstasy". Sixty-three per
cent reported the life review experience.
Stories such as these are denounced as laughable by
skeptics, who argue that
some people copy what others have said or project their own childish ideas
of heaven: a robed Jesus, joy, flowers, cottages, even reunions with
deceased pets. The existence of an American society, Hello From Heaven, is
seen as proof of the battiness of these gullible dreamers.
Scientific rebuttal usually refers to residual electrical activity in the
brain cortex. Medics mostly argue that the feeling of peace could be caused
by the release of endorphins in response to extreme stress or cardiac arrest
and
anesthesia of the brain state; neural noise and retino-cortical mapping
could explain the rushing sound, the tunnel and the darkness and light.
Ayer's account of his own NDE, for a man of such formidable intellect, was
surprisingly similar to most of the others on record, though more elegantly
observed. He wrote of "a red light for governing the universe" and some
barrier he crossed, "like the River Styx." The experience, he said,
"weakened my conviction that death would be the end of me, though I continue
to hope it will be."
For Ayer to admit doubt about his life-long conviction "no God, no
afterlife" shook the academic establishment in Britain. As a student, he
had debated with some of the greatest minds in the country, including the
Jesuit Fr. Martin d'Arcy who described Ayer as "the most dangerous man in
Oxford University." Not bad at age 21!
Following the classic route of Eton, Oxford and the (Welsh) Guards, Ayer
became that rare thing, a popularly-known philosopher, mostly through his
appearances on the BBC radio
program, the "Brains Trust."
Serious research on NDEs has been going on since the mid-1970s. What put the
subject back on the front pages was a new revelation concerning the Ayer
experience. Many of his friends felt his published account reflected an
academic's urge to embellish and tease the classical reference to the
River Styx, for example. What's more, the doctor who attended Ayer suspected
the smoked-salmon story was meant to impress his friends. He found no salmon
in his patient's throat, but if you want a truly high-class way of dying,
you couldn't do better than choking on this expensive delicacy!
None of his circle, however, denied Ayer's claim to have had an
extraordinary experience while his heart was stopped. And a year later, his
wife said, "Freddie has been so much nicer since he died." What his friends
questioned was whether his NDE account was the entire truth.
Now the surgeon who attended him has broken a long silence. He told an
author who wrote a play about the affair: "Ayer told me he saw the Supreme
Being." There was no further elucidation. The physician said simply that
when Ayer recovered, "he told me he saw the Supreme Being."
His friends were astounded. Ayer had admitted there was a god! Was this
another joke? If not, why did he withhold it from his story? Was it that he
could not face the possibility that he had built a glittering career on a
false premise?
In the post-Christian age that is Britain today, few people are ready to
admit to belief in the supernatural, at least not if Jesus or God are
involved, though stone circles and pyramid power seem quite acceptable.
However, a London magazine last week carried a strange claim from one of
those least likely to fall victim to delusion, a veteran journalist.
Robert Blair Kaiser is an author and a former correspondent for Time
magazine. Reviewing a book about miracles he wrote: "In 1994, behind the
wheel of my Mercedes, I lurched out of my driveway and was awakened from my
dreamy preoccupation by the sight of a speeding car bearing down on me, not
five feet away on my left. I knew I was a dead man.
"All of a sudden, that car was on my right. The driver weaved a bit, braked
for a moment and then drove off, shaking his head in disbelief, as I was.
For it was clear to me, there was no way he could have missed crashing into
me, no way he could have steered aside. His car had flashed through my car,
his steel and glass and rubber passing through my steel and glass and rubber
like a ray of light through a pane of alabaster."
Kaiser ends his anecdote with a reflection: "This miracle moment was a
turning point in my life, for I took it as a sign that God wasn't finished
with me yet and that I had some new business to attend to."
Mr. Kaiser may well be right. But has he reflected that maybe it was the
other guy God wanted to keep alive?
