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There's a recent volume on NDEs, the Accident for Near Death Experiences, and happens to be a collection of peer reviewed articles. And even some editorials published in Missouri Medicine, the journal of the Missouri State Medical Association. And that was then published in an edited volume by the University of Missouri Press. And it starts off by indicating that in the U.S., they were just using the U.S., I was looking at the statistics, as well, but it just started to get used in the U.S. It says that between nine and twenty million persons have had NDEs. And that in itself, that in itself is a little research value, other than generating some serious interest for initiating further studies, especially when there is, when there are corroborative critical recollections. This is a very little recollection. This just means what's actually happening in reality, so these people, when they come back to consciousness, they're getting accountable with going on around them, etc. Human consciousness during near death may offer some evidence for the various theories of human consciousness, but entirely depends on the brain or any bodily state. And corroborated data may show the presence of consciousness at other times when neither the heart nor brain had any detectable measurements. And some experiences that people report doing NDEs that involved observation that could not have been made from the person's physical location, even if completely conscious, healthy or looking at the surroundings at that moment. Stopping. Thank you.
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