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April 15,
2005
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Newsletter |
Vol. 04 No. 04 Ed. 2 |
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The
Near-Death Newsletter
is a free semi-monthly newsletter which is emailed to subscribers every 1st of
the month and on every 15th of the month. The mission of this newsletter is to
inform, enlighten, entertain, and aid the public in understanding the latest in
all things concerning the NDE and related phenomena by promoting
IANDS
(International Association for Near-Death Studies), NDE researchers,
experiencers, multimedia resources, and events. Disclaimer: This newsletter is
not affiliated with IANDS; but the creator of this newsletter,
Kevin Williams, is a member of IANDS who is dedicated to the IANDS mission.
IANDS is the premier organization for NDE research. Membership gives you access
to subscribe to their prestigious
Journal of Near-Death Studies and their newsletter
Vital Signs. You can
join online right from their website. Get connected with the people and
organization which will likely provide the world with the evidence of our
survival after death. |
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Archive of NDEs in the News
- Read all the major news articles
concerning the NDE and related phenomena
from 1995 to current. This is a
permanent archive to ensure that these
news articles will always be available
on the internet. The Near-Death News
section of this Near-Death Newsletter
will soon be available in syndication so
stay tuned! |
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(April 15, 2005) |
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April 22 - 27, 2005:
7th Conference on Science & Consciousness in Santa Fe, NM - Presenters include: Gary Schwartz, Stanislav &
Christiana Grof, Charles Tart, Lee Baumann, Peter Russell, and Joseph Chilton
Pearce |
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May 14 -15, 2005:
International
Parapsychology Conference in Istanbul, Turkey - Presenters include: Gary Schwartz, P.M.H. Atwater,
Janet Cunningham, John Palmer |
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May 20 – 29, 2005:
SSF-IIIHS
International Conference Montreal, QC, Canada - Presenters include: Raymond Moody, Melvin Morse,
Joyce Hawkes, Sean David Morton |
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June 24 - 27, 2005: ASSC
Annual Conference, Pasadena, California - Association for the Scientific Study of
Consciousness' annual conference |
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August 17-20, 2005: TSC Annual
Conference, Copenhagen, Denmark - Toward a Science of Consciousness annual conference |
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Sept. 8 - 10, 2005: IANDS
Annual Conference, Virginia Beach, Virginia - "Message and Meaning: Using the Near-Death
Experience as a Tool for Living." |
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Sept. 16 - 18, 2005:
CEP Annual
Conference, Oxford, UK - Consciousness and Experiential Psychology annual
conference |
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Sept. 18 - 26, 2005:
P.M.H. Atwater's
"Sacred Journey Carnival Cruise" - Puerto Rico, U.S. & British Virgin Islands. Call
(800) 624-7718 for reservations. |
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Visit the NDE Events Around The World page
for more conference info |
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EXETER, NEW HAMPSHIRE |
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"My heart literally burst,"
Rodgers said. "The priest was waiting for me when I got to the hospital to give
me last rites. I remember looking at him and at the doctors, and everything went
black." From there, Rodgers said he heard the doctors crack his chest, heard
medical terms being used, and also visited the hospital chapel - while the
medical team was operating on him. "There were people in the chapel crying, a
man who lost his daughter that day, another woman. There was no priest there,
just those people," Rodgers said. "It was very odd." Rodgers said when he
visited the chapel after his recovery it looked exactly as he'd seen it earlier,
though he'd never actually been inside. [Read
more] |
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ANCHORAGE, ALASKA |
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I was visiting my neighbor Don,
a retired fisherman, when he got talking about an old school friend who nearly
drowned after falling through the ice while clamming. When the lifesaving crew
reached him, his buddy punched the first rescuer in the head. Later, he told Don
that he had heard glorious music, seen bright lights and felt warm and content.
