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Our future, our universe, and other weighty topics


Sunday, September 15, 2024

They Said They Saw a Husband's Apparition

 My 2021 post "They Said They Saw a Wife's Apparition" describes many accounts of people who claimed to see an apparition of their wives. It's time I did a similar post looking at such reports coming from females. 

The Chronicling America web site allows you to do text searches of American newspapers from 1756 to 1963.  Searching for the phrase "apparition of her husband" on the site produces 45 matches. For example, in one newspaper account we read this:

"Calling together her friends and neighbors, she told them she had just seen an apparition of her husband, who, for two years had been absent In New York. He appeared to her to be lying in a hospital with one hand covering his breast, and he told her that he had been gravely wounded. The day after she received a cablegram from America informing her that her husband was dying, having been stabbed by an emissary of the Black Hand."

Below is another account of a wife seeing her husband's apparition: 


In another newspaper account, we read this account of a wife seeing her husband's apparition:

apparition of husband

In another newspaper account we read this account of a wife seeing her husband's apparition:

husband's apparition

The account below tells of a woman seeing her husband's apparition. It is case of a common type, in which someone sees an apparition of someone long dead, with the witness of the apparition very quickly dying. In this type the witness is "ghost-told" of a death, but not someone else's death, but the imminent death of the witness herself or himself. The wording of the account makes it unclear whether the witness was awake or having a vivid dream, although given the facts that follow, it may make little difference. 


deathbed vision

You can read the account here:


You might call the account below "the husband who broke up his widow's wedding":

ghost prevents wedding

You can read the account here:

https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86091111/1907-12-06/ed-1/seq-6/


Below is yet another account of a wife claiming to have been visited by her husband's apparition -- a chatty apparition, it seems.


The account below (involving society trying to suppress an account of an apparition) reminds me of the similar suppression of accounts of the paranormal occurring in academia, which is constantly trying to uphold a senseless "nothing spooky allowed" filter bubble in which people are prevented about learning of relevant observations.

suppression of reports of the paranormal

You can read the account here:

 
The item below is about as strange a story of seeing your husband's apparition as you could find. We read of a ghost haunting his wife's home for 14 years, until the wife finally got sick and tired of such activity:

persistent apparition

You can read the account here:

I hope any widow who sees a husband's ghost will have a more pleasant experience than the one reported below:

attacked by a ghost

You can read the report here:


A much happier account of an encounter with a husband's ghost is contained below:

husband's ghost

You can read the account here:



Thursday, September 12, 2024

How Would Viewpoints Differ If Life or Mind Were Drastically Different?

An interesting question is: if life or mind worked very, very differently, would viewpoints change about philosophical questions such as the existence of God, life after death and whether life is purposeful -- and if so, how would they change?

Prelude: The Reality We Find Ourselves In

First, let me make a little sketch of the reality we find ourselves in. Some may disagree with some of my statements, but at least this little sketch will "set the stage" for some of the interesting thought experiments to come, in which I discuss alternate realities very different from our own. 

  • Physically human beings are organisms of enormous physical organization and complexity.  Subatomic nucleons are organized into atomic nuclei, which (along with electrons) are organized into atoms, which can be organized into particular types of molecules (consisting of about 10 to 20 atoms) called amino acids, which are organized into protein molecules, which are organized into organelles, which are organized into cells, which are organized into tissues, which are organized into organs, which are organized into organ systems, which (along with a skeletal system) are the main large-scale parts of human bodies. 
  • Human bodies arise through an extremely mysterious process. There is nothing mysterious about the earliest instant of this process: a single male sperm unites with a female egg at the moment of conception, the result being a fertilized zygote. What is extremely mysterious is how this simple cell (a zygote) manages to somehow progress to become a full human body.  Were it true that DNA contains assembly instructions for how to build a body, the nine-month process of human development might not be so mysterious. But since no such assembly instructions exist in DNA, the progression from a tiny speck-sized zygote to the enormous organization in the full body of a new-born baby is profoundly mysterious. 
  • Human minds are extremely complex things with a huge number of capabilities. It is alleged that an organ in the human body explains such minds. But scientists have not been able to well-substantiate such claims. For example, we lack any understanding of how neurons could produce such things as thinking, imagination and self-hood.  And we lack any real understanding of how a brain can explain the marvels of human memory such as instant recall of complex facts after hearing a single name. 
  • We live in a universe that has just the right characteristics to allow organisms such as ourselves to exist. Each proton has a rest mass 1836 times greater than the rest mass of each electron. Scientist Ethan  Siegel yesterday published an article yesterday on how life would not exist if the electron mass differed by a factor of 100.  He failed to mention a sensitivity of electron characteristics a billion times greater: the fact that planets would not hold together if the charge of each electron was not the exact opposite of the charge of each proton.  In his book The Symbiotic Universe, astronomer George Greenstein (a professor emeritus at Amherst College) says this about the equality of the proton and electron charges: "Relatively small things like stones, people, and the like would fly apart if the two charges differed by as little as one part in 100 billion. Large structures like the Earth and the Sun require for their existence a yet more perfect balance of one part in a billion billion." In fact, experiments do indicate that the charge of the proton and the electron match to eighteen decimal places. 
Alternate Reality Scenario #1: Minds Without Bodies

