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Old 04-05-2019, 07:42 PM
Found Goat Found Goat is offline
Knower
Join Date: Mar 2019
Posts: 196
 
The feeling of happiness is not the result of a positive effect on one’s spirit from an exterior source but rather caused by something physical, be it chemical, a neurotransmitter, or whatever. Can’t sleep? It mustn’t be stress-induced, but rather not enough melatonin in one’s cranial noodle. Hear unseen voices? Must be schizophrenia. And so it goes. If one inhabits a strictly mechanistic world, as most scientists do, the brain and the body, with its fibers and nerves and neurological components, must account for everything that happens to a person concerning that which isn’t caused by an outside source.

Can DMT, a chemical that exists naturally inside the human body and in most plants, cause one to envision NDE-like phenomena, such as the Life Review? It has been reported to, whereas others see this as an instance of science mistaking cause for effect.

When sleepers are hooked up to machines that study brain activity while they slumber, is it the brain activity that is causing the person to sleep or the act of sleep creating the effects on the monitor?

Materialist-minded scientists will attempt any theory that’ll try and restrict human consciousness to organic gray matter. That is only to be expected of them.

DMT within the brain or spinal column, as some researchers have speculated, may also be the cause for some people encountering elves or Reptilians, for example, which is a way of maybe saying that our bodies were created to naturally experience paranormal happenings via a biochemical process or catalyst into the unknown and otherworldly dimensions.

Researcher Dr. Rick Strassman refers to DMT as the “spirit molecule” and his book delves into the theme of DMT and his 1990 study and findings into this matter. His book discusses DMT’s possible connection to NDEs and his view that science ought to be studying the spiritual aspects of life. DMT and its relation to the paranormal is also discussed at some length in Daniel Pinchbeck’s “2001: The Return To Quetzalcoatl,” another excellent read.
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