Intrasomatic model

The Intrasomatic Model is an hypothesis created by British author and binary-mind theorist Anthony Peake as an alternative explanation and interpretation regarding Out of Body Experience and Near Death Experience. "Intrasomatic" means literally, "within the