logo
Jeremy Renner and the Science of Extraordinary Near-Death Experiences

Jeremy Renner and the Science of Extraordinary Near-Death Experiences

New York Times02-05-2025
A little over two years ago, the actor Jeremy Renner was run over by a seven-ton snowplow. In a new memoir, he wrote that as he lay near death, he experienced something extraordinary.
He could see his entire life at once, and felt an 'exhilarating peace' and a connection to the world. He also saw family and friends arrayed before him, telling him not to let go.
'What I felt was energy, a constantly connected, beautiful and fantastic energy,' Mr. Renner wrote. 'There was no time, place or space, and nothing to see, except a kind of electric, two-way vision made from strands of that inconceivable energy, like the whipping lines of cars' taillights photographed by a time-lapse camera.'
What Mr. Renner described is 'classic for near-death experiences,' the term researchers use for such events, said Dr. Jeffrey Long, the founder of the Near-Death Experience Research Foundation.
Dr. Long's foundation has collected more than 4,000 accounts similar to Mr. Renner's. Some people who have come close to death have recounted a sense of energy, peace and absence of time, as Mr. Renner did. Some have also described watching their body from above, moving through a tunnel toward a light and even meeting God.
The general public may be familiar with these events through a genre of memoirs that present near-death experiences as proof of a Christian afterlife. But they have been reported across countries, demographics and religions, as well as by atheists, and have been a subject of scientific research for decades.
There is no scientific consensus on what causes near-death experiences. But whatever their cause, they can change people's lives. Some lose all fear of death; others change careers or leave relationships. The reactions to near-death experiences seem to outstrip what researchers have seen in people who nearly die but don't have such an experience.
For those people, 'usually it's like, yeah, you almost died, so you become more appreciative of life,' said Marieta Pehlivanova, a research assistant professor of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences at the University of Virginia School of Medicine's Division of Perceptual Studies, which researches near-death experiences.
But, Dr. Pehlivanova said, 'the changes we see in these people who almost died but didn't have an N.D.E. are much more subtle and do not continue over such a long period of time.'
Why do these experiences happen?
Near-death experiences are hard to study because the catastrophic injuries and illnesses that can lead to them don't lend themselves to controlled experiments. But neuroscientists have proposed a range of theories as to what causes them, and many believe the experiences stem from a complex cascade of neurological and physiological processes.
In a paper published in March, seven researchers proposed an explanation that linked near-death experiences to a burst of brain chemicals called neurotransmitters, and an activation of specific receptors in the brain that produces a sense of calm and vivid imagery. The paper also posits that near-death experiences might occur when partly conscious people go through aspects of rapid-eye-movement sleep, which is when the most robust and complex dreaming happens.
Other scientists' theories include one that involves the same neural receptors that facilitate the effects of ketamine.
Another suggests aspects of N.D.E.s might arise from dysfunction in the area of the brain responsible for combining sights, sounds, motion and our innate sense of where we are into a single sensory experience.
That might explain one of the most curious parts of near-death experiences: that some people later say they watched their body from above, and are able to describe details of what was happening around them that it seems like they shouldn't be able to know.
Dr. Kevin Nelson, a professor of neurology at the University of Kentucky who was an author of the March study, noted that people might be able to hear even when apparently unresponsive, and that patients' eyelids were often open during resuscitation efforts.
So they might take in sight and sound in real time but, because their brain is disrupted by a lack of blood flow, recall it as coming from a perspective above their body.
Processing a life-altering experience
Some researchers — and a great number of people who have had near-death experiences — believe that none of the proposed scientific explanations can account for all the elements, and that these experiences are true encounters with an afterlife.
That idea is anathema to many neuroscientists for whom a fundamental precept is that consciousness arises from the brain.
'Faith and science often get confused on this topic, in part because it has such a profound emotional valence,' Dr. Nelson said. But, he added, 'There is no scientific evidence that we can have human experience outside of the brain.'
But Dr. Long, whose medical training and practice are in radiation oncology, believes people's consciousness does leave their bodies during near-death experiences in a way that neuroscience can't account for. He is particularly convinced that science cannot explain the accuracy and detail of what patients recall seeing and hearing from outside their body.
Dr. Pehlivanova and her colleagues at the University of Virginia institute also believe the experiences could involve a real separation between consciousness and the brain, though they have not dismissed the possibility of neurological or physiological explanations.
Dr. Bruce Greyson, a professor emeritus of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences in that institute, has studied near-death experiences for 50 years. These days, he is mostly focused not on causes but on how medical professionals could best help people who go through these experiences process what they experienced.
Doctors and nurses tend to be the first people to whom patients describe their experiences, hoping to 'get some perspective on it,' Dr. Greyson said. And sometimes, those professionals respond dismissively.
'For almost all near-death experiencers, they regard this as one of the most important things, if not the most important thing, that's ever happened in their lives,' he said. 'And while it may seem inconsequential to the health care worker, it's not at all to the experiencer.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Parents seeking religious exemptions to school vaccines win reprieve in a West Virginia county
Parents seeking religious exemptions to school vaccines win reprieve in a West Virginia county