NDE Researchers
Analyze the NDEs of Atheists
Dr. Barbara Rommer has this to say about
atheist NDEs:
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It appears that disavowing the reality or possibility of
the existence of a Higher Power may contribute to the why of a Less-Than-Positive
(LTP) Experience: 19.4
percent of my LTP study group labeled themselves as atheist or agnostic prior to their
experience. |
Dr. Kenneth Ring
concludes that religious belief is not required:
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Religious orientation was not a factor affecting
either the likelihood or the depth of the near-death experience. An atheist was as likely to have one as was a
devoutly religious person. Regardless of their prior attitudes - whether skeptical or deeply religious - and
regardless of the many variations in religious beliefs and degrees of skepticism from tolerant disbelief to
outspoken atheism - most of these people were convinced that they had been in the presence of some
supreme and loving power and had a glimpse of a life yet to come. Almost all who experienced
a NDE found their lives transformed and a change in their attitudes and values, and in their
inclination to love and to help others. |
Some atheists do not need to have a NDE to have their life changed. Dr. Diane Komp, a pediatric
oncologist at Yale, was transformed by hearing about children's NDE reports, such as that of an
8-year-old with cancer envisioning a school bus driven by Jesus, a 7-year-old leukemia patient hearing a
chorus of angels before passing away. Dr. Komp states the following about
her conversion:
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I was an atheist, and it changed my view of spiritual
matters. Call it a conversion. I came away convinced that these are real spiritual
experiences. |
Dr. PMH Atwater
concluded the following about atheists NDEs:
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No matter what the nature of the
experience, it alters some lives. Alcoholics find themselves unable to imbibe. Hardened criminals opt for a
life of helping others. Atheists embrace the existence of a deity, while dogmatic members of a particular
religion report feeling welcome in any church or temple or mosque. |
Dr. Raymond Moody
concluded that the identity of the Being of Light is based on the
experiencer's religious background::
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Of all the possible near-death elements, the light exerted the greatest
influence on the individual. Patients interpreted the light as a being - a being that radiated love and warmth.
Christians recognized the light as Christ. Atheists identified the spirit only as a
guide.
(The
Light Beyond, p.22)
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Dr. Susan Blackmore
concludes that a belief in an afterlife is not necessary:
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NDEs happen to people
who don't appear to have any need to believe in an afterlife: they are as common among atheists as they are
among the devout. |
In the IANDS FAQ pamphlet
the question is asked: Are the people who have
NDEs very religious? The IANDS answer is:
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People who report NDEs are no better
or worse � and no more or less religious � than in any other cross-section of the population. They come from
many religious backgrounds and from the ranks of agnostics and even atheists. The experience seems more
closely related to a person's life afterwards than to what it was before. |
My own NDE research
shows that atheists who return from a NDE may not believe in a God after
it, but they do return recognizing a higher power in the universe and behind
everything.
Ruth Montgomery gave some examples of the
death experience of an atheist who cares little about others:
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Let us take as an example a person who is so sure that there is no God and no hereafter that he treats
others badly while on Earth and he feels no moral obligation to lend a helping hand or to be a decent citizen.
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When he makes the transition he is angry and tempestuous as he finds himself in a situation of his own
making, surrounded by other greedy souls who, because they are in like situation, welcome him gleefully to
the hell that they have created for themselves. He is shocked. These are not the type of people he wants to
associate with. They are fiendish and ill-mannered, whereas he has been a stiff-necked, educated, and
polished man, although he never gave thought to anyone but himself.
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He tries to break out of the fiendish
group, but they surround him. He calls for help, but no one with a better nature can enter the group to save
him. He has dug his own grave, so to speak, and is allowed to lie in it for a while. He is utterly miserable, for
he now begins to see the folly of his ways but does not know how to avert his fate. He is left there until his
own remorse for sinful ways begins to penetrate his being and he acknowledges to himself that he wasted a
lifetime, a rare privilege, by thinking only of himself. |
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After he reaches full repentance he is then able to free
himself of the unrepentant creatures around him, and for a long time thereafter he searches his own soul to
review the past mistakes. This is sometimes a long, drawn-out process because he will have to make his
way alone. Only he is able to assess his wrongs and seek forgiveness, although there are many here willing
to lend a hand whenever he reaches out to them for it. |
Concerning this example of an atheist's unpleasant NDE, it must be qualified by stating that not all atheists
have unpleasant NDEs.
The description of this atheist's death experience sounds uncannily similar to
Rev. Howard Storm's NDE whom I
profile on this website. Rev. Howard Storm was an atheist who was rescued from hell by Jesus.