A very simple scenario to imagine is a community of human minds existing without there being any kind of corresponding bodies. We can imagine minds that would be like disembodied spirits, free to float around in any direction, up or down. People would need no food to eat or water to drink, and they would need no shelter to protect them from the cold. Such disembodied minds might exist on planets, or they might exist in a disorganized universe without planets (because such disembodied minds would not require planets for their existence).  A new disembodied mind might be kind of non-physically parented when two disembodied minds mutually willed to create a new disembodied offspring. It might even be possible for a single person to instantly have a child by willing very hard to produce a new disembodied person. 

How would such beings explain their existence?  You might think that such disembodied people would surely regard their disembodied minds as proof of a purposeful universe and the existence of God. But we should not underestimate how resourceful people can be when they are determined to believe that they are random accidents in a purposeless universe in which there exists nothing higher than themselves. It could well be that a large group of these disembodied people would teach that the existence of disembodied minds was simply "the way nature works," and not evidence of any planning or intention of some mind higher than themselves. Such a group might be encouraged by what would be a lack of any physical evidence (in their universe) of any physical bodies showing high levels of purposeful organization. It might be that in their universe nothing at all showed any signs of purposeful physical organization. There might be no organisms at all with bodies, and might not even be any organized planets or galaxies.  Even if their minds were very organized, organization in minds is not as obvious as physical organization. 

Alternate Reality Scenario #2: Low-Complexity Bodies Without Much Organization

An alternate reality scenario very easy to imagine is one in which people had bodies that showed very little signs of any complexity or organization. In such a reality there would be no DNA, no protein molecules consisting of thousands of well-arranged atoms, no very complex cells, and no complex organ systems.  The shape of people might be very simple. People, for example, might have a very simple ball-like shape. We can imagine humans without any of the very complex physical organization needed to have vision. Rather than having to plant crops or search for animals to eat, such organisms might get food by merely opening their mouths, and sucking in nutritious particles floating about in the air.  

In such an alternate reality, it might be that people would be less prone to regard themselves as living in a purposeful universe controlled by some power higher than themselves. If they saw no impressive signs of purposeful complexity in their bodies, and saw no great signs of purposeful organization in other organisms living on their planet, such people might be more prone to believe that they and their species were mere accidents of nature.  

Alternate Reality Scenario #3: Humans With Minds Like Ours, But Without Brains 

A rather easy alternate reality scenario to imagine is humans with bodies just like regular bodies and minds just like regular human minds, except for there being an absence of  any brains at all. Such human might look a little like the imaginary figure below, with no significant amount of flesh above the eyes, only hair. 
 

Would an absence of any brain cause such humans to recognize that their minds must be souls? Not necessarily. We must not under-estimate the great resourcefulness of people intent on denying the reality of a human soul. It seems that certain people are determined to believe that they are soulless accidents of nature, no matter what they observe.  Minds of this type would not be terribly discouraged by a lack of any brain in their body. They would probably theorize that their minds are produced by something else in their body. Maybe they might theorize that their skin produces their mind, or that their memories are stored in their hairs. Or they might claim that their livers have three functions: regulating chemicals in the body, secreting bile, and also producing thoughts and storing memories. If such had been the teachings of the authorities they most esteemed, for a long time, none of them might think that such ideas are ridiculous. 

A shocking fact that few people realize is that the human brain has no  characteristics whatsoever than can account for processes such as thinking, instant memory recall and memory storage. Humans know from their work with computers the type of things that make possible things such as computation, reliable information storage and reliable instant retrieval of information: things such as a CPU for serially executing stored instructions, an operating system, application software programs, stable media for storing learned information, wires that make sure fast and reliable signal transmission occurs everywhere in a system, encoding protocols used in storing newly acquired information, and also indexes, sorting and addresses needed for instantly retrieving information. The brain has no such things, as I explain in my post here and in other posts of my blog here. So if humans were to imagine that thinking and memory were done by the liver, they would not be engaging in any flight of fancy worse than they are already doing by imagining that thinking and memory are done by the brain. 

