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ElaKiri Talk!
What Can Science Tell Us About Death?
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<blockquote data-quote="imhotep" data-source="post: 29098058" data-attributes="member: 562115"><p>If someone wakes up from death (this has happened in the olden days and even to this day) he wasn't dead in the first instance. The person appears to be dead. That's all. It's named the "Romeo Error" for obvious reasons. I have written on this on another post long ago.</p><p></p><p>The brain takes around 10 mins to die and unless in the case of where the person was drowned in zero temperature water or in immediate cryostorage, can never recover. Clinical death is not only heart failure. It's the death of the brain. Once the brain's basic rhythms disappear you are clinically dead.</p><p>There are several important wave patterns eg alpha, beta, gamma, delta, theta oscillations in the brain. Neuroscientists have recorded the activity of a dying human brain and discovered rhythmic brain wave patterns around the time of death that are similar to those occurring during dreaming, memory recall, and meditation.</p><p>This is the reason for near-death experiences. The brain simply plays last recall of important life events.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="imhotep, post: 29098058, member: 562115"] If someone wakes up from death (this has happened in the olden days and even to this day) he wasn't dead in the first instance. The person appears to be dead. That's all. It's named the "Romeo Error" for obvious reasons. I have written on this on another post long ago. The brain takes around 10 mins to die and unless in the case of where the person was drowned in zero temperature water or in immediate cryostorage, can never recover. Clinical death is not only heart failure. It's the death of the brain. Once the brain's basic rhythms disappear you are clinically dead. There are several important wave patterns eg alpha, beta, gamma, delta, theta oscillations in the brain. Neuroscientists have recorded the activity of a dying human brain and discovered rhythmic brain wave patterns around the time of death that are similar to those occurring during dreaming, memory recall, and meditation. This is the reason for near-death experiences. The brain simply plays last recall of important life events. [/QUOTE]
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