He was more than a little ticked at being pulled back onto the dark, freezing
shore. "After that he wasn't afraid of anything," Don told me. Hertz, our
electrician, used to be a logger. He once was hit by a falling tree and had what
he knows was a vision of the next world. He says he felt completely free as he
hovered above the people who eventually brought him back to life. Hertz is
Catholic and seems to accept death better than most of us do. [Read
more] |
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DECATUR, ILLINOIS |
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In that instance, Clack felt
the sensation of rising out of bed, pain-free, moving into "the pure white
light. I could feel the warmth of the light, the cool freshness of the air
rushing around me, the sweet scent of a field of wildflowers and the most
beautiful soft music I had ever heard." "Without question, I was entering
paradise, but as I did, I was also seeing myself lying on the bed below and
watching the doctors and nurses frantically trying to resuscitate me and stop
the blood flow." When it occurred to her that leaving her family and new baby
would not only be a shock but a hardship, she came back to that "aching body,
convulsing and begging them to let me go back." That experience has enabled her
to know the material values of the world aren't as important as family and love.. [Read
more] |
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CINCINNATI, OHIO |
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Howard Storm
spent three years at the United Theological Seminary in Dayton and became pastor
for the
United Church of Christ ... He will
then devote himself to a non-profit he calls Mission to Belize. The focus is on
the Mayan village of San Victor, situated in a flat stretch of cane country
about a mile from the Mexican border. "If the people there were any poorer,
they'd be dead," Howard said ... Every other month or so, Howard puts together
teams of whoever wants to go - a batch
of 50 from Brossart and Holy Cross high schools is heading down for 10 days in
June, followed by church groups from Evansville and Mason ... On an early visit
there three years ago, he asked the people what the village needed most. "The
universal answer was, 'We need a church,'" he says.. [Read
more] |
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BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS |
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Most people say they believe in
an afterlife. Over the centuries artists, poets and philosophers have struggled
to capture celestial splendor in words and images. It seems that we are all
anxious to believe in heaven as a blissful resting place, a kind of reward for
all our earthly labors -- yet few of us know much about it -- and it's clear
that people have questions. Books dealing with the subject like "The Five People
You Meet in Heaven" and "Left Behind" are perennial bestsellers. So why is it
that we are so interested in what happens after we die? Is heaven a particularly
Western obsession? And what are the important differences between how other
faiths understand the afterlife? Exploring life after death, human notions of
immortality. [Read
more] |
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LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM |
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Dr. Peter Fenwick, a
neuropsychiatrist at the Institute of Psychiatry, in London, works on near-death
experiences. Fenwick is also chair of the Scientific and Medical Network, which
held its annual Mystics and Scientists conference last weekend. Charla Devereux,
of the network, says: “Research into the paranormal is becoming more accepted by
the scientific establishment, particularly among younger academics. There will
always be scepticism, but that's no problem as long as minds aren't closed. And
on the other side there is still a lot of flakiness. So it can be difficult
walking a central road to get the best from both sides.” Patricia Robertson has
conducted triple-blind experiments on mediums alongside Professor Roy. She says:
“We are convinced that some mediums can impart to a sitter information about
people who have died that they couldn't possibly know in any normally accepted
way. I'm not saying that it comes from the dead, but the most plausible
explanation is that the information is coming from the deceased personalities.” [Read
more] |
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SAN
FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA |
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Scientists writing in the
journal Nature Neuroscience have described their experiments with a completely
blind British man who "possesses an apparent sixth sense that lets him recognize
emotions on people's faces." This 52-year-old lab subject somehow uses a part of
his brain not normally used for sight to process visual signals linked to
emotions. When the scientists showed him images of circles and squares, he could
only guess at what they were at an accuracy no greater than chance expectation.