Alternate Reality Scenario #4: Humans With Souls That Always Visibly But Silently Left Their Bodies at Death

An interesting alternate reality possibility is one in which human souls always visibly left a body at death. We can imagine, for example, a planet on which whenever a human died, we would see a glowing shape like a human body visibly rising up from the dead human body, and floating up into the sky, gradually disappearing in the clouds. 

soul leaving body

Some AI art

In such an alternate reality, would humans then almost all believe in the reality of a human soul? Not necessarily.  You can never underestimate the degree to which humans are capable of inventing ingenious excuses for not believing in things they do not want to believe in, despite the clearest evidence for the reality of such things. So we can imagine materialist thinkers trying to explain away such observations by claiming that the arising of a ghost-like form from a dying body was just some kind of unimportant physical side-effect of death, rather like a rotting corpse giving off a stench. Such a claim would not be any more far-fetched than the excuses today's  materialists give to explain away frequent observations of apparitions or observations of out-of-body experiences in which people say they floated out of their bodies and saw them from meters away. 

Alternate Reality Scenario #5: Humans With Souls That Always Visibly and Vocally Left Their Bodies at Death

Another interesting alternate reality possibility is one in which human souls always visibly left a body at death, while at the same time continuing to speak. So you might have death scenes like this:

MotherGrandma's heart has finally stopped. Soon she will be dead.

SonLook, Mom. Grandma's ghost is rising out of her body!

Grandma:  Well, here I am out of my body. I guess this "dying" thing isn't so hard after all. Please arrange for a burial of that old corpse I no longer need.  

In such an alternate reality, would humans then almost all believe in the reality of a human soul? Not necessarily.  You can never underestimate the degree to which humans are capable of inventing ingenious excuses for not believing in things they do no not want to believe in, despite the clearest evidence for the reality of such things. So we can imagine materialist thinkers trying to explain away such observations by creating a theory that complex shared hallucinations always occur at death, with all the witnesses hearing and seeing the same illusory thing, due to a kind of rapid hallucination infection caused by moving hallucination particles. Such speculations would be no more bizarre than current speculations about a multiverse, designed to evade the evidence that our universe was fine-tuned to allow observers. 

Alternate Reality Scenario #6: Very Quick Human Reproduction

An interesting alternate reality scenario to imagine is one in which human reproduction occurs very quickly. Once a human decided to reproduce, his or her body might become rather bloated. Then he or she might split into two different adult bodies, each with its own mind.  The reproduction of a human body would therefore be rather like the reproduction of a cell.

If life worked this way, humans would probably "take it for granted," and regard it as no great clue about the nature of reality. Humans probably would not say, "Look at how amazing it is -- each of us can split into two bodies very quickly; such a marvel must be some sign of divine design or the agency or a higher power." The marvel involved in such a splitting would not be all that much greater than the real-life marvel of an extremely complex eukaryotic cell (consisting of trillions of well-arranged atoms) splitting into two identical copies of itself, or the real-life marvel of a speck-sized zygote progressing to become the vast state of organization that is the adult human body.  Those marvels 95% of all humans "take for granted," and fail to regard with wonder, even though they are more amazing than anything an astronomer has ever seen in a telescope.

The rule is always: people will "take for granted" any marvel, as long as they have seen such a marvel all their lives.  So, for example, if it were true that anyone could go outside, snap his fingers, and always then see a delicious four-course meal on a silver platter descend from the sky, landing at his feet, then we might call that a law of nature and call it "the law of convenient food delivery," and regard it as nothing very special and no sign of the work of a higher power. 

Alternate Reality Scenario #7: Most Human Living Places Older Than Human Civilization

Finally, I can imagine one other alternate reality scenario: one in which most humans lived in living places older than human civilization. We can imagine a planet in which there are billions of very well-constructed castles and mansion that humans live in, so many that every family might have its own glorious castle or mansion, with all of these grand living places so old that there was no record of when they were constructed. 

If there were such a reality, it would not necessarily be the case that most humans would regard themselves as being blessed by some castle maker who provided these things for their convenience. There would probably be some large group of materialists who would claim an accidental origin for all of these convenient castles and mansions.  We can imagine such people coming up with some catchphrase or slogan they would use to help spread claims of an accidental origin of so many millions of castles and mansions so convenient.  They might constantly repeat some vacuous  phrase such as "constructive conglomeration" as an explanation. It wouldn't be a decent explanation at all, but it would serve the purpose of acting as an analgesic pill for those pained by encountering examples seeming like design by some higher power. If it seems far-fetched to imagine very many people would postulate an accidental origin of tall, glorious castles and mansions, you should remember that every new type of biological innovation or new type of species is a hierarchical organization of matter trillions of times more impressive than a lifeless castle or mansion, and remember the type of claims made about such marvels of purposeful innovation.  

