Researchers have long observed patients experiencing vivid hallucinations after clinical death, when the heart stops but the brain shows electrical activity.
In 2009, George Washington University researchers studied seven clinically dead patients, detecting a surge of gamma waves—linked to perception and movement—lasting up to 90 seconds after the heart stopped.
Hameroff suggested this could indicate the “near-death experience” or the “soul leaving the body.”...<<<Read More>>>...