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A team of international experts presents the history, recent
developments, and controversies in the intriguing study of
near-death experience. Experts from around the world share the
history and current state of near-death experience (NDE) knowledge.
They explore controversies in the field, offer stories from their
research, and express their hopes for the future of investigation
into this fascinating phenomenon. As modern medical techniques for
resuscitation advance, NDEs are more frequently reported. These
include more than the popular notions of moving through a tunnel or
seeing a light. They also include people, once revived, knowing
things their knowledge of which can't currently be explained. As
The Handbook of Near-Death Experiences: Thirty Years of
Investigation makes clear, great controversy exists in the medical
and psychological fields concerning NDEs. Are they caused by
physiological changes in the brain, or are they biological
reactions to oxygen loss or impending death? Are they a product of
changing states of consciousness? Or are they caused by something
else altogether? All of these ideas and more are discussed in this
unique and comprehensive volume.
Many books have dealt with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from
the Israeli perspective. However, few reflect the Palestinian point
of view. "Letters from Palestine" offers an American audience a
rare opportunity to listen to actual Palestinian people as they
describe what it is like to live in the occupied territories of the
West Bank or Gaza, or to grow up as a Palestinian in the U.S. Their
accounts are lively, poignant, searing, and tragic, yet often laced
with touches of surreal humor. By showing Palestinians in all their
humanity, Letters from Palestine enables American readers to see
beyond the usual stereotypes.
This book investigates the astonishing claim that blind persons,
including those blind from birth, can actually "see" during
near-death or out-of-body episodes. The authors present their
findings in scrupulous detail, investigating case histories of
blind persons who have actually reported visual experiences under
these conditions. There is fascinating evidence that the blind do
"see" in these moments, but it is not sight as we think of it. Ring
and Cooper suggest a kind of "transcendental awareness" they refer
to as Mindsight. It involves seeing in detail, sometimes from all
angles at once, with everything in focus, and a sense of "knowing"
the subject, not just visually, but with multisensory knowledge.
Human beings may be more talented than we think, gifted with
amazing abilities of perception. This book is an opportunity to
assess the evidence for yourself.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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