Monday, September 9, 2024

Wasting Billions Looking for Things Never Seen, Universities Ignore So Many Important Things Often Seen

 There was recently in the science news the latest results of the search for dark matter. Once again, scientists failed to find any evidence for it. If there were a magazine devoted to the search for dark matter, it might look like this:

futility of dark matter searches

A quote from the journal Science gives us a hint of the dysfunction and lack of candor that is occurring. We read this:

"Once again, physicists have used an ultrasensitive underground detector to hunt for particles of mysterious dark matter—and come up empty. The LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) experiment searched for so-called weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) with five times better sensitivity than any previous experiment, but saw no sign of the hypothetical particles, the LZ team reported at two conferences today—one in Chicago and the other in São Paulo. The result doesn’t rule out the existence of WIMPs—long the favored candidate for dark matter—but it suggests the 4-decade-long saga of the whimsically named particles is entering its final chapters.

'If WIMPs were there, we have the sensitivity to have seen them,'  says Chamkaur Ghag, a particle physicist at University College London and spokesperson for the 250-member LZ team. Still, it’s too early to give up hope of detecting WIMPs, Ghag says. 'This is our first real foray into discovery territory.' ”

Notice the "black is white" kind of language occurring, in which an utter failure to detect anything is described as a "foray into discovery territory."  It's kind of like declaring your bankruptcy announcement by calling it "the latest proof of my prosperity." 

Here is how one university announced the "found nothing" results:

Let's fix that "PR spin" headline to get rid of its lack of candor:

corrected headline

Even more misleading is the bogus boasting headline in this article written by one of the dark matter scientists.


Let's fix that bogus headline:


In a Scientific American article on the observational flop, we very strangely hear one dark matter enthusiast tell us that a lack of signal (in other words, a failure to observe anything) is "a scientific triumph." 

Professor believers in dark matter are a belief community, like some religious sect. Just as the zealots of some sect may fail to be very honest when arguing for their creed, the dark matter believers very often fail to be honest. They routinely misspeak by speaking as if they had dark matter observations when all they have is observations of regular matter which they claim is being influenced by dark matter. According to dark matter theorists, dark matter is invisible. So no observations of ordinary matter should ever be described as observations of dark matter. It's kind of like someone seeing only cloud movements, and calling them "angel tugs."


Members of the dark matter belief community routinely publish "composition of the universe" charts like the one below, and thereby pretend to understand deep, sweeping things they do not at all understand. When they publish such charts, you never see the confessions shown below.

composition of the universe

The cherished hope of the dark matter theorist is to one day have some observation that he can use to claim that his dogma about the universe being 24% dark matter is correct. No observations that we can reasonably envision in our lifetimes would ever prove the dogma that dark matter makes up a large fraction of the universe.  The most that could ever happen is that scientists might discover some invisible never-discovered particle, and then claim that dark matter is that particle.  But that would never prove that dark matter is a substantial fraction of the universe.  All that would have happened is that dark matter dogmatists would have got a little talking point that they could crow about. Consequently, under no conditions in our lifetime will anyone ever justify the huge sums of money spent on looking for dark matter. 

What is very strange is that universities are wasting billions on futile attempts to try to observe things that have never been seen (such as dark matter, dark energy, supersymmetry "super-partner particles" and primordial b-modes), while at the same encouraging a suppression of the study of very important observations of things that have abundantly been seen.  The observations I refer to are observations of the paranormal, including the things mentioned in the visual below:

types of paranormal phenomena

You can read about such observations in my post here, which lists 120+ types of paranormal or anomalous experiences.  Such observations and reports are of great importance because they have the greatest relevance to fundamental questions about who we are, unlike dark matter quests which have no relevance to such questions.  


Universities are suppressing serious study of such phenomena, by denying funding to the study of such phenomena, by encouraging the gaslighting of those who report such phenomena, and by excluding fair summaries of such phenomena (and excluding first-hand reports of such phenomena) in the textbooks and papers and lecture classes produced by the scholars of such universities. Our universities are churning out "filter bubble" scientists who stay within a materialist echo chamber, refusing to study abundant observations that contradict their cherished beliefs.  This is utterly contrary to the true spirit of science, which is "follow the observations wherever they lead, no matter how much they defy your expectations." 

scientists responding to paranormal

I will give an example of such suppression. In a post scheduled for publication on this blog a few weeks from now, I will tell the story of the founder of one of America's leading universities, a man who served as that university's first president for many years. In the middle of his very long term of very productive intellectual activity as the president of the university, this university founder reported to a newspaper that he had seen the apparition of his deceased wife at least twenty times, and that in most of these times he had lengthy two-way conversations with this apparition. He reported trying a fascinating test, in which the apparition identified the location of a small object in his house that someone else had hid, a location he did not know. I am rather sure that no one who studies science at this major university is informed in any of their classes about this very important account coming from the founder of their university, a person who reported the observations at length in a mainstream newspaper of that university's city. 

