What is your answer?

Some suggest that near-death experiences come from oxygen starvation of the brain. Glynn criticizes this view on the grounds that

    { 1 } - those who have experienced both (oxygen starvation and near-death experiences) tell us that the two are very different.
    { 2 } - oxygen starvation confuses our mental processes -- but people who have near-death experiences give very clear accounts of what they experienced.
    { 3 } - those who have near-death experiences frequently have normal or above normal oxygen levels.
    { 4 } - all of the above.

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1 is wrong. Please try again.

Some suggest that near-death experiences come from oxygen starvation of the brain. Glynn criticizes this view on the grounds that

He also gives the other objections.

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2 is wrong. Please try again.

Some suggest that near-death experiences come from oxygen starvation of the brain. Glynn criticizes this view on the grounds that

    { 1 } - those who have experienced both (oxygen starvation and near-death experiences) tell us that the two are very different.
    { 2 } - oxygen starvation confuses our mental processes -- but people who have near-death experiences give very clear accounts of what they experienced.
    { 3 } - those who have near-death experiences frequently have normal or above normal oxygen levels.
    { 4 } - all of the above.

He also gives the other objections.

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3 is wrong. Please try again.

Some suggest that near-death experiences come from oxygen starvation of the brain. Glynn criticizes this view on the grounds that

    { 1 } - those who have experienced both (oxygen starvation and near-death experiences) tell us that the two are very different.
    { 2 } - oxygen starvation confuses our mental processes -- but people who have near-death experiences give very clear accounts of what they experienced.
    { 3 } - those who have near-death experiences frequently have normal or above normal oxygen levels.
    { 4 } - all of the above.

He also gives the other objections.

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4 is correct!

Some suggest that near-death experiences come from oxygen starvation of the brain. Glynn criticizes this view on the grounds that

    { 1 } - those who have experienced both (oxygen starvation and near-death experiences) tell us that the two are very different.
    { 2 } - oxygen starvation confuses our mental processes -- but people who have near-death experiences give very clear accounts of what they experienced.
    { 3 } - those who have near-death experiences frequently have normal or above normal oxygen levels.
    { 4 } - all of the above.

Glynn adds that there's often little relation between the quality of the recollection and the condition of the brain (which frequently is in a very bad condition).

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Before continuing, you might try some wrong answers.
























 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

























the end