Prelude
When I was last in hospital I spoke to a young man opposite me who was recovering from a near fatal car crash. He had fallen asleep while driving and his foot apparently had jammed full on the accelerator pedal as his car left the road and ploughed into a tree. Miraculously surviving the horrendous ordeal he was pronounced clinically dead during surgery before being brought back to life. Subsequently he became the subject of intense interest from medical staff at the large public hospital as he recounted in intricate detail the procedures he recalled during the period he was pronounced clinically dead, arising as a consequence of his out of body near death experience. He told me he no longer held any fears of dying.
When I was last in hospital I spoke to a young man opposite me who was recovering from a near fatal car crash. He had fallen asleep while driving and his foot apparently had jammed full on the accelerator pedal as his car left the road and ploughed into a tree. Miraculously surviving the horrendous ordeal he was pronounced clinically dead during surgery before being brought back to life. Subsequently he became the subject of intense interest from medical staff at the large public hospital as he recounted in intricate detail the procedures he recalled during the period he was pronounced clinically dead, arising as a consequence of his out of body near death experience. He told me he no longer held any fears of dying.
But out of
body experiences need not relate to such traumatic near death events, but are
often associated with the use of hallucinogenic drugs or from hypnosis,
or from emotional traumas or deep seated meditative
practices. Many of these experiences no doubt are due to the confusion
on the part of the experiencer, but others, such as was the case of the young
man opposite me in hospital are underpinned by reported verifiable events.
This
phenomenon has become more prevalent in modernity, no doubt triggered by every
day medical resuscitative applications; which I have I have even noticed
in my limited circle. Some time ago a good friend, who has since passed away,
told me of his vivid out of body experience and another recently recounted the
near death experience of his father following revival after a heart attack.
Others recall childhood memories not mentioned previously for fear of ridicule.
I recall vividly when I visited Kiribati, (once known as the Gilbert Islands)
hearing the story of a volunteer who had experienced an out of body event
involving their local culture. Coincidentally, a century earlier, Robert Louis
Stevenson, had set out in his south sea voyages for that same destination
seeking emotional and physical healing whereupon he was to discover and
documented their rich culture. Hence my interest has prompted me to write a
discussion paper about this mysterious phenomena.
Introduction
This paper
defines out of body experiences as rational memories of seeing a recognisable
self from a conscious awareness from outside of that place. The vision usually
is of normal surrounds and or people to the extent the experiencer is an
onlooker from a floating type dimension looking down.
The aim of
this paper is to discuss a credible possible explanation.
Early
beginnings and development
The
intricate entanglement of the material body with the integrated circuitry of
the central nervous system to support the complexity of a massive cell
structure, has only enabled humans to discern oneself as separate to self, very
late in the evolutionary cycle, possibly only within the last 100,000 years.
The first
early experiences may have simply arisen from gazing into the flickering embers
of campfires to become absorbed into a deep imaginative or meditative trance
like state. The likely effect of such a feeling, then, may conceivably be not
much different to that in modernity which many attribute to various states of
enhanced serenity or even wellbeing.
Tribal
existence then was highly reliant on staying in tune with the environment, as
survival meant adapting to the changing seasons and migratory patterns. This in
turn necessitated critical reliance on our sensory preceptors so that stories
and visions became etched into the culture and customs of disparate groups.
Seeking shelter or refuge deep within caves, evidenced by the silhouettes and
drawings etched onto on the rock walls, they became the first of the sacred
cathedrals of humanity. No doubt, as that ventured into the deeper regions with
increased curiosity that experience gave rise to vivid images and feelings,
just as they will today, if one spends any prolonged time deep within the earth
in complete darkness. At the same time the hypnotic type dances, under
the ever changing starry cosmos, precipitated trance like states, possibly
fuelled from prior highly charged anticipatory emotional build-ups.
When I was
staying in the Republic of Kiribati, it was interesting to discover how their
culture and oral history was celebrated in the many elaborate dances combined
with harmonised singing. Their training and rehearsal extends over several
months, as young men are expected to refrain from any intimacy to gain strength
before each important celebration. I learnt from a local volunteer from Canada,
when we visited the corral atoll of Abyiang she had decided to learn their
language and dance that they were arduous and extremely difficult to remember.
She recounted a story to me of a young man who had kindly dedicated himself to train her for a dance but died several months before the intended celebration. During the dance she lost her way but as her mind went blank, so she experienced what she thought was an out of body experience. The way this happened was at this point the image of the man came to her who assumed authority for the dance. Afterwards many complemented her on her performance.
She recounted a story to me of a young man who had kindly dedicated himself to train her for a dance but died several months before the intended celebration. During the dance she lost her way but as her mind went blank, so she experienced what she thought was an out of body experience. The way this happened was at this point the image of the man came to her who assumed authority for the dance. Afterwards many complemented her on her performance.