Thursday, September 5, 2024

A Related-Topic Diagram for Near-Death Experiences

 At a site I read I got a link to a PhD dissertation on the topic of near-death experiences. The dissertation is entitled "Are Near-Death Experiences Veridical? A Philosophical Inquiry," and is by Monika J. Mandoki of the University of Western Ontario. I cannot recommend reading the document, which does a poor job of giving us relevant scholarship on the topic mentioned in its title. We get a 315-page document that wanders all over the map, without giving us much in the way of a discussion of the topics the author should have been writing  about to properly address the question raised in the title. I guess this is what we might expect from someone doing a dissertation to get a PhD in Theory and Criticism.  The dissertation reads as if the author is trying to show how much she knows or has learned about various philosophers or theorists. Along the way the reader gets little discussion relevant to the topic of whether near-death experiences are veridical in the sense of providing evidence for life after death. 

Although the bibliography of the dissertation lists many books on near-death experiences, we are left with the suspicion that the author did not study accounts of near-death experiences very deeply. We don't get much in the way of quotations from such books, or discussion of the best cases in such books. The literature of near-death experiences includes quite a lot of discussion of what are called veridical near-death experiences. These are mainly cases in which someone having a near-death experiences reports seeing things or hearing things or perceiving things which should have been impossible for him, given his medical affliction or state of unconsciousness at the time.  I discuss quite a few such cases in my widely-read post "The Enigma of Veridical Near-Death Experiences," which you can read here

For example, a person who has a near-death experience while his heart stopped for minutes may report many details of what was going on during medical attempts to restart his heart, details which should have been impossible for him to have learned. Other examples of veridical near-death experiences include cases in which someone reports learning information from some nonearthly source, information that he or she never learned during regular sensory experience, information subsequently confirmed. One of many examples I could cite is the account near the beginning of my post here, in which a daughter dying during labor reports seeing in the spirit world both her mother (Mrs. Arnot, three miles away) and the daughter's infant child, both of whom died just before the daughter died, before the daughter was told of either of their deaths. 

Oddly Mandoki seems to have made no serious study of such cases, despite them being so relevant to the title of her dissertation. The author has also apparently failed to pay sufficient attention to almost all of the items in a set of topics that are closely related to whether near-death experiences provide evidence for human survival after death. 

The diagram below illustrates what some of these topics are, also giving some URLs where you can find out more about some of these topics:

near-death experiences related topics

Let me discuss some of these topics, and mention how they are extremely relevant to whether near-death experiences are important evidence for life after death. 

Apparition sightings:  Contrary to the idea of some people that near-death experiences are a rather recent phenomenon, there are quite a few cases of such experiences dating from long before 1975 -- accounts you can read by reading my series of posts here, and continuing to press Older Posts at the bottom right.  But there was little discussion of such evidence before 1975. Conversely, there has been throughout history well-known evidence for apparition sightings.  By the late 19th-century serious researchers at the Society for Psychical Research were able to publish the massive two-volume work Phantasms of the Living on the topic of apparitions, a work with a total of more than 1000 pages that you can read here and here. The whole topic of apparition sightings is extremely relevant to the credibility of near-death experiences.  If there are credible sightings of deceased people existing outside of their bodies,  such evidence helps to shore up the credibility of people reporting traveling out of their bodies during near-death experiences.  Commonly related accounts of death-bed apparitions (in which deceased family members are so often reported as being seen by a dying person) provide a type of observation that is similar to what we often get in near-death experiences, in which someone may report traveling to some heavenly realm and seeing deceased family members.      

There are two types of apparition sightings which have elements of the veridical, if we use that term to mean some level of evidence that can be verified independently of one person's subjective experience.  One type is what are called crisis apparitions, in which a person may have an experience of seeing the apparition of a person he did not know was dead, with that witness later finding out that such a person did die at about the same time the apparition was seen.  I have listed hundreds of such cases in my series of posts below:

An Apparition Was Their Death Notice

25 Who Were "Ghost-Told" of a Death

25 More Who Were "Ghost-Told" of a Death




There are also many apparition sightings that involve multiple witnesses claiming to see the same apparition. These have a strongly veridical element, in that we are not reliant on the testimony of a single witness. Some of these cases can be read about in my posts below:

When an Apparition Is Seen by Not Just One

Apparition sightings and their veridical elements are extremely relevant to the credibility of near-death experiences as evidence for life after death. But strangely Mandoki makes no relevant mention of such sightings, completely ignoring the topic. 