But when he was presented with photos of happy, sad or fearful human faces, his
accuracy rate became uncanny, far beyond chance. Brain scans taken when he was
sensing the faces showed an activation of the brain's right amygdala, which
responds to non-verbal emotional signs. [Read
more] |
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BREMERTON, WASHINGTON |
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 With a reputation as a painter
of spirits and angels, near-death experiencer Peter Teekamp is auctioning
coincidence on eBay. Convinced after a lifetime of connections and discoveries
that his life's work was meant to help make the point in a powerful way that we
have all been here before. Teekamp believes the only way to illustrate that fact
is with the physical evidence of more than 200 of his paintings and 250 drawings
dating back to the early 1970'S ... As completely ironic and unbelievable as it
sounds, in December 2003 Teekamp discovered and purchased what is believed to be
a century-old Gauguin masterpiece charcoal drawing. The unsigned charcoal is
understood to be one of the first Tahitian Gauguin compositions that was said to
have 'not survived' ... The phenomenal chains of coincidence and well-researched
art and quotes from Gauguin come in the form of a manuscript, a journal filled
with sparks and Hollywood-style magic that read like pure fiction and yet all
100% true. In addition to the mystical Teekamp art collection and the publicized
Gauguin drawing, this one-of-a-kind auction adds a bonus gift to the successful
bidder of 50% net book royalties for the next five years for the yet unpublished
true story. [Read
more] |
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CALCUTTA, INDIA |
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A three-decade-old
Indo-American research project suggests reincarnation might actually be a
scientific fact ... Bangalore's National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro
Sciences (NIMHANS) and the University of Virginia have been studying and
documenting reincarnation since 1974. The three-decade-old research is now
throwing up results. “We now have enough evidence to believe in reincarnation,”
says Dr Satwant Pasricha, head of department, clinical
psychology, NIMHANS ... One of Pasricha's early subjects was Naresh Kumar. He
was born in 1981 in Baznagar, a village near Lucknow. By the age of four, Naresh
was talking of a past life. He called himself Mushir Ali, and said he had lived
in a nearby village, Kakori and had died in a road accident while carrying
mangoes in his horse-cart. The researchers thought it was significant that
Naresh's favourite game as a child was to tie a rope to his bed and pretend to
drive a horse-cart. When Naresh's parents took him to Kakori, he said he
recognised Mushir Ali's family, friends and relatives. The researcher points out
that Naresh was born with a depression on his chest — and Mushir Ali's
post-mortem report said he had been hit at the same spot. [Read
more] |
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HOPKINSVILLE, KENTUCKY |
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A documentary film about
Hopkinsville native and renowned psychic Edgar Cayce won the Directors' Choice
Award Sunday at the 11th annual Sedona International Film Festival in Sedona,
Ariz. "Edgar Cayce, Beautiful Dreamer" was also selected as the "Festival
Favorite" and "Most Thought-Provoking Documentary" during the four-day event ...
The hour-long documentary traces Cayce's life from his birth near Hopkinsville
in 1877 to his death in Virginia Beach, Va., in 1945. Using his skills as a
clairvoyant, Cayce is credited with more than 14,000 medical diagnoses and
readings while under hypnosis. He is known worldwide as the "Sleeping Prophet." [Read
more] |
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Related articles of interest: |
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SEOUL,
KOREA |
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Will an asteroid hit Earth this
century, threatening to end all life as featured by such disaster movies as
"Armageddon"' and "Deep Impact?" Experts point out there is no cause for public
concern as an actual collision is very unlikely despite recent reports on the
substantial odds of an asteroid catastrophe in the mid-2030s. "Current risk
analysis of near-Earth asteroids (NEAs), including 2004 MN4, indicates that no
Earth encounters are of big concern for this century,'' said Yonsei University
professor Byun Yong-ik. Byun added that NEAs have constantly passed nearby or
sometimes hit the Earth for the past 4.6 billion years after the solar system
was formed and there is no reason to worry now. [Read
more] |
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Related articles of interest: |
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NEW
YORK CITY, NEW YORK |
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Time may indeed be on your
side. If you can just last another quarter century. By then, people will start
lives that could last 1,000 years or more. Our human genomes will be modified to
include the genetic material of microorganisms that live in the soil, enabling
us to break down the junk proteins that our cells amass over time and which they
can't digest on their own. People will have the option of looking and feeling
the way they did at 20 for the rest of their lives, or opt for an older look if
they get bored. Of course, everyone will be required to go in for age
rejuvenation therapy once every decade or so, but that will be a small price to
pay for near-immortality. This may sound like science fiction, but Aubrey de
Grey thinks this could be our reality in as little as 25 years. Other scientists
caution that it is far from clear whether and for how long science can stall the
inevitable. [Read
more] |
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Related articles of interest: |
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LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM |
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Japanese entertainment giant
Sony has patented an idea for transmitting data directly into the brain, with
the goal of enabling a person to see movies and play video games in which they
smell, taste and, perhaps, even feel things -- the patent, which is based only
on a theory and not on any invention, marks the first step towards a “real-life
Matrix”. In the science fiction film of that name, cyber-reality is projected
into the brains of people via an electrode feed at the back of their necks. In
Sony's patent, the technique will be entirely non-invasive -- it will not use
brain implants or other surgery to manipulate the brain. The patent has few
details, describing only a device that will fire pulses of ultrasound at the
head, to modify the firing patterns of neurons in targeted parts of the brain.
