The handbook of near-death experiences Thirty years of investigation

Book - 2009

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133.9013/Handbook
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2nd Floor 133.9013/Handbook Due Dec 16, 2024
Subjects
Published
Santa Barbara, Calif. : Praeger Publishers c2009.
Language
English
Other Authors
Janice Miner Holden (-), Bruce Greyson, Debbie James
Physical Description
xv, 316 p. ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 259-302) and indexes.
ISBN
9780313358647
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • 1. The Field of Near-Death Studies: Past, Present, and Future
  • 2. Pleasurable Western Adult Near-Death Experiences: Features, Circumstances, and Incidence
  • 3. Aftereffects of Pleasurable Western Adult Near-Death Experiences
  • 4. Distressing Western Near-Death Experiences: Finding a Way through the Abyss
  • 5. "Trailing Clouds of Glory": The Near-Death Experiences of Western Children and Teens
  • 6. Characteristics of Western Near-Death Experiences
  • 7. Census of Non-Western Near-Death Experiences to 2005: Observations and Critical Reflections
  • 8. World Religions and Near-Death Experiences
  • 9. Veridical Perception in Near-Death Experiences
  • 10. Explanatory Models for Near-Death Experiences
  • 11. Practical Applications of Research on Near-Death Experiences
  • References
  • Subject Index
  • Name Index
  • About the Editors and Contributors
Review by Choice Review

People who have been revived after being close to death sometimes report memories of dramatic and vivid experiences occurring while death was imminent. These near-death experiences (NDEs) include cognitions, perceptions, and emotions. For instance, some people have recalled out-of-body sensations, as though they were floating above and looking down at themselves. Some NDEs have been described as life-changing events. What is the source of these memories? One possibility is that they are the result of chaotic activity of a brain exposed to the cascade of unique neural events accompanying extreme disruption of normal physiology. A second possibility is that they are evidence that the dying individual has caught a fleeting look at an existence after life or on a plane other than that of the physical world. Holden (counseling and higher education, Univ. of North Texas), Greyson (psychiatry and neurobehavioral science, Univ. of Virginia Medical School), and James (nursing, Univ. of Texas Cancer Center) are concerned with the second possibility. The book's eleven chapters (each with references) cover a variety of topics: e.g., the history of NDE studies; pleasurable and distressing NDEs; NDEs in children; religious connections; and practical implications. The research relies heavily on interviews, questionnaires, and anecdotes. Summing Up: Recommended. General collections only. R. H. Cormack New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.