Boston Globe

time6 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Parents seeking religious exemptions to school vaccines win reprieve in a West Virginia county

Froble's ruling came in a lawsuit that was filed June 24. The injunction was limited to the three children of the plaintiffs who sued the state and local departments of education, and has no impact statewide. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Morrisey, who served as West Virginia's attorney general from 2013 until he was sworn in as governor in January, said he believes the religious exemptions to vaccinations should already be permitted under a 2023 law passed by the Legislature called the Equal Protection for Religion Act. Advertisement 'Today's ruling is another legal victory in the fight for religious freedom,' Morrisey said in a statement. 'No family should be forced to choose between their faith and their children's education, which is exactly what the unelected bureaucrats on the State Board of Education are attempting to force West Virginians to do.' The board said in a statement that it was disappointed by the ruling and that its members 'will decide next steps in the near future.' Advertisement The original lawsuit doesn't explain what specific religion the families follow. It was filed on behalf of parent Miranda Guzman, who identifies as a Christian and said that altering her child's natural immune system through required vaccinations 'would demonstrate a lack of faith in God' and 'disobey the Holy Spirit's leading.' The suit was later amended to add two other parents. Most religious denominations and groups support medical vaccinations, according to the American Bar Association. Vaccination mandates for public schools are seen as a way of to prevent the spread of once-common childhood diseases such as measles, mumps, whooping cough, chickenpox and polio. But due in part to vaccine hesitancy, some preventable and deadly diseases are on the rise. For example, the U.S. is having its worst year for measles spread in more than three decades. Medical experts have long heralded West Virginia's school vaccination policy as one of the most protective in the country for children. State law requires children to receive vaccines for chickenpox, hepatitis B, measles, meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping cough before starting school. Several states grant medical exemptions from school vaccinations. At least 30 states have religious freedom laws modeled after the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, signed in 1993 by then-President Bill Clinton. It allows federal regulations that interfere with religious beliefs to be challenged. On Wednesday, a Kanawha County judge dismissed a separate lawsuit against Morrisey's executive order because it didn't give the required 30 days' notice prior to being filed. That lawsuit, filed on behalf of two Cabell County parents, will be allowed to be refiled. It alleged that only the Legislature, not the governor, has the authority to make such decisions. Advertisement During their regular session that ended in April, lawmakers failed to pass legislation that was introduced to allow religious exemptions for school vaccine mandates.

UVU-led team finds evidence challenging universe expansion rate models
UVU-led team finds evidence challenging universe expansion rate models