ADC and afterlife-related dreams:  The term ADC (standing for after-death communication) refers to cases in which a living person in normal health seems to get some sign or indication which he interprets as being possibly caused by some deceased person or spirit. Although the term ADC is of relatively recent coinage, in the later half of the second nineteenth century there were innumerable reports of strange phenomena that people called "spiritual manifestations," and interpreted as coming from the deceased. Such reports are discussed in the 22 posts here, which you can read by continuing to press Older Posts at the bottom right. Even today surveys indicate that a large fraction of the population reports having such experiences, or having dreams that they interpret as some kind of contact with the deceased.  I will give an example of a type that I often experience.  I awoke one morning pondering whether a dream I had about papayas may have been a symbolic reference to my father, the word "papayas" beginning with the same four characters as "papa."  While pondering that, suddenly the circuit breaker went off mysteriously in a nearby bathroom no one had been in for more than an hour, something requiring a press of a button in that bathroom.  I later realized that this spooky event occurred on my father's birthday. A similar spooky experience on a parent's birthday is described here

Events such as these (and highly recurrent dreams about life after death and deceased relatives) may be evidence that near-death experiences are a subset of a larger class of phenomena that occurs to a fraction of the population much larger than those who have near-death experiences. I will give an example of such a dream at the end of this post. The topic is very relevant to whether near-death experiences are evidence for life after death, but Mandoki ignores the topic. 

Seance and medium activity.  During the second half of the nineteenth century, there was a great abundance of reports of inexplicable phenomena that were called "spiritual manifestations." These included a vast variety of phenomena including mysterious raps, inexplicable table movements, the playing of musical instruments when no one touched them, the full levitation or half-levitation of tables, the full levitation of human beings, the appearance of mysterious materialized forms at seances, and so forth.  The people reporting these phenomena were extremely diligent about documenting their observations, often producing reports signed by multiple witnesses, and published within a few weeks of the reported observations.  You can read many of their accounts in my posts  herehereherehereherehere, herehereherehereherehere,  here and hereThe topic is very relevant to whether near-death experiences provide evidence for life after death, but Mandoki ignores the whole topic, failing to make any reference to a medium or a seance. 

Out-of-body experiences.  Near-death experiences may include out-of-body experiences in which someone reports floating out of his body. But out-of-body experiences are widely reported by many who did not have a near-death experience. Long before Raymond Moody's 1975 Life After Life book bringing near-death experiences to the forefront, there were books by people reporting out-of-body experiences.  The main scholar who wrote about such experiences was Robert Crookall, who wrote a series of books (mostly before 1975) citing very many out-of-body experiences reported by others (including the books herehere and here). The topic of such experiences is very relevant to the topic of near-death experiences. Mandoki does not show much of a sign of having seriously studied this topic, and fails to mention Crookall or any of the pre-1975 publications (such as those of the Society for Psychical Research) which documented reports of out-of-body experiences. 

Psi: ESP, clairvoyance, etc.  Systematic written evidence for ESP and clairvoyance goes back two hundred years. The 20th century saw extremely convincing results in many formal ESP tests conducted by professors, such as the results described here and here, which we would never expect to get by chance even if everyone on Earth was tested for ESP.  Reports of dramatic clairvoyance (such as those here,  herehereherehereherehereherehereherehere  and herewere written throughout most of the nineteenth century, and were often written by physicians and scientists.  All evidence for ESP and clairvoyance is evidence against the claim that the human mind is merely the product of the brain, as there is no possible neural explanation for such phenomena.  Evidence for ESP and clairvoyance is evidence for a human soul, which is part of the reason why so many scientists have been so stubborn in refusing to pay attention to convincing evidence for ESP and clairvoyance (they realize that materialism will receive a "bullet in the chest" the moment the reality of such evidence is admitted).  Being evidence for a human soul, the evidence for psi phenomena such as ESP and clairvoyance have great relevance to the credibility of reports of souls rising out of the human body during near-death experiences. The evidence for ESP and clairvoyance corroborates such reports and helps to lend credibility to such reports. Many of the reports of "traveling clairvoyance" under hypnosis resemble reports of out-of-body experiences during near-death events. The same type of veridical details (people reporting things they should not have known of) occur in accounts of clairvoyance and near-death experiences. Mandoki makes no mention of telepathy or clairvoyance other than a passing mention. 

