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Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife is a 2012 New York Times bestselling nonfiction book and autobiographical book written by the American neurosurgeon Eben Alexander and published by Simon & Schuster.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (born June 30, 1944) is an American philosopher, psychiatrist, physician and author, most widely known for his books about afterlife and near-death experiences (NDE), a term that he coined in 1975 in his best-selling book Life After Life. [1]
Eben Alexander III (born December 11, 1953) is an American neurosurgeon and author. In 2008, he went under a medically-induced coma while being treated for meningitis.His book Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife (2012) describes his near-death experience while in the coma. [1]
A doctor has penned a book that chronicles his alleged journey to the afterlife following a near-death experience that led to a "spiritual awakening" that transformed his career.. In "Dying to ...
Long is the author of the book Evidence of the Afterlife: The Science of Near-Death Experiences, a New York Times Best Seller. [9] He has appeared in many media outlets, including The O'Reilly Factor , NBC Today , ABC (Peter Jennings), Dr. Oz Show , History Channel , Learning Channel , National Geographic and Fox News Houston.
Since it was the doctors and nurses who were giving the reports, not the patients who had, presumably, actually had the experience, the reports were secondhand. This means they had passed through two highly fallible and constructive human memory systems (the doctor’s or nurse’s and the actual patient’s) before reaching Osis and Haraldsson.
That sense of an alternative belief system underlies the descriptions of near-death experiences, at least as they’re documented by the Christian researchers in "After Death." The floating, the ...
Moody's alleged evidence for an afterlife was heavily criticized as flawed, both logically and empirically. [8] The psychologist and skeptic James Alcock has noted that "[Moody] appears to ignore a great deal of the scientific literature dealing with hallucinatory experiences in general, just as he quickly glosses over the very real limitations of his research method."