While in hell, Storm was subjected to extreme torment and torture by hideously dark souls. The following
passage describes his conversion from atheism while in hell:
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Exactly what happened was ...and I'm not going to try and explain this. From inside of me I felt a voice, my
voice, say: "Pray to God." |
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My mind responded to that: "I don't pray. I don't know how to pray." |
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This is a guy
lying on the ground in the darkness surrounded by what appeared to be dozens if not hundreds and hundreds
of vicious creatures who had just torn him up. The situation seemed utterly hopeless, and I seemed beyond
any possible help whether I believed in God or not. The voice again told me to pray to God. It was a dilemma
since I didn't know how. The voice told me a third time to pray to God. |
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I started saying things like: "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want ...God bless America .." and anything
else that seemed to have a religious connotation. |
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And these people went into a frenzy, as if I had thrown
boiling oil all over them. They began yelling and screaming at me, telling me to quit, that there was no God,
and no one could hear me. While they screamed and yelled obscenities, they also began backing away from
me � as if I were poison. As they were retreating, they became more rabid, cursing and screaming that what I
was saying was worthless and that I was a coward. |
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I screamed back at them: "Our Father who art in heaven," and similar ideas. |
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This continued for some time
until, suddenly, I was aware that they had left. It was dark, and I was alone yelling things that sounded churchy.
It was pleasing to me that these churchy sayings had such an effect on those awful
beings. |
Howard Storm's acknowledgement of a Higher Power led to his rescue from
hell. This suggests that it is the way to leave hell.
Ruth Montgomery gives another example of an atheistic death experience
except that this atheists was a murderer as well.
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What of a murderer who deliberately kills another for his personal gain or satisfaction? This is not a pretty
story.
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Full of hatred or vengeance, he expects to find nothing when he passes through the door called
death, and for a long time that is usually what he finds - nothing. He is in a state like unto death for a goodly
while, until at last something arouses him, and he wakens to find out that the hell he had every reason to
expect is indeed awaiting him. It is not goblins and devils that he sees, but visions of his own face distorted
by hatred, greed, malice, and other defeating emotions. He cringes from the sight, realizing that he sees
himself thus, that he himself was possessed of a devil, and that except for his baser nature he would have
been able unaided to cast him forth.
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He is appalled as he realizes that he wasted a lifetime of opportunity.
Not for him is enrollment in the temple of wisdom or the higher school of learning.
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This soul will stay in
torment for a long, long time, until he believes himself to be totally lost.
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When he eventually reaches this pit of
despair, he may at last cry out to God to rescue him and that wail of despair is heard by God. Other souls are
sent to ease his suffering, and if his will is truly uplifted toward spiritual development, he will slowly, slowly,
slowly begin to work himself upward until he has learned the penalties for taking another's life which was
given by God.
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When he is sufficiently strong to do so, he will accost the person whose life he took, and their
reaction is such as to ring bells in paradise; for, as likely as not, the other soul has conquered self to such an
extent that he has already forgiven the suffering soul who cut short his span of physical life. This forgiveness
uplifts the murderer to such an extent that he is gradually able to take his place in the society of other souls
and finally to learn some of the lessons of salvation.
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Remember that a soul on this side, just as on your side,
is never without help from God and the good souls whom God created in his own image. Ask and ye shall
receive, seek and ye shall find, knock and it will be opened unto you. That is the law of the universe. Ask,
receive; knock, open the door of your mind and let the rays of universal love flow
in.
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The late Betty Bethards was an
experiencer and paranormal researcher who concluded the following about atheists:
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If you don't believe in God or an afterlife, you will probably be kept in a sleep state for the first two to three
day period. You will wake up in a beautiful meadow or some other calm and peaceful place where you can
reconcile the transition from the death state to the continuous life. You are given teachings in the hope that
you do not refuse to believe that you are dead.
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Bethards' analysis agrees with Ruth Montgomery's research who described an atheists being kept in a sleep state for a
short period because of their disbelief of an afterlife.
