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Epistemological Implications of Near-Death Experiences and Other Non-Ordinary Mental Expressions: Moving Beyond the Concept of Altered State of Consciousness

πŸ“„ Original study β†—
Facco, Enrico, Agrillo, Christian, Greyson, Bruce β€’ 2015 Modern Era β€’ nde

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

This paper teams up Italian neuroscientists with NDE pioneer Bruce Greyson to ask a pointed question: do any of the standard brain-based explanations for near-death experiences actually hold up? They go through the usual suspects β€” oxygen-starved eyes, natural painkillers, seizure-like activity, and dream intrusion β€” and find that none of them are backed by solid clinical evidence. That's a pretty big deal. About 10-18% of people in critical condition report NDEs, and brain scans suggest these memories behave like real memories, not hallucinations. The authors argue the whole way we talk about "altered states of consciousness" is too dismissive. Instead, they propose a new label β€” "non-ordinary mental expressions" (NOMEs) β€” and call for a framework that takes both the brain data and the person's lived experience seriously, drawing on a philosophical approach called neurophenomenology.

Actual Paper Abstract

During the last decades an increasing interest has developed in the so-called altered state of consciousness (ASCs); among these, near-death experiences (NDEs) are one of the most intriguing and debated examples. NDEs are deep and universal experiences with a clear phenomenology and incidence, while some of their features challenge the current views of human consciousness (focused on neural circuits and based on the concept of mind as a byproduct of brain circuitry) with relevant epistemological and historical implications. The origin of the ruling mechanist–reductionist paradigm can be traced back to Descartes' radical separation of res cogitans and res extensa and the conflict between the nascent science and the Inquisition; this led to removing the subjective properties of mind from the field of scientific interest, relegating them to philosophy and theology in order to enable the development of modern science. However, the physics of the 20th century has eventually moved beyond the classical paradigm, permitting a profound renewal of scientific interest in the mind. Modern research on NDEs has contributed to reopening the debate surrounding the Cartesian separation, the mind–brain relationship and the nature of consciousness. It is now time to reappraise the relevance, strengths, and weaknesses of the available scientific interpretations of NDEs, their relationship with other ASCs, as well as the very concept of ASC; the latter looks to be ill-founded, suggesting the need for: (a) a revision of the conventional approach to subjective phenomena, including both the third- and first-person perspective; and (b) a deep reflection on the possible links between different non-ordinary mental expression, as regards both their phenomenology and mechanisms from a non-pathological perspective.

Research Notes

Key epistemological paper bridging Facco's Padua neuroscience group with Greyson's UVA DOPS program. Provides the most systematic critique of neurobiological NDE explanations in the library and introduces the NOME concept. Central to controversy #7 (NDEs and consciousness survival). Complements Facco & Agrillo (2012) and Van Lommel (2013).

Examining epistemological implications of near-death experiences and other non-ordinary mental expressions (NOMEs), this paper critiques proposed neurobiological NDE explanations β€” retinal ischemia, endogenous opioids, temporal lobe epilepsy, NMDA receptors, and REM intrusion β€” finding each unsupported by clinical evidence. NDE incidence is 10-18% in critical-condition patients; NDE memories show theta-band EEG consistent with true episodic memory. The authors trace the mechanist-reductionist paradigm to Galileo and Descartes, proposing to replace the 'altered states of consciousness' framework with NOMEs, integrating first-person and third-person perspectives per Varela's neurophenomenology.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Facco, Enrico, Agrillo, Christian, Greyson, Bruce (2015). Epistemological Implications of Near-Death Experiences and Other Non-Ordinary Mental Expressions: Moving Beyond the Concept of Altered State of Consciousness. Medical Hypotheses. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2015.04.004
BibTeX
@article{facco_2015_nde_epistemological,
  title = {Epistemological Implications of Near-Death Experiences and Other Non-Ordinary Mental Expressions: Moving Beyond the Concept of Altered State of Consciousness},
  author = {Facco, Enrico and Agrillo, Christian and Greyson, Bruce},
  year = {2015},
  journal = {Medical Hypotheses},
  doi = {10.1016/j.mehy.2015.04.004},
}