Purement révolutionnaire : après quinze années de recherches, le Dr Melvin Morse, médecin urgentiste et pédiatre, affirme que 1) nous disposons tous dans notre lobe temporal droit d'un circuit biologique spécialement conçu pour dialoguer avec Dieu et que 2) les souvenirs de notre vie ne se trouvent pas dans notre cerveau! S'appuyant sur les dernières découvertes médicales et scientifiques, son livre explique pour la première fois avec une logique implacable l'ensemble des phénomènes surnaturels et mystiques, tout comme les vies passées, les sensations de déjà vu, l'intuition, les guérisons spontanées et surtout le don de ''voir'' des parcelles de l'avenir. De façon simple et claire, le Dr Morse donne des cas précis et raconte comment il est parvenu à ses conclusions après avoir travaillé sur les expériences aux frontières de la mort infantiles. Salué par la presse anglo-saxonne comme une avancée majeure pour le XXIe siècle, ce livre ouvre des portes insoupçonnées et donne une dimension, nouvelle, phénoménale à la spiritualité. Des pilotes de chasse aux épileptiques, des neurologues aux physiciens et des médecins aux magnétiseurs, sa thèse prend vie et s'impose comme une évidence. Ce livre monumental peut changer votre vie. Version mise à jour et avec une préface française du Dr Melvin Morse.
this book started out amazing, but as it when on became less and less amazing. less grounded in science and more speculative. which is fine if it were not about the science of the paranormal. i was expecting it to be a bit more empirical. although it is still very much worth reading.
THE NEAR-DEATH RESEARCHER LOOKS POSITIVELY ON REINCARNATION AND OTHER PHENOMENA
Pediatrician Melvin L. Morse (born 1953) has also written 'Closer To the Light,' 'Transformed By The Light: The Powerful Effect Of Near-death Experiences On People's Lives,' 'Parting Visions,' and 'Where God Lives: The Science of the Paranormal and How Our Brains are Linked to the Universe.' In 2012, he was also arrested for allegedly "waterboarding" his daughter [possibly to try and induce a near-death experience]; the case hadn't come to trial, as of my writing of this review.
He wrote in the Introduction to this 2000 book, "What we learn from studying NDEs is that we have the biological potential to interact with the universe at any time during our lives. In order to do so, we just have to learn to activate the right temporal lobe, the place where God lives... Don't look for the God Spot in an anatomy book. Modern medical science does not officially recognize this area of the brain, or any other area... as the God Spot... In 'Where God Lives,' the right temporal lobe will be shown to function as a 'paranormal' area, which gives us such abilities as mind-body healing, telepathy, and the ability to communicate with God." (Pg. 2-3)
He reveals, "I never thought to try this time-tested method of right-temporal-lobe stimulation, this thing called 'prayer,' myself. I was like most doctors who rarely taste the medicine they dispense. I kept it at a distance, using it to explain my work but never praying in my own life. I can honestly say that I had never truly prayed until I was forty years old." (Pg. 5-6)
After recounting a case of an individual's recall of a purported previous incarnation, Morse observes, "Researchers regard this as a nearly airtight case for the proof of reincarnation. I think it is also an airtight case for the existence of a universal memory bank, a place where all memory is stored." (Pg. 65) He later adds, "I am asked so many times by patients: 'Dr. Morse, do you believe in reincarnation?' Given all the research, I would have to answer that question with a resounding 'probably.'" (Pg. 73)
He observes, "Angel and ghost sightings have many elements in common with NDEs, including the fact that the perception of them is mediated by the right temporal lobe. People who have had NDEs are more likely to see ghosts and angels." (Pg. 76) Later, he suggests, "Remote viewing doesn't involve actually seeing something as much as it involves processing information through our right temporal lobe from the patterns of information contained in the universe." (Pg. 100)
Fans of Morse's first two books may not like the direction he is taking in this book; on the other hand, others with a more "open" or "New Age" orientation may like this book best of all.
me gustan los libros que cuestionan y tienen fundamento para hacerlo. y este es uno de esos que no tiene miedo en unir ciencia y espiritualidad para entender que ambas tienen conexión fundamentada
I should know by now that no book can give an adequate answer to this question, but still the book left me disappointing. It started off clear and concise and then lost itself more and more as if it did not remember what point it was going to make. It also made some bold statements that can be called into question, such as the healing effects of prayer. Since this book was published other studies have come to different conclusions than the ones made in the book.