One particular atheist once emailed me and argued that life outside the physical universe is unlikely. He
stated:
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The picture looks bleak so far for our survival. If the
spiritual universe is completely outside of the material
universe, then it has no true bearing on the physical universe, and if this is the case, then there might as well
be no god. God's existence is only useful if it somehow interacts with us, in the physical universe; after all,
all of our thoughts are determined by molecular motion in the brain. Prayer is initiated in the brain. A
response, if it's valid, must obviously move matter through space-time. Therefore, we have this thorny
problem: |
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If we believe that there is a spiritual universe, how does it interact with the physical universe, of
which we are a part?
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My response to the above remark is:
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me some definitions.
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universe?
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I will assume you are using the traditional definitions. If you define
God as an old man
with a long beard somewhere, then I agree with you that there is no God. But if you define
God the same
way that many experiencers do - that everything is God - then you can come close to
understanding what they know. In other words, denying the existence of a Higher Power
is denying
the existence of everything. In addition to this, it must be stated that the term
God has so many different
meanings by so many different people, that it is virtually meaningless. Perhaps the only meaning of
God is
what a person gives it. After all, we create our own reality and what may be true for one person, may not be
true for another.
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There is evidence that, to some degree, we get what we expect after death. If
your using of the term spiritual universe means you are referring to another reality called
heaven which exists separately from
physical reality, then I would agree with you that such a reality probably does not exist.
Experiencers have some good ideas about this. From a great number of
near-death accounts, one can basically conclude that the realm of life
after death is the realm of the mind and imagination. Today there is some very
compelling circumstantial
evidence that the mind survives physical death. I personally believe life after death means living in pure thought form.
And thoughts are a part of reality as well. Especially if
consciousness survives bodily death as the circumstantial evidence
suggests. |
This same atheist argued that the existence of a God is unlikely.
His reasoning is the following:
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By looking at human behavior as objectively as I can, from an anthropological perspective, all paths lead me
to support the hypothesis that God is the combination of projection and transference of a given culture's
(and individual's) ideals and ideal relationships onto an unseen (yet psychically, very real) entity. Borrowing
from analytic psychology, what I believe happens is the creation (or greater
potentiation) of a complex,
charged emotional contents with attendant thoughts and images, continually reinforced through normal
operant techniques through institutions such as churches and their various rituals. |
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My latest thinking on the
topic of God is that it's hard to look at the DNA sequence for a particular trait (speaking as a software engineer), and not
say:
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"You know, that looks a lot like machine code! And that, in turn, presupposes a
programmer, a Creator!" |
At the same time, this is far removed from the idea of a personal, loving, Christian
God who cares about us individually and will somehow rescue us from extermination at death. Don't get me
wrong: I very much hope that there is a loving God, but in light of what I know of neuroscience, it seems
unlikely. It seems much more likely that we are the miraculous products of natural selection.
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I also believe
that religion is very much man-made, and that if God does exist, he appears to be utterly and absolutely
silent, having nothing to do with humankind, other than in man's dreams, hopes, and fantasies (though these
are products of man's minds). I don't say any of this to be disrespectful, and I'm painfully aware of how
emotional an issue religion is, but I say it in the spirit of honest
exploration. |
My response to this is:
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NDE reports support much, if not all, of what you are saying. Man did
create religion and the idea of god(s). And the idea of a Master DNA programmer
God
does seem much more impersonal than the idea of a Christian God. In fact, both of these ideas are probably the product of human imagination. This, of course, is not to say that
imagination is not real, unless one believes that thoughts are not a part of
reality. The only realistic answer to the question, What is God? is that
God is only a term that represents whatever you
want it to mean. It can mean virtually anything, such as: |
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Father.
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2. Hindus believe God
(Brahman) to be
divinity manifesting everywhere with no exceptions.
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national god.
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| 5. To tribal cults, God may be a stone statue.
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Certainly, people throughout history believed things that seem utterly ridiculous to our enlightened minds. As
stated previously, the idea of God has so many different meanings to different people that it is really
useless to talk about the idea of a God unless a consensus is reached on it's definition.
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Experiencers have much to say about
their experience with God. Many times I have read NDE reports where
experiencers say that God is a reality that words alone cannot adequately describe. Most of the time, we hear
descriptive words such as Love, Life, Light, All, Source, Force, One, Mind,
Consciousness, Vibration, Spirit, Being, etc... But, according to many
experiencers, even
these descriptions are woefully inadequate.
