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A typology of near-death experiences

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1985
Cluster analysis of 89 near-death experiences yielded three discrete types of such experiences: transcendental, affective, and cognitive. Demographic variables did not differentiate individuals having these different types of experiences, but cognitive near-death experiences were less frequent following anticipated near-death events.
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Near-Death Experiences

New England Journal of Medicine, 1977
Sabom Mb, Kreutiziger S
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The Near-death Experience

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1988
John H. Owen, Glenn Roberts
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Near-death experiences

2016
Some people who are near death – or believe themselves to be – have found that the dying process is experienced not in terms of a painful and fearful catastrophic loss of function, but rather as a serene, perhaps even blissful, experience that includes coherent and meaningful elements that suggest to them that some aspect of the self continues to ...
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A NEAR-DEATH EXPERIENCE

The Lancet, 1983
E. Wiltshaw, I.R. Judson
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A near death experience

British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2014
Bryan Renton, B K Y Chan
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Death, Near-Death Experiences, “Near-Death Experiences”

The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, 1980
I. Stevenson, B. Greyson
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Pushing Near-Death Experiences (I)

2018
This chapter focuses on a long-term development in Western societies addressed as “privatized death,” namely, the assignment of the dying into hospitals and other institutions. This trend, mirrored in the works of French historian Philippe Ariès and psychologist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, so the chapter argues, served as a “push factor” for articulating ...
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