UNVERIFIEDPARANORMAL

Near-Death Experiences

The reported experiences of people who have been clinically dead or near death, often including out-of-body sensations, tunnel vision, and encounters with light or deceased relatives.

CREDIBILITY
20%
RABBIT HOLE
65%

INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW

Near-death experiences (NDEs) occur when individuals report specific sensations after being clinically dead or near death. Common features include floating outside the body, moving through a tunnel toward a bright light, encountering deceased loved ones, a life review, and a feeling of peace. The phenomenon has been studied by researchers including Dr. Raymond Moody, Dr. Sam Parnia, and the University of Virginia's Division of Perceptual Studies. Estimates suggest 10–20% of people who come close to death report NDE features. Explanations range from oxygen deprivation and neurochemical processes to genuine evidence of consciousness beyond death.

KEY CLAIMS

The consistent cross-cultural features of NDEs suggest a real phenomenon beyond brain function

Patients report accurate observations of their surroundings while clinically dead

The AWARE and AWARE-II studies documented veridical perceptions in cardiac arrest patients

NDEs occur during periods when brain activity should be impossible

Children born blind have reported visual NDEs, suggesting perception outside the body

SUPPORTING EVIDENCE

Large-scale studies (AWARE, AWARE-II, Gallup) have documented NDEs in clinical settings

Some patients reported accurate observations of objects or events while apparently unconscious

Common elements across cultures and religions suggest a shared phenomenon

Children as young as 3 describe NDEs with adult-level detail

Blind individuals report visual experiences during NDEs consistent with their degree of blindness

COUNTER ARGUMENTS

Cerebral anoxia (oxygen deprivation) can produce similar hallucinations and sensations

The tunnel-and-light experience is consistent with neuronal hyperactivity during oxygen loss

No veridical perception has been conclusively proven under controlled conditions

Endorphin release during trauma can produce peaceful sensations

Cultural expectations shape NDE accounts despite claims of universality

TIMELINE

1975

Moody publishes 'Life After Life' popularizing NDE research

1990s

Greyson develops standardized NDE scale

2008

AWARE study begins at 15 UK/US hospitals

2014

AWARE study results published

2023

AWARE-II study results published

KEY FIGURES

Raymond Moody

Physician who coined the term 'near-death experience'

Sam Parnia

Resuscitation researcher and AWARE study director

Bruce Greyson

Psychiatrist who developed the NDE scale

ORGANIZATIONS

University of Virginia Division of Perceptual Studies

Academic

International Association for Near-Death Studies

Research

AWARE Study (Southampton University)

Academic

SOURCES

Life After Life — Raymond MoodyBook
Greyson NDE Scale — Journal of Nervous and Mental DiseaseAcademic
AWARE-II Study — Sam Parnia et al. (2023)Academic Paper

RELATED ENTITIES

PEOPLE

Raymond Moody

Sam Parnia

Bruce Greyson

ORGANIZATIONS

University of Virginia Division of Perceptual Studies

International Association for Near-Death Studies

AWARE Study (Southampton University)

EVENTS

Moody publishes 'Life After Life' popularizing NDE research

1975

Greyson develops standardized NDE scale

1990s

AWARE study begins at 15 UK/US hospitals

2008

AWARE study results published

2014

AWARE-II study results published

2023

RELATED DOSSIERS

TAGS

#nde#death#consciousness#afterlife#moody#parnia#aware

Shadow Archive separates documented facts from claims, counterarguments, and open questions. It does not present unsupported allegations as confirmed fact.