UAP, UFOs, orbs: As discussed here and here, it has been pointed out by quite a few investigators that many UFO sightings and sightings of UAP (unidentified aerial phenomena or unidentified anomalous phenomena) can be mysterious encounters similar to near-death experiences, experiences that seem more psychic than encounters with "nuts and bolts" hardware. People often report naked-eye observations of mysterious orbs, as you can read about by viewing the 100+ posts you can read here (by continuing to press Older Posts at the bottom right).  There is also abundant photographic evidence for mysterious orbs, including mysterious orbs showing abundantly repeating patterns. Such observations may be evidence of some spiritual reality related to near-death experiences. 

Do brains make minds? The very large topic of whether the human brain can explain the human mind is one of the greatest relevance in discussing whether near-death experiences are compelling evidence for life after death.  A materialist will appeal to the dogma that all mental activity is the result of brain activity to try to present a fatal objection to all reports of experiences occurring when a brain was shut down during cardiac arrest. The materialist will also appeal to such a dogma to try and slam the door on all discussion of life after death. The materialist reasoning is "permanently dead brains equals permanently dead minds." The topic of whether such claims are valid therefore has the greatest relevance to discussions of whether near-death experiences provide evidence of life after death. Mandoki makes almost no mention of the topic. 

Cases of a bad brain and good mind. There are very many neuroscience case histories that dramatically defy claims that the human brain is the source of the human mind.  Some of those cases are discussed here and here. Many of these cases involve people who retained high-performing minds after the most severe brain damage, such as loss of the left half of the brainloss of the right half of the brain, or even loss of more than half of the brain.

The topic of whether the brain can credibly explain the human mind is a topic of very great depth, requiring an inquiry into many smaller topics such as whether scientists have any credible brain explanation for memory formation,  whether scientists have any credible brain explanation for memory persistence for fifty yearswhether scientists have any credible brain explanation for instant memory retrieval, whether scientists have any credible neural explanation for self-hood, creativity and thinking, and so forth. You can read my extremely detailed "deep dive" into this topic by reading the very many posts on my "Head Truth" blog here. A sufficiently deep and objective examination of the topic will lead you to the conclusion that the "brains make minds" dogma is untenable, and that boasts that scientists have neural explanations for minds are groundless achievement legends. The innumerable failures of "brains make minds" claims is of the greatest relevance to whether near-death experiences provide evidence for life after death. Mandoki briefly mentions some of these cases around page 180 of her dissertation. 

Brain physical shortfalls.  Investigating the question above leads to the extremely relevant topic of brain physical shortfalls, which are physical limitations of every brain that seem to imply that the brain  cannot possibly be the source of the human mind and the storage place of human memories. Such shortfalls have a clear relevance to the evidence value of near-death experiences. You can read about such shortfalls hereMandoki fails to discuss this topic, and seems to make little or no substantive discussion of neuroscience.  

Marvels of mind and memory: HSAM, memorizing long books, etc: I refer here to the topic of the most impressive cases of human mental performance, such as HSAM (Highly Superior Autobiographical Memory, in which someone can remember almost all days of his adult life), the ability of some humans to perform marvels of memory such as memorizing long books such as the Quran, the New Testament, and the Aeneid, the ability of certain math marvels to perform very quickly very hard math problems without touching paper, pen or computer, and so forth. The more such cases there are (cases that cannot be explained by human brains with many physical shortfalls such as a lack of addressing and indexes, and unreliable synaptic transmission), the more credible is the idea that human minds are souls rather than the outputs of brains; and the more credible such an idea is, the more credible is the idea that accounts of near-death experiences are evidence of life after death.  

Lack of credible neural explanations for selves, memory and cognition: this topic involves the failure of neuroscientists to give credible neural explanations for things such as memories that can last for 50 years or more, instant recall, creativity, imagination, and self-hood. This failure is of very great relevance to accounts of near-death experiences. The more badly neuroscience fails to explain basic abilities of the human mind (as discussed in many posts here), the more plausible is the idea that human minds are souls that can leave a human body in near-death experiences. 

In an interview in Psychology Today, Mandoki states this:

"Looking at reality this way, I examined the possibility of materialism (physicalism), mind-body dualism (there is a separate mind and a separate body in existence), and philosophical idealism (reality is mind-created and/or mind-dependent). Initially, I was uncertain whether any of these theories were viable. Soon, I dismissed materialism entirely and I found that mind-body dualism does not work in any form because the theory is very difficult to make it workable."