One experiencer described God as:
Another experiencer, Chuck Griswold, stated in the NDE documentary entitled Shadows:
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"Life is love is God. If you
add anymore to this definition then you are not making it any better."
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When experiencers say that life itself is God, they are stating that everything is God, or that everything is a part of God, or that all is God. With this
definition, we may as well state that reality itself is God. For this reason, we should probably just assign the
term God to the toy box and simply say that there is no God. There is only
reality.
My NDE Analysis of 50 NDEs from
this Website
The following is my analysis of 50 NDEs from
this website. More
information about my research methods can be found at the bottom of this web page.
(1) Concerning the NDE aspect of feeling
overwhelming love, more experiencers in the category of atheist
(75%) reported experiencing overwhelming love than any other category of
experiencer.
This highest percentage
may be a reflection of how atheists, more than any other category of
experiencers,
may be more overwhelmed by the love of a God they didn't believe existed. This highest percentage may also be a reflection of how most
atheists get what they don't expect - an experience with God - and get what they need
(divine love).
(2) Concerning the NDE aspect of experiencing mental
telepathy, the percentage of all atheists who
experienced mental telepathy is (65%).
This is not the highest percentage nor the lowest percentage of
people in a particular category who experienced mental telepathy. This is interesting because it may be
assumed that the atheist category of experiencers should be the least category of people open to the paranormal
idea of mental telepathy.
However, it was the non-Christian category that experienced the lowest percentage
of experiencers (50%) experiencing mental telepathy. The highest percentage was in the new age category
which may be a reflection of how mental telepathy is considered more of a new age concept than any other
category of experiencer.
(3) Concerning the NDE aspect of having a life
review, more atheists (100%) reported having a life
review than any other category of experiencer.
This high percentage may be a reflection of how atheists, more than
any other category of experiencer, need a life review to understand their life from God's
perspective. Atheists generally reject the concept of an afterlife. A life review would certainly teach them how the belief in an
afterlife has its advantages. Because atheists do not believe that their actions have divine consequences,
this high percentage of atheist experiencers having a life review may be a reflection of how all atheists
get what
they don't expect - judgment of their life - and get what they need
- a perspective of their life from
God's perspective.
(4) Concerning the NDE aspect of seeing God, the percentage of all atheists who saw a divine being is
(75%).
Although this percentage isn't the highest percentage of all the categories of
experiencers who saw God, it may be
a reflection of how a majority of atheists get what they don't expect
- an experience of God - and get
what they need - knowledge of God. This also demonstrates how people don't have to be religious to
see God after death.
(5) Concerning the NDE aspect of feeling tremendous
ecstasy, the percentage of atheists who experienced
tremendous ecstasy is (50%).
The atheist category is not the category with the highest percentage of
experiencers having tremendous ecstasy. Another point of interest is within the atheist category itself. Because the
percentage of atheists experiencing tremendous ecstasy is equal to those atheists who didn't, this statistic is
basically irrelevant other than it destroys the idea that atheists don't have positive
NDEs.
(6) Concerning the NDE aspect of receiving unlimited
knowledge, more atheists (63%) reported
receiving unlimited knowledge than any other category of experiencer.
Since atheists generally emphasize
knowledge over religious faith, this high percentage may be a reflection of how a majority of atheists
get
what they desire - knowledge - and get what they need - knowledge of
God.
(7) Concerning the NDE aspect of traveling through different afterlife
realms, fewer atheists (25%)
reported traveling through a number of different afterlife realms than any other category of
experiencer.
This low
percentage may be a reflection of how their NDEs are limited in scope because of their disbelief in life after
death. This low percentage may also be a reflection of how a majority of atheists may be
getting what they
expect - a restricted understanding of the afterlife.
(8) Concerning the NDE aspect of being told they are not ready to
die, fewer atheists (13%) reported
being told they were not ready to die than any other category of experiencer.
This low percentage may be a
reflection of how they, more than any other category of experiencer, already knew they were not ready to die (as
was the case with Rev. Howard Storm) and didn't need to be told so. This low percentage may also be a reflection
of how the vast majority of atheists don't get what they don't need -
information that they are not ready to die.
(9) Concerning the NDE aspect of meeting Jesus, the percentage of atheists who reported meeting Jesus is
(50%).
