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What Is It Like To Be Dead Christianity The Occult And Neardeath Experiences Hardcover Jens Schlieter

  • SKU: BELL-7259386
What Is It Like To Be Dead Christianity The Occult And Neardeath Experiences Hardcover Jens Schlieter
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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What Is It Like To Be Dead Christianity The Occult And Neardeath Experiences Hardcover Jens Schlieter instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.86 MB
Pages: 336
Author: Jens Schlieter
ISBN: 9780190888848, 0190888849
Language: English
Year: 2018
Edition: Hardcover

Product desciption

What Is It Like To Be Dead Christianity The Occult And Neardeath Experiences Hardcover Jens Schlieter by Jens Schlieter 9780190888848, 0190888849 instant download after payment.

What Is It Like To Be Dead?offers the first full account of the modern genealogy of "near-death experiences" and outlines the important functions of these experiences in the religious field of Western modernity. Emerging as autobiographical narratives in the legacy of Christian death-bed visions, near-death experiences were used in Western religious metacultures (Christian, esoteric, and spiritist-occult) as substantial proof for the survival of death and various other claims, for example, the ability of the soul to leave the body in mesmerist or other esoteric practices. The study demonstrates how certain features of near-death experiences, such as the panoramic life review and autoscopic out of body-experiences, were initially not reported in Christian death-bed narratives. Instead, they emerged in occult and esoteric circles in the 19th and 20th centuries, in experiments with astral projection, drugs, and "clairvoyant" states.
It was only in the 1970s that Raymond Moody, to whom we owe the generic term "near-death experience," could declare the different features to be elements of a single phenomenon. Enabling factors include the discussion on "brain death" and coma, the 20th-century increase in hospitalized dying, the crisis of traditional religious institutions in the 1960s and early 70s, and the "imperative of individual experience." Jens Schlieter analyzes the religious relevance of these near-death experiences--for the experiencers themselves, but also for the growing audience of such testimonies. These functions encompass ontological, epistemic, intersubjective, and moral significance, ranging from reassurance that religious experience is still possible to claims that they initiate a new spiritual orientation in life, or offer evidence for the transcultural validity of afterlife beliefs.

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