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David Manheim's avatar

Just thinking that we have increasing rates of video cameras for patient monitoring, telesitting, etc. Whether terminal lucidity cases start going away as video becomes more prevalent, or they start getting videoed, we'll have a pretty clear answer about whether they are real.

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Mitchell Porter's avatar

My first thought is to consider the psychology of it. For example: The mind is easily clouded by psychological factors like indecision and despair. But if you sense that you really are about to die, you have motivation to think more clearly and act more decisively.

We can place this in the context of a physically deteriorating brain, if we suppose that the brain's plasticity and redundancy allow it to function even under those conditions, but the degree to which these adaptive resources are actually activated, depends in part on motivation.

I also absolutely endorse the search for a purely physiological cause of terminal lucidity. But since subjectivity is a factor in whether human potential is realized, I think looking at psychological as well as physiological causes will produce a richer theory.

By the way, someone else recently posted about a neglected medical phenomenon (which they interpret as a supernatural miracle) that I would interpret as a mix of psychology and unknown biology in action:

https://benthams.substack.com/p/the-miraculous-healing-of-barbara

The story goes that a woman was dying of multiple sclerosis, she was at home at death's door, her church prayed for her, she heard a voice that told her to get up, and she stood up and recovered completely.

My interpretation would be that for unknown reasons, her MS had already gone into complete remission, her body had healed and she was even subliminally aware of this, but she had already resigned herself to immobility and death. Then she saw all the messages from her church, and some remnant of will to live, told her to get up.

On my account, some cases of terminal lucidity should be like this too, except without the lasting recovery.

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