draqon

Discussion in 'Free Thoughts' started by Cortex_Colossus, Oct 19, 2007.

  1. Cortex_Colossus Banned Banned

    Messages:
    477
    Without love, there is only pity and sadness,
    Where also one is not "living" nor "strong",
    To regain that consciousness
    That love
    and that radiance and joy that is God,
    realize that you are one with what you observe,
    since the pixels in that computer screen you watch
    is analogous to reality,
    you are not found in reality,
    reality is found in you.
    You are mind, and your subjective mind is equally the spirit behind your picture
    OF reality.
    Reality is therefore nowhere when not being looked at,
    By asking "who am I?" deep beneath the ID can one discover
    that I am that (limitless being/non-separation and consciousness and love, each are self-contained in that their definitions can mistakenly form false concepts.)

    http://www.victorzammit.com/articles/nde&sixthsense.html

    Quote:



    For his latest research, 60 patients at Southampton General Hospital's coronary care unit were interviewed after heart attacks had left them temporarily brain-dead. Seven reported near-death experiences - defined by characteristic features such as a feeling of leaving your body, going through a tunnel and entering an area of "love, bliss and consciousness".

    "The significance of this is that after a cardiac arrest you lose consciousness within eight seconds; within 11 seconds the brain's rhythms become flat, and within 18 seconds there is no possibility of the brain creating a model of the world - so the brain is down," said Dr Fenwick.

    "Yet whenever we asked people when their near-death experiences occurred, they said it was during unconsciousness. If that's true, their experience was occurring when there was no blood flowing through the brain - and consciousness would appear to exist outside the brain."

    It could be argued that their experiences occurred in the few seconds between brain functions being restored and the return of consciousness. But recent research on a patient in the United States, where traces of electrical activity in the brain were closely monitored, suggested this was not the case.

    "That study and other evidence points to the mind and brain not being identical, and it seems that the mind may operate in part outside the brain as a sort of field which works in the same way as a TV receiver receives programmes through the airwaves," said Dr Fenwick.
     

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