The aim, it says, is to create “sensory experiences”, ranging from moving images
to tastes and sounds. [Read
more] |
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WASHINGTON, DC |
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One problem is that there are
too many definitions! And getting these four guests to agree on what
consciousness is and what causes it, is a fun but hopeless task that is
revelatory at the same time. These four leading brain scientists couldn't even
agree on at what level a simple "memory" was stored, whether as a gross "brain
circuit," at the synapse between nerve cells, or in the microstructure of the
nerve cells as some sort of quantum effect. But why should it be any different
now? Philosophers have debated the "mind-body problem" and the existence of
"free will" for thousands of years. However, never before have we been in a
position to examine the brain with such precision. Even as we begin to
understand the deep science that underlies our cognitive processes, there is no
letup in arguments whether we are anything other than automata, just reacting to
stimuli -- vastly more complex than a bacterium to be sure -- but fundamentally
little different. [Read
more] |
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ALBERTA, CANADA |
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Computer scientists at the U of
A have already created technology allowing people to sit across from
three-dimensional recreations of each other, even though in reality they may be
thousands of miles apart ... Imagine a world, for example, where professors of
surgery transmit hand and scalpel movements, as well as what they see while
operating, thousands of miles across a computer network, where it is recreated
in an operating room ... Families separated by travel will spend meals together
through what is called "telepresence," said Boulanger. "You would wear special
goggles - and we're working on that - which would allow you to see your wife
sitting in front of you, having a day-to-day conversation. In the future you
will have virtual encounters like this, people you want to be part of a meeting
sitting beside you virtually and having a conversation." [Read
more] |
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Related articles of interest: |
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SAN
FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA |
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The surprise indie hit film
"What the Bleep Do We Know?" tackles some of life's biggest questions, without
really answering them: Where have we been? Why are we here? Where are we going?
Part documentary, part feature, it's a quirky film that draws parallels between
the mysteries of quantum physics -- a mind-expanding field whose findings
suggest many so-called laws of science are a lot less ironclad than we once
thought -- and some of humankind's most vexing spiritual queries. [Read
more] |
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Related news articles of interest: |
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SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA |
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A legislative committee Tuesday
approved a measure modeled after an
Oregon law that would allow the terminally ill to end their lives with a
doctor's assistance ... Supporters said the measure would give people with no
more than six months to live the choice to end their lives with a
self-administered drug prescribed by a physician ... Former Oregon Gov. Barbara
Roberts testified for the bill, saying Oregon's assisted-suicide law — the only
one of its kind in the nation — has been used sparingly and properly and has led
to better care for people facing death. "The law has broad and deep political
and public support in our state," she said. [Read
more] |
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WASHINGTON, DC |
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I want Terri Schiavo to die
because I believe she's earned it. I don't view death as the end of the journey
of a human soul. I view it as a transition ... I cannot believe that it is God's
plan that the life experiences of a man; wisdom gained, lessons learned and love
experienced, should, upon death, disappear as if they never were. I believe that
there's something to follow the life we know on this Earth; and I believe that
most of the people fighting to keep the body of Terri Schiavo alive feel the
same way. These feelings give rise to some questions of my own; questions for
the devoutly religious people who are fighting to keep Terri Schiavo alive. Do
you believe in God's promise of everlasting life? Do you believe that the reward
for a life well spent on this Earth is a life with God in heaven after you die?
