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Resuscitation medicine grew out of the mid-twentieth century discovery of CPR, the medical procedure by which hearts that have stopped beating are revived. Originally effective for a few minutes after cardiac arrest, advances in CPR have pushed that time to a half-hour or more.New techniques promise to even further extend the boundary between life and death. At the same time, experiences reported by resuscitated people sometimes defy what’s thought to be possible. They claim to have seen and heard things, though activity in their brains appears to have stopped.It sounds supernatural, and if their memories are accurate and their brains really have stopped, it’s neurologically inexplicable, at least with what’s now known. Parnia, leader of the Human Consciousness Project’s AWARE study, which documents after-death experiences in 25 hospitals across North America and Europe, is studying the phenomenon scientifically.
If someone dies of a heart attack, for example, and it can be fixed, then in principle we can protect the brain, make sure it doesn’t experience permanent cellular death, and re-start the heart
People tend to interpret what they see based on their background: A Hindu describes a Hindu god, an atheist doesn’t see a Hindu god or a Christian god, but some being. Different cultures see the same thing, but their interpretation depends on what they believe.....At the very least, it tells us that there’s this unique experience that humans have when they go through death. It’s universal. It’s described by children as young as three. And it tells us that we should not be afraid of death.......The point that goes against the experiences happening afterwards, or before the brain shut down, is that many people describe very specific details of what happened to them during cardiac arrest. They describe conversations people had, clothes people wore, events that went on 10 or 20 minutes into resuscitation. That is not compatible with brain activity.
That Red Dwarf stuff....is so...so...umm....WRONG. After 8-10 episodes I just gave up. It almost works, but not quite.This was a bit I had never seen though, and it was funny. Thanks for posting it.
I don't care for most British television and would rather go to the dentist than watch Dr. Who, but I liked Red Dwarf.
Quote from: Alphabet Soup on April 26, 2013, 06:44:56 PMI don't care for most British television and would rather go to the dentist than watch Dr. Who, but I liked Red Dwarf.Monty Python and Fawlty Towers were fairly decent at times. Never heard of Red Dwarf.
Quote from: AlanS on April 26, 2013, 08:03:23 PMQuote from: Alphabet Soup on April 26, 2013, 06:44:56 PMI don't care for most British television and would rather go to the dentist than watch Dr. Who, but I liked Red Dwarf.Monty Python and Fawlty Towers were fairly decent at times. Never heard of Red Dwarf.I will say this - it is definitely an acquired taste.