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Expérience de mort imminente ou EMI, near death experience
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Gary Habermas on the Scientific Evidence for Near-Death Experiences

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Is there strong scientific evidence for near-death experiences? On this episode of Mind Matters, we’re happy to share host Andrew McDiarmid’s recent ID The Future conversation with Dr. Gary Habermas about his chapter evaluating the evidence for near-death experiences in the recent book Minding the Brain.

As Dr. Habermas explains, most near-death accounts contain both objective and subjective elements. While personal testimony about other realms can’t be independently corroborated, objective evidence rooted in this world can be confirmed and evaluated. “I can’t verify heavenly discussions or heavenly sites,” says Habermas, “so the kind of NDE data I’m talking about virtually always occur on this earth in normal kinds of situations, like parking lots or in your home two miles away. That’s where the evidence comes from.”

Dr. Habermas relays several examples of near-death cases with strong evidential support. He also lays out five different lines of verifiable phenomena: reports in the room the patient occupies, reports outside of the room, experiences relayed by blind patients, cases where other living people also experience the NDE, and cases of loved ones already dead who share unique information. After studying hundreds of evidential cases, Habermas contends that the evidence is both plentiful and varied, having the potential to satisfy even the most skeptical of observers. 

Additional Resources

  • To read Dr. Habermas’s chapter on near-death experiences, get your copy of Minding the Brain
  • Learn more about Dr. Habermas and his work at his website, garyhabermas.com.

Gary Habermas on the Scientific Evidence for Near-Death Experiences