Posted 03.09.2012
No matter how tough someone might be, when Mother Nature decides to have her way with them, they've no choice but to roll with it and wait until it's ...
The Huffington Post | Posted 09.24.2011
It's a question at par with "What happens when we die?" and "Why are we all here?" One of those eternal human mysteries that science has been unab...
Posted 05.25.2011
By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service Wanda Colie vividly remembers what she saw in 1984 when, at age 28, a condition that produced blood in ...
Dr. Douglas Fields | Posted 05.25.2011
Does a person's religious belief affect the likelihood of experiencing such spiritual feelings on the threshold of death?
William Horden | Posted 11.17.2011
a strong positive balance of attending to life and death makes the most sense. The problem is that we are decidedly out of balance today. Paradoxically, letting go of life allows us to appreciate it more deeply!
Scott Mendelson, M.D. | Posted 11.17.2011
Can the mind that has cast off its mortal coil still experience hunger? Can the mind be tickled? Is it possible for the disembodied mind to have a toothache?
Scott Mendelson, M.D. | Posted 11.17.2011
The philosopher George Berkeley posed the question, "If a tree fell in the forest and no one heard it, would it make a sound?" A closer look may have bearing on the question of whether there is life after death.
HuffingtonPost.com | Cara Santa Maria | Posted 05.23.2012