The atheist category is not the category with the highest percentage of
experiencers who met Jesus.
Another point of interest is within the atheist category itself. Because the percentage of atheists who
reported meeting Jesus is equal to those atheists who don't, this may be a reflection of how a person's lack
of religious belief has no relevance when it comes to meeting Jesus. It also means you don't have to be a
Christian to meet Jesus during a NDE.
On the other hand, the relatively large number of atheists who do
meet Jesus may be a reflection of how some atheists get what the don't expect
- an afterlife and
experience of Jesus and get what they need - an experience with a great spiritual
leader and/or get
what they don't desire - knowledge that they were wrong about the afterlife or
Jesus. It may also be a
reflection of the fact that Christianity is the dominant religion in the West were the vast majority of these
experiencers come from.
(10) Concerning the NDE aspect of receiving forgotten
knowledge, fewer atheists (0%) reported
receiving forgotten knowledge than any other category of experiencer. This low percentage of atheists may be a
reflection of how atheists, more than any other category of experiencer, don't believe in a
pre-birth existence. For them, it is possible that forgotten knowledge of life before birth is not realized because they may not be
receptive to the idea. However, the category with the highest percentage of
experiencers receiving forgotten
knowledge are those in the category of being non-religious.
The other categories of experiencers (Christians,
non-Christian religious people, and so-called "new agers") have a percentage that is somewhere in between.
One
interesting thing about this is that Christians generally don't believe in life before birth either, yet a
percentage of them received forgotten knowledge of a life before birth. This may be because Christians are
more open to the idea of an afterlife than atheists are. This low percentage of atheists receiving forgotten
knowledge may be a reflection of how they don't get what they don't expect
- knowledge of life before birth and perhaps not getting what they desire
- knowledge in general.
(11) Concerning the NDE aspect of experiencing
fear, more atheists (50%) reported experiencing fear
than any other category of experiencer.
This high percentage may be a reflection of how atheists, more than any
other category of experiencer, are surprised, if not terrified, in knowing they were wrong about the existence of life
after death. Their denial of the existence of a Higher Power may also cause them to have a terrifying
experience while in the presence of a Higher Power. It may be that their prior disgust of religious people,
such as was the case with Daniel Rosenblit and
Rev. Howard Storm, caused them to be horrified of their
ignorance.
This high percentage may be a reflection of how some atheists
get what they don't expect - earning they were wrong about the existence of an
afterlife. It may also be a reflection of how such atheists get what they deserve
- fearing what they don't know concerning the afterlife.
(12) Concerning the NDE aspect of having a homecoming with family and friends, fewer atheists (0%)
reported having a homecoming, or something similar to it, than any other category of
experiencer.
This low
percentage may be a reflection of how atheists, more than any other category of
experiencer, don't believe in life
after death, including seeing family and friends after death. This low percentage may be a reflection of how
atheists get what they expect - no homecoming.
(13) Concerning the NDE aspect of being told of past
lives, fewer atheists (13%) reported receiving knowledge of past lives.
This low percentage may be a reflection of how atheists, more than any other
category of experiencers, reject the possibility of reincarnation. This low percentage may also be a reflection of
how a majority of atheists get what they expect - not receiving knowledge of past
lives.
Another interesting fact is that Christians today generally don't believe in reincarnation, yet a percentage of
them receive knowledge affirming the reality of reincarnation.
(14) Concerning the NDE aspect of being in or seeing hell, the percentage of atheists who reported experiencing
or seeing hell is (50%).
Because the percentage of atheists who reported experiencing hell is equal to those
atheists who don't, this may be a reflection of how a person's lack of religious belief has no relevance when it
comes to experiencing hell or not experiencing hell. This relatively high percentage may be a reflection of
how atheists may feel they are unworthy of heaven, as was the case with Rev. Howard
Storm, once they realize
they were wrong about God and the afterlife.
Since it can be assumed that people in hell need to be there
because of a hellish spiritual condition, this relatively high percentage of atheists finding themselves in hell
can also be assumed that they are there because of a hellish spiritual condition as well. This relatively large
percentage of atheists in hell may be a reflection of how they get what they need
- a purgatory of their
hellish spiritual condition - and/or get what they expect - self-punishment for not believing in spiritual
matters.