Such an idea
to traverse time and space is evident in the practice of the Great
Plains Indian tribes in North America in their quest to make contact with a guardian
spirit, through fasting, isolation and meditation, which involves ‘Out of Body
type experiences’. This quest was also associated with the rite of passage at
puberty, to avail oneself of the ancestral knowledge from spiritual out of body
encounters to connect with the distant far off spiritual places to gain wisdom
and understanding. In Australia the aboriginal culture believed all life
evolved from the dreamtime period of creation with its myths which provided the
stepping stones in the connectivity to the environment and to all living
things; to provide meaning to their life, death and constant rebirth.
Mystical
religious ‘’out of body’’ experiences or visions.
Subsequently
over time the term out-of-body experience was also applied to ever widening
aspects of visionary and mystical type experiences. There are many examples
within the mystery traditions which often return to the familiar theme of
losing one’s fear of death, and more particularly to provide comfort in times
of severe trauma or persecution on the promise of an afterlife. The experiences
would also conceivably have underwritten a spirit of embolderment or authority
or meaning to give confidence of spiritual continuance in the afterlife.
Certainly in
religious terms, probably the most notable was that of the apostle St Paul on
the road to Damascus, where he describes a vision of the future
kingdom which some attribute to an out of body type experience, although its
true meaning remains somewhat obscure and is hotly debated by scholars today.
Although these accounts
don’t directly reference seeing the body separate to self there are many
references to such a term, to give credence to the idea St Paul was familiar
with the idea.
In the Asian region the degree of complexity was
astonishing, as according to Julian Ching (Christianity and Chinese religions)
in their evolving Taoist tradition there existed a mammoth divination manual
comprising of 1,000 volumes. The essence of such practices was inherent in the
idea of transcending the communications between self and the inner self with
direct out of body union with the TAO –the way.
In modernity many of the practices of the ancients
have tended to be regarded as mere magic or superstition, but in more recent
times we are beginning to understand such ideas from a more enlightened
viewpoint. In fact the idea of magic or mystery is entwined onto most people’s
adaptive style of thinking more than we realize, regardless of the degree of
sophistication or the way of life we choose in relation to our beliefs or
non-beliefs as the case may be. Understanding others and their motivations,
gives credence to how our beliefs and purpose in life are shaped and formed
over time. Interestingly enough there are many physicists and neuroscientists
who posit a non-mystical technical basis for support in relation to put of body
experiences. One such advocate has been Fritjof Capra’s TAO OF PHYSICS
whose motivation for writing his book was Science does not
need mysticism and mysticism does not need science, but man needs both.
The
evolving interest of science and neuroscience
The human brain is the most complex creation known in the
entire universe, yet it weighs in at only a bit over three pounds but is made
up of over 100 billion cells. Along its six and one half miles of integrated
circuitry the interneuron chemical reactions enable one to switch nerve
impulses on or off - mostly from the perspective of
an auto pilot since we are not aware of their functions until alerted that
something is wrong. Although our knowledge of the human brain is incomplete we
do understand how circuitry links the older limbic areas to the more recently
evolved executive functioning frontal lobe regions which gives rise to the
various ephemeral states of consciousness. This later evolution enables
us to make many complex
or abstract decisions or ideas- a tiny slither of the up to a billion
or so decisions made for us each day of which we are unaware. But exactly
how all of this occurs in a physical sense at the micro level along the neural
highways remains somewhat of a mystery.
A credible
possible explanation for out of body type experiences could conceivably entail
a concept of a dualistic mind functioning process as opposed to the idea it
(the mind) must only be the property of the material brain. At this point it is
worth acknowledging the idea of the purely material mind gained credence over
the past few hundred years as consequence of the Newtonian mechanised clocklike
view of reality. Given the fact large scale physics had been demonstrated to
work very well it was not surprising this view gained traction in materialistic
philosophical concepts to become the basis for determinism. This was predicated
on the basis of the predictability for all events given a knowledge of the
underlying initial conditions. But the reality is our knowledge of the human
brain in its present state is incomplete in relation to the neural signalling
which makes up our consciousness.
In the
latter period beginning with the 20th century, in relation to
outcomes of small particle physics known as quantum mechanics it was
established such outcomes are indeed unquantifiable, which was first made
famous under Schrödinger’s Cat thought experiment, to create the requirement
for an ultimate "observer".
Physicist
Paul Davies, who is author of the Other Worlds and The Edge of Infinity,
maintains that the discoveries of 20th-century physics — relativity and the
quantum theory — are now pointing towards a more mystical way to view reality
and opens up the possibility of a new appreciation of our place in the
universe.
Hence for an
out of body experiences to be believable only requires one to accept the
possibility of a dualistic view of the mind or spirit. One part (call it a soul
if you want to) represents the form of a non-destructible conscious awareness,
which could continue on in some disembodied form after death. In a nutshell the
idea already exists for a nonlocal depository of brain particle – wave
collapsed symmetry within mind consciousness, so that the continuation of that
which is already present in some disembodied form may not be such a big deal
after all.