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

UVU-led team finds evidence challenging universe expansion rate models

In this mosaic image stretching 340 light-years across, Webb's Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) displays the Tarantula Nebula star-forming region in a new light, including tens of thousands of never-before-seen young stars that were previously shrouded in cosmic dust. The most active region appears to sparkle with massive young stars, appearing pale blue. (Courtesy of NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Webb ERO Production Team) A new Utah Valley University study is providing new evidence in a debate astronomers across the world haven't been able to agree on — how fast the universe is expanding. The findings may add more fuel to what has been known as the Hubble Tension, a disagreement between scientists on how to best calculate the expansion rate of the universe. According to a study led by UVU astrophysicist Joseph Jensen in collaboration with other astronomers from Arizona, Maryland, Hawaii and Italy, the universe is expanding faster than current theories predict. The researchers used ultra-precise data from NASA's Hubble and James Webb telescopes, and the agency's Dark Energy Camera, which is mounted on the U.S. National Science Foundation's Víctor M. Blanco Telescope, to calculate galactic distances through an independent measuring method. According to a UVU news release, 'this allowed them to bypass traditional distance measurement methods.' 'This is a major step forward,' Jensen said in a statement. 'By using a completely independent method with the power of [the James Webb Space Telescope], we've confirmed that the universe is expanding faster than our best theories say it should. That means there's likely something fundamental that we're still missing in our understanding of the cosmos.' Astrophysicists have debated the growing discrepancy between the predicted and observed expansion rates, aiming to determine whether the inconsistencies are because of measurement errors, or theoretical flaws. The new study calculated the current universe expansion rate, or Hubble constant, to be 73.8 kilometers per second per megaparsec, a number significantly higher than the 67.5 value predicted by widely accepted models, according to the release. 'We're not saying the standard model is wrong,' Jensen said. 'But it's clearly incomplete. These results help us move closer to understanding what might be missing.' Essentially, this new data gives clues on how old the universe is, what it is made of, and how it was created, the university says. Researchers hope to reach more precise answers in the next few years through the telescopes' observations. In recognition of the team's approach NASA awarded them three additional James Webb Space Telescope observing programs to expand measurements to more than 100 elliptical galaxies, bringing about $220,000 in research funding to Utah Valley University. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Solve the daily Crossword

NASA says a plane-sized asteroid will pass Earth next week. Here's what to know.

time2 days ago

NASA says a plane-sized asteroid will pass Earth next week. Here's what to know.

A plane-sized asteroid scheduled to pass Earth next week is making headlines, but NASA experts want the public to understand why this encounter is more routine than remarkable. The asteroid is named 2025 OW and measures approximately 210 feet in length, according to NASA. It is set to pass Earth on July 28 at a distance of approximately 393,000 miles -- about 1.6 times the average distance to the Moon, according to the space agency. While it's traveling at an impressive speed of 46,908 miles per hour, NASA scientists emphasize this is normal and nothing to lose sleep over. "This is very routine," Ian J. O'Neill, media relations specialist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), told ABC News. "If there was a threat, you would hear from us. We would always put out alerts on our planetary defense blog." Davide Farnocchia, an asteroid expert at NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies (CNEOS), explains that space rocks passing by Earth are just business as usual in our solar system. "Close approaches happen all the time -- it's just part of the fabric of the solar system," Farnocchia told ABC News. His team usually tracks several asteroids passing Earth each week -- as of Tuesday, they're watching five for next week alone. While 2025 OW is large enough to be of interest to NASA scientists, its well-understood orbit means it poses no danger. "We know exactly where it's going to be. We'll probably know where it's going to be for the next 100 years," O'Neill said. For space enthusiasts hoping to catch a glimpse of 2025 OW, Farnocchia indicates it won't be visible with binoculars. However, he points to a more exciting upcoming event: the 2029 approach of asteroid Apophis. "Apophis will come within 38,000 kilometers of Earth in April 2029 -- closer than our geostationary satellites," Farnocchia said. Approximately 1,115 feet in length, and due to its exceptionally close approach, Apophis will be visible to the naked eye, offering a rare opportunity for public observation of an asteroid. Both Farnocchia and O'Neill emphasize that while Earth is struck by roughly 100 tons of space material daily, most of this is harmless dust. Larger, potentially hazardous impacts are extremely rare. "For an object the size of 2025 OW, while close approaches might happen yearly, an actual Earth impact would only occur roughly every 10,000 years," Farnocchia notes. NASA continues to monitor near-Earth objects through its planetary defense programs, maintaining public transparency about any potential risks while emphasizing that most asteroid headlines are more sensational than concerning.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store