Skip to main content

Near-Death Experiences Between Science and Prejudice

Contested
Facco, Enrico, Agrillo, Christian 2012 Modern Era nde

📌 Appears in:

Plain English Summary

An ICU anesthesiologist who has seen plenty of oxygen-deprived brains pushes back on eight neuroscience explanations for near-death experiences. His core point: oxygen deprivation produces confusion and delirium — the exact opposite of the vivid clarity NDE survivors describe. If biology explained everything, most cardiac arrest patients should have NDEs, yet only about 12% do. He dismantles the claim that NDEs resemble Cotard syndrome (where people believe they're dead), calling it a total mismatch. His takeaway? Insisting brain chemistry explains everything isn't science — it's dogma in a lab coat.

Actual Paper Abstract

Science exists to refute dogmas; nevertheless, dogmas may be introduced when undemonstrated scientific axioms lead us to reject facts incompatible with them. Several studies have proposed psychobiological interpretations of near-death experiences (NDEs), claiming that NDEs are a mere byproduct of brain functions gone awry; however, relevant facts incompatible with the ruling physicalist and reductionist stance have been often neglected. The awkward transcendent look of NDEs has deep epistemological implications, which call for: (a) keeping a rigorously neutral position, neither accepting nor refusing anything a priori; and (b) distinguishing facts from speculations and fallacies. Most available psychobiological interpretations remain so far speculations to be demonstrated, while brain disorders and/or drug administration in critical patients yield a well-known delirium in intensive care and anesthesia, the phenomenology of which is different from NDEs. Facts can be only true or false, never paranormal. In this sense, they cannot be refused a priori even when they appear implausible with respect to our current knowledge: any other stance implies the risk of turning knowledge into dogma and the adopted paradigm into a sort of theology.

Research Notes

Key epistemological critique from an ICU anesthesiologist experienced with hypoxic patients. Reviewed by Mobbs (whose 2011 paper it critiques), Greyson, and van Lommel. Pro-NDE despite occasional misclassification. Speaks to Controversy #7 on the epistemological level.

A systematic critique of eight neurobiological explanations for NDEs — retinal ischemia, CO₂/acidosis, temporal lobe dysfunction, endogenous opioids, hallucinogen analogies, REM intrusion, G-force loss of consciousness, and psychological expectation. Drawing on ICU anesthesiology experience, argues that cerebral anoxia produces confusion and delirium qualitatively unlike NDEs' characteristic clarity. Notes that only ~12% of cardiac arrest patients report NDEs, though physiological causes should affect most. Rejects Mobbs & Watt's (2011) Cotard syndrome analogy as phenomenologically opposite. Concludes reductionism applied as absolute truth becomes dogma, and calls for a neutral epistemological position.

Links

Related Papers

More in Nde

📋 Cite this paper
APA
Facco, Enrico, Agrillo, Christian (2012). Near-Death Experiences Between Science and Prejudice. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00209
BibTeX
@article{facco_2012_neardeath,
  title = {Near-Death Experiences Between Science and Prejudice},
  author = {Facco, Enrico and Agrillo, Christian},
  year = {2012},
  journal = {Frontiers in Human Neuroscience},
  doi = {10.3389/fnhum.2012.00209},
}