Eminent
physicist Roger Penrose in collaboration with neuroscientist Stuart Hereof
explains that under quantum theory the brains processing output may conceivably
entail non-localised wave and particle entwinement in the same manner as
everything is linked in the wider universe. Hence the mystery where traditional
large scale physics give rise to certainty to conquer the tyrannies of space
and time as in space travel, don’t apply at the sub atomic level.
Penrose
proposes the mind processing possibilities at this sub atomic level (which
ultimately comprises of you and me) into definite values emerges as a reality
from the collapse of the wave function into our conscious experience. Hence the
conscious experience, which in turn influences our behaviour, is a combination
of space time continuum, comprising both non-localised particles and their
collapsed wave functions within the mind. If Penrose is correct then there
already exists a “non- locally” brain existence, so that we are linked in one
way or another mysteriously to matter within the wider cosmos. That link
conceivably might live on in some embodied form after death. Certainly, any
form of out of body experience, triggered by stimuli may be just a precursor or
glimpse of that ultimate reality.
Those
opposed to such views say that the brain may be able to will itself into
producing sensations which are akin to a perceived reality of another body
moving outside the boundaries of one’s physical body. Hence the sceptical view
is that out of body experiences can be triggered by stimuli of one kind
or another in the area
of the brain responsible for imagining body movements, to flash
an image of yourself as if you have that view from another point in space
located outside of the physical body. But they cannot offer any explanation to the detailed
accounts of items, procedures and conversations remembered and confirmed by
medical staff as correct during periods when patients were declared clinically
dead.
Conclusion
I think it
is fitting to end this paper with a quote from Albert Einstein who said “Nature shows us the
tail of the lion. But I do not doubt that the lion belongs to it, even though
he cannot at once reveal himself because if his enormous size “.
So it seems
that conceivably such experiences may be just a precursor or glimpse of that ultimate
gigantic reality, so that hopefully this discussion paper does provide some
food for thought on this enduring mystery. For there can be no doubt there are
persuasive reasons to support the idea life itself and near death experiences
are inextricably linked to the infinite cosmos. It is also true that mystery
plays a much more pivotal role in our culture than is generally realised in our
attempt to understand reality, so that our beliefs and purpose in
adapting to our existence are largely shaped and formed by others, inclusive of
out of body type experiences. Finally I think one can say with some confidence there are no grounds
to be dismissive of these accounts or to hold firm to the idea that the mind
must be solely a property of the material brain.
4 comments:
I recall some while ago now, watching an 'Horizon' programme on BBCTV which is pertinent here. I cannot remember the details, nor can I reference the programme, being made for British TV.
An experiment was conducted in which some people were fitted with a lens/prism attachment to their eyes that had the effect of turning the environment upside down. After a period of time (about 4 days I think) the 'guinea pigs' discovered that were then seeing the world the right way up. Similarly, when the devices were removed, the world was the wrong way up for a period, then reverted to normal.
Far from being a state in which the mind is an emergent property of the brain, this experiment showed that mind was an independent state. At the very least one could conclude that mind had a degree of autonomy.
On the question of 'out of body experiences' I suppose such states will not be fully accepted so long as one believes in total subservience of the mind to the brain. That this attitude seems to fly in the face of experience seems to matter not one jot. One period in life where 'out of body' or 'near death' experiences are relatively common, is at our physical births. Of course such periods cannot be remembered, but can be accessed through meditation.
Thanks so much for your wonderful post, Lindsay. Materialism had its role in the evolution of Mind. It would have been very confusing to go from pre-rational religion to transrational awareness all in one step. Science needed a chance to be established to dispel many myths of the pre-rational world. But it's time is past. Many people are waking up to the fact that science has no answers for the most fundamental aspect of life, consciousness. And they will go looking for answers. We must be there to light the way.
All the best
Thanks Tom & Susan for your thoughtful comments. I think the risk is that we could, in the 21st century, become overly dependent (if we are not already) upon technology to rob us of our individuality.
There continues to be the misconception that brain imaging might even be developed to read off what a person is thinking; a concept which fails to acknowledge the intricate biology and evolution of mind consciousness which makes a mockery of such ideas. As you say Tom, the interesting experiment you mention does prove what we’ve always thought that the mind is far more than just the properties of the material brain. But I do think now is the time to ensure future systems have safeguards to preserve our individuality and avoid slavishly adopting the ruinous route of unfettered materialism.
Best wishes
Thanks for sharing this! I agree that it's probably a "glimpse of that ultimate gigantic reality"... perhaps when we embrace the possibility of our own extra sensory abilities we will discover more about their existence. Like with science that starts out as a hunch and then later gets "proven."
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