(15) Concerning the NDE aspect of seeing a heavenly City of
light or some variation of this, more atheists (25%)
reported seeing a City of light, or something similar to it, than any other category of
experiencer. This relatively
high percentage may be a reflection of how atheists, more than any other category of
experiencer, get what they
need - a vision of a higher realm of spiritual existence.
This City of light is often described by
experiencers as
being similar to the New Jerusalem, a heavenly city described in the Book of Revelation in the Bible.
According to Revelation, this city comes down from heaven to the Earth sometime in the future. Because
Revelation is highly symbolic, it can be assumed that this city coming down to
Earth is also symbolic.
Nevertheless, because more atheists report seeing this holy city, this may be a reflection of how such
atheists get what they don't expect - knowledge that the Bible contains spiritual
truth - and perhaps they get what they need - receive knowledge that the
Earth will one day be like
heaven.
(16) Concerning the NDE aspect of seeing a Temple of
Knowledge, more atheists (25%) reported
seeing a Temple or Library of knowledge or a Hall of Records than any other category of
experiencer.
This
high percentage may be a reflection of how some atheists, more than any other category of
experiencer, emphasize knowledge over religious faith. It may also be a reflection of how they
get what they desire - knowledge in general and get what they need
- spiritual knowledge - and get what they don't expect - knowledge of life after
death.
(17) Concerning the NDE aspect of witnessing spirits among the living, fewer atheists (0%) reported
seeing spirits among the living than any other category of experiencer. This fact that no atheists saw spirits among
the living may be a reflection of how they, more than any other category of
experiencer, reject the idea of
ghosts, demons, or earthbound discarnates.
It is interesting to note that more Christians (25%)
reported seeing such spirits than any other category of experiencer. This may be a reflection of how Christians
believe in demons more than the other categories of experiencer. The fact that no atheists witnessed such spirits
may be a reflection of how they get what they expect - don't receive knowledge
of demons and ghosts.
(18) Concerning NDEs that occur due to a suicide attempt, fewer atheists (0%) reported having a NDE
resulting from a suicide attempt than any other category of experiencer.
The fact that none of these atheists made a
suicide attempt may be a reflection of how they, more than any other category of
experiencer, reject the concept of
an afterlife and are more connected to physical life than the other categories of
experiencers who may be more heavenly minded and therefore have a lesser connection to physical life. This may also show that atheists
would probably be less likely to commit suicide than those who believe in a life after death. On the other
hand, those who believe in life after death may have an even stronger reason not to commit suicide - the fear
of having to go to hell because of it.
(19) Concerning seeing the Devil during a NDE, no category of
experiencers saw the Devil.
This is significant because
atheists get what they expect - no Devil. The category of religious
experiencers who believe in the existence
of the Devil (0%) and get what they desire - no Devil - and perhaps don't get what they expect
- don't receive an affirmation of the existence of the Devil.
In summary, the following conclusions
can be drawn:
A. Compared to the other categories of
experiencers, more
people in the atheists category experienced [1] fear, [2] life review,
[3] overwhelming love, [4] unlimited knowledge, [5]
temple of knowledge and [6] city of light, than in any other category of
experiencer.
B. These six aspects are part of
the total of 21 aspects found in many NDEs.
C. Of these six NDE aspects, two
of them (feeling overwhelming love
and experiencing a life review) are in the top three most common aspects of the 21 total aspects researched.
D. Compared to the other categories of
experiencers, fewer people in the atheist category [1] attempted suicide,
[2] saw
spirits among the living, [3] received a homecoming, [4] received forgotten knowledge,
[5] received past life
knowledge, and were [6] told they are not ready to die, than in any other category of
experiencer.
E. Of these six NDE
aspects, two of them (saw spirits among the living and committed suicide) are in the bottom
three most common
aspects of the 21 total aspects researched.
F. These conclusions show that more atheists experienced
two of the three most common aspects and more atheists experienced two
of the three least common aspects. This shows that
more atheists experience both extremes - the top three common NDE aspects and the bottom
three common NDE aspects. Could this statistic be a reflection of how extreme atheism is? It is anyone's guess.
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"From what may anyone be saved? Only from themselves! That is, their individual hell. They dig it with their own desires." -
Edgar Cayce |
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