Oops, that quote makes it sound like someone acting with haste, not someone delivering a judgment from many years of study of all the relevant evidence. The most convincing case against materialism can be made, but it requires a great deal of study ranging across many different topics. The statement against mind-body dualism has no force, as it consists merely of a vague and unsubstantiated claim that it is "very difficult to make it workable." Had Mandoki deeply studied most of the topics listed above, she would have found very much in favor of mind-body dualism, something as credible or more credible than philosophical idealism (the idea that all that exists is minds and mental phenomena). Reports that people floated out of their bodies or saw apparitions of deceased relatives seem more suggestive of mind-body dualism than philosophical idealism. I wonder whether Mandoki's preference for philosophical idealism rather than mind-body dualism has been a factor in her seemingly weak study of such observational reports more suggestive of mind-body dualism than philosophical idealism. Mandoki then states this:

"I believe that a consciousness-only or mind-only reality works out better than any other types of philosophically-advanced theories because the uniformity of reality solves many difficult philosophical questions, such as the relationship of mind and body and the relationship of this world and the next. Therefore, its conclusion that consciousness or mind survives death and continues in an afterlife is the most convincing philosophical option."

The conclusion she makes in the second sentence is warranted, but in the interview she poorly states the case for such a conclusion, and her PhD dissertation does a poor job of marshalling evidence for such a conclusion, largely because she ignores or scantily discusses so many relevant lines of evidence she could have used, instead wasting way too much time on scarcely relevant discussions of philosophers.  Perhaps what is going on is something that can be described like this: you are allowed in mainstream venues to present a case against materialist thinking, but only if your case is pretty weak. So you can write a PhD dissertation challenging materialist orthodoxy, but only if you write a rather evidence-weak dissertation that doesn't cause the professors reviewing your work to lose too much sleep. And you can publish an opinion piece defying the worldview of today's professors, in publications read by such professors, as long as you present a weak case, so that your readers are not too shaken. And you can get interviewed in a mainstream publication, and state a case for life after death, but only if you state your case weakly in a way that won't upset the typical readers of such a publication. 

Finally, let me give that example I promised earlier of a dream seeming to symbolize life after death. Yesterday I had a dream I was walking up a stairway looking like the stairway depicted below, one with tombstone images on the stairway walls. The dream may have symbolized rising up from death to a higher level of existence. It is one of 400+ dreams I have had that seemed to refer to an afterlife

dream symbolizing life after death
AI art recreates my dream image

Postscript: Mandoki's failure to describe well the better examples of what are commonly called veridical near-death experiences is shown by two examples. She discusses the Pam Reynolds case, strangely turning it into a philosophical discussion of whether Reynolds was literally dead during her near-death experience. She fails to discuss why the case attracted so much attention: the fact that Reynolds reported details of her very complicated operation that should have been unknown to her.  I earlier described the case like this:

"At the time of her brain operation, the late Pam Reynolds was a 35-year old who had a large brain aneurysm. She underwent a complicated operation that involved pumping out her blood and chilling her body temperature to only 60 degrees. Some twenty medical personnel worked on the complex operation.

After the successful operation was over, Reynolds reported having a near-death experience. She reported floating out of her body, and witnessing her operation. She accurately reported details of some medical equipment that was used to cut her skull open, describing it as a 'saw thing...like an electric toothbrush,'  with 'interchangeable blades' that were stored in 'what looked like a socket wrench case.'  She reported someone complaining that her veins and arteries were too small. These details were later verified. This was despite the fact that Reynolds eyes were covered throughout the operation, and her ears were plugged with earplugs delivering noise of 40 decibels and 90 decibels."

The Pam Reynolds case is discussed in further detail here

Similarly, Mandoki discusses the research of Sam Parnia, mentioning the failure of subjects under cardiac arrest to detect cards hidden from them that were placed as test objects that could be seen only by a patient having an out-of-body experience. But she fails to mention the success of Parnia's original AWARE study in finding a patient reporting medical details that should have been unknown to him during his cardiac arrest. I earlier described the case like this:

"The study did 'hit the jackpot' in regard to one case of a 57-year-old patient who said that he floated out of his body while being revived from his cardiac arrest. The man said that a woman appeared in a high corner of the room, beckoning him to come up to her. He said that despite thinking that was impossible, he found himself up in the high corner of the room, looking down on the medical team trying to revive him. The man described specific details of the revival efforts, including the presence of a bald fat man with a blue hat, a nurse saying, 'Dial 444 cardiac arrest,' his blood pressure being taken, a nurse pumping on his chest, a doctor sticking something down his throat, and blood gases and blood sugar levels being taken.

Here is what the scientific paper said in regard to the accuracy of these recollections:


'He accurately described people, sounds, and activities from his resuscitation...His medical records corroborated his accounts and specifically supported his descriptions and the use of an automated external defibrillator (AED). Based on current AED algorithms, this likely corresponded with up to 3 minutes of conscious awareness during CA [cardiac arrest] and CPR.' "