If you do, then a few more questions if you will. Do you believe that the human
soul can make the transition to everlasting life while the human body that
carried that soul through life clings to life on this Earth? If you do, then you
must surely believe that Terri Schiavo has earned and is already enjoying her
reward in heaven. That being the case, why is it so important to you that the
now-unneeded body of Terri Schiavo is kept alive? [Read
more] |
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BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA |
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Dr. Ronald Cranford, a brain
death expert at the University of Minnesota, represented Michael Schiavo at a
2002 court hearing, testifying that he was convinced Terri Schiavo was in a
persistent vegetative state. Cranford said medical providers could face
additional legal and ethical issues in coming years as a large portion of the
country's population passes retirement age. He said many Americans, including
himself and his wife, may refuse to enter a nursing home even if their health is
declining. "That's a controversial issue, but it's a fact of life," he said. In
North Dakota, a bill awaiting Gov. John Hoeven's signature, would combine parts
of the states existing laws for living wills and durable powers of attorney for
health care. Wetzel and others who supported the measure say it will make the
delicate matter of registering how one wants to be cared for in one's final days
less confusing. Jane Voglewede, a lawyer for MeritCare Health System of Fargo,
said widespread publicity about the Schiavo case has left many North Dakotans
with the incorrect perception that medical, legal and ethical questions about
withholding or ending life-sustaining treatment are unsettled. Many of those
issues have been decided, she said. It was the lack of a binding document
showing Schiavo's medical wishes that made the case difficult to resolve,
Voglewede said. "It's not whether or not you can do this. It's whether she made
her wishes clear," Voglewede said.. [Read
more] |
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Related news articles of interest: |
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(April 15, 2005) |
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For the sake of your family,
download the "Five Wishes" Living Will now. The Five Wishes Living Will is
unique in that it is valid in 36 states and was created by the nation's leading
experts in end-of-life care with the help of the American Bar Association. It
serves the function of BOTH a living will AND a durable power of attorney so you
don't need to have both. And it is void of "lawyer speak" and is very easy to
use. All you have to do is check a box, circle a direction, or write a few
sentences. The Five Wishes Living Will has been featured on CNN and NBC's
Today Show and in the pages of Time and Money magazines. Newspapers have called
"Five Wishes" the first "living will with a heart." [Download
the PDF] |
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Then submit your
completed Five Wishes document to the U.S. Living Will Registry |
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At the
NDE Online Store you can find NDE products
such as books, documentaries, movies, music,
magazines, and journals. More NDE media products
are coming. |
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by John R. Violette |
(Availability:
May 2005) |
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The author explains the science
of events such as UFOs and abductions, mystical and psychic phenomena, and the
near-death experience -- events that shouldn't exist in a 3-D world, but which
happen everyday. An advancement of the classic theories of R. M. Bucke and P. D.
Ouspensky, this book presents the larger framework of space and time necessary
for understanding how psychic phenomena happen and why some people experience it
while others don't. In the tradition of recent bestsellers "The Holographic
Universe"
and "The Field," independent scholar Violette explains why a 3-D worldview
simply doesn't work and why expanded consciousness is the missing link in
current extra-dimensional theories. [Read
more] |
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by Jaap Hiddinga |
(Availability:
May 2005) |
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Visions and out-of-body
experiences are not uncommon, but few have been experienced in such depth, and
articulated with such clarity, as those of Jaap Hiddinga. He began to have them
as a young child, and out of the thousands he has accumulated since then he
presents here some of the most powerful. They range from the Christ awareness
that came into the world at the birth of Jesus to travels in other dimensions,
in other times, in this universe and beyond. Along the way he raises questions
