A beckoning light; a feeling of transcendence: these are two characteristics of a near-death experience that new research suggests may relate to amounts of certain chemicals in the blood. “The phenomenon known as ‘near-death experience’ is the stuff of hospital dramas, a dramatic conceit for movies about do-overs and for a (I guess lucky) few of us, a mysterious peephole to ‘the other side.’ The phenomenon is very real: By various estimates, 11% to 23% of those who had experienced cardiac arrest and lived to tell about it report some unique cognitive experience — an overwhelming feeling of transcendence, doors opening, beckoning light, a thumbnail life-review — that broadly fits the description. (The Internet yields a bounty of personal accounts as well, so it must be real!) But their observations are not very well explained — not, at least, by standard earthly measures.”
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Chemical Afterlife
A beckoning light; a feeling of transcendence: these are two characteristics of a near-death experience that new research suggests may relate to amounts of certain chemicals in the blood.
Monthly Issue
April 2026
In this monthly issue, we examine how our understanding of energy — and how we source and use it — is evolving.
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