and suggests answers about the origins of Christianity, the nature of the
quantum world, the links between the earthly and spiritual worlds, and the
future of humanity. [Read
more] |
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by Allan Kellehear |
(Availability:
Now) |
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The forty short reflections in
this book address the ways in which we face the prospect of death and loss. The
first twenty reflections are designed to be read by (or to) anyone living with a
life-threatening illness; the other twenty are reflections on living with grief,
especially bereavement. Each reflection is based on a single story drawn from
one of three sources: Dr. Kellehear's professional experience with individuals
living with dying or loss; his own experiences and stories from childhood; and
the retelling of some of the great myths and legends about life, love, and
death, selected from around the world-from Ireland to Japan, from Melanesia to
China. These reflections are stories about how we can make the most of life in
the shadow of death and loss. They are designed to instill hope and meaning in
the difficult times that can accompany human mortality. [Read
more] |
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by Anneli Rufus |
(Availability:
May 2005) |
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The longer we live, the more
people around us will die. This book helps us tell the truth - to ourselves, to
the dead, and to each other. Revisiting the deaths of many people she has known
including loved ones, casual acquaintances, children and adults, friends and
enemies - prize-winning journalist Anneli Rufus gives powerful, eloquent voice
to everyone who has ever lost anyone and whose reactions wouldn't fit into the
standard template of "feel sad, cry, then get over it." [Read
more] |
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by J. Allan Danelek |
(Availability:
May 2005) |
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In 1952, an American housewife
under hypnosis recalled living a previous life in eighteenth century Ireland as
Bridey Murphy. This case became widely publicized and sparked a Western interest
in reincarnation that continues today. With arguments supporting and debunking
the validity of the famous Bridey Murphy case and the plausibility of rebirth,
how can one intelligently decide if reincarnation is fantasy or truth? Examining
the debate from viewpoints of science, religion, psychology, and logic, J. Allan
Danelek helps readers understand this controversial issue from all sides. He
takes a discerning look at past life regression, scientific explanations, common
religious/philosophical objections, and reincarnationist concepts in Gnostic
Christianity. Danelek also poses theories that explain the mechanical process
and purpose of rebirth. [Read
more] |
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by Jaegwon Kim and Harry Frankfurt |
(Availability:
May 2005) |
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Contemporary discussions in
philosophy of mind have largely been shaped by physicalism, the doctrine that
all phenomena are ultimately physical. Here, Jaegwon Kim presents the most
comprehensive and systematic presentation yet of his influential ideas on the
mind-body problem. He seeks to determine, after half a century of debate: How
much physicalism can we lay claim to? He begins by laying out mental causation
and consciousness as the two principal challenges to contemporary physicalism.
How can minds exercise their causal powers in a physical world? Is a physicalist
account of consciousness possible? Mind-body reduction is required to save
mental causation. But are minds physically reducible? Kim argues that all but
one type of mental phenomena is reducible, including intentional mental
phenomena, such as beliefs and desires. The apparent exceptions are the
intrinsic, felt qualities of conscious experiences ("qualia"). Kim argues,
however, that certain relational properties of qualia, in particular their
similarities and differences, are behaviorally manifest and hence in principle
reducible, and that it is these relational properties of qualia that are central
to their cognitive roles. The causal efficacy of qualia, therefore, is not
entirely lost. According to the author, then, while physicalism is not the whole
truth, it is the truth near enough. [Read
more] |
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by Sylvia Browne and Chris
DuFresne |
(Availability:
Now) |
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The renowned psychic Sylvia
Browne and her son explain for pet owners what animals experience when their
life on Earth is over and what is waiting for them when they return home to the
other side. Popular questions such as "Does my pet miss me?" "Did he know I
loved him?" "Can he hear me when I talk to him?" "Can he come back to visit me?"
and "How will I be able to find my pet when I go home?" are answered. The story
begins when the spirit of Sylvia Browne's dog, Jolie, leaves her body and goes
home to live on the other side. Jolie runs, jumps, and plays with her eternal
friends all around the world, devoid of the pain and suffering she was
experiencing on Earth. This is a comforting account of a pet's journey through
one life and onto the next that explains how animals enjoy eternal happiness
right alongside the people who love them. [Read
more] |
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(3) |
IANDS in the
Spotlight |
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Support
NDE Research by Buying NDE Books, |
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Videos,
and Other NDE Products! |
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Last
modified on
July 10, 2006 |
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visitors |
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"The mind is its own place,
and in itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven." - John Milton |
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Recommended |
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NDE Books |
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On Life After Death |
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by
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross |
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This is the world-famous best-seller by the
woman who popularized the field of thanatology
as a subject for general social commentary. |
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Life After Life |
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by
Raymond Moody |
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Dr. Moody
investigated more than 100 case studies of
people who experienced a NDE and in 1975
published this best-seller. |
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Mindsight |
by Kenneth Ring, et al. |
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Dr. Ring and
associates investigated the astonishing claim
that blind persons, including those blind from
birth, can actually "see" during a NDE. They
present their findings in scrupulous detail and
include fascinating case histories. |
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The New Children and Near Death Experiences |
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by
P.M.H. Atwater |
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P.M.H. Atwater
provides compelling evidence for the existence
of a generation of children who experienced a
NDE and represent the spiritual evolution of the
human race. Atwater shows that understanding the
NDEs of children can help us prepare for a
quantum leap in the evolution of humanity. |
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Where God Lives |
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by
Melvin Morse |
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Dr. Morse presents
the scientific evidence of life after death
which is being overlooked by skeptics such as
the existence of a location in our brains that
communicates with God and the universe.
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Light and Death |
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by
Michael Sabom |
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Dr. Sabom combined
scientific research and dramatic narrative in
the first book to seriously explore the
relationship between the NDE and traditional
Christian experience. |
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Lessons from the Light |
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by
Kenneth Ring, Evelyn Elsaesser Valarino |
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An outstanding book that presents intriguing
evidence to support the theory that NDEs are an authentic, objective experience,
and not the hallucination of a dying brain. |
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Blessing in Disguise |
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by
Barbara Rommer |
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Even the most horrifying NDEs are a spiritual
wake-up call that causes the person to stop, look back, and review past choices
which makes it the ultimate learning experience. |
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Descent Into Death |
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by
Howard Storm |
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An atheistic professor dies, goes to hell, is
rescued by Jesus, is shown the future, returns to life, then becomes a minister. |
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Ordered to Return |
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by
George Ritchie |
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This is the profound NDE testimony which inspired
Raymond Moody to begin his groundbreaking research of the NDE. |
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Embraced by the Light |
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by
Betty Eadie |
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A woman describes one of the most detailed and
profound NDE ever documented and becomes a New York Times bestseller. |
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When Ego Dies |
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by
Diane Corcoran, et al |
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A compilation of NDE and mystical conversion experiences
described in their very own words. |
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After The Light |
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by
Kimberly Clark Sharp |
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Kimberly's profound life-changing NDE led her to
conclude that death is not to be fear; therefore, a life without fear can be
lived to the fullest. |
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Love Is The Link |
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by
Pamela Kircher |
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A seasoned hospice doctor shares her experience of
near-death and dying in this unique and deeply moving book. |
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The Truth In The Light |
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by
Peter & Elizabeth Fenwick |
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One of the world's foremost NDE experts conducted a
thorough study of more than 300 NDEs and presents his analysis. |
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Journey Of Souls |
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by
Michael Newton |
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A hypnotherapist regressed clients back to a point
in time between past lives -- the time before birth and after death -- to
discovery what happens after death. |
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Hello From Heaven |
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by
Bill & Judy Guggenheim |
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This is the "Bible" of the after-death communication
(ADC) phenomenon and the groundbreaking study in the field. |
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Saved By The Light |
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by
Dannion Brinkley, Paul Perry |
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Brinkley recounts how his own NDEs
brought him before 13 angelic instructors in the "cathedral of knowledge" where
he was given visions of the future. |
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Closer To The Light |
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by
Melvin Morse, Paul Perry |
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One of the best books on the NDEs of children by a
renowned pediatrician and leader in the field of NDE research. |
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The Place We Call Home |
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by
Robert Grant |
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"This is the handbook we need to help us prepare for
the realms to come." -- George Ritchie, Jr., M.D., author of Return from
Tomorrow |
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God At The Speed Of Light |
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by
T. Lee Baumann |
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Learn how quantum physics, NDE
research, and religious studies share a common central theme: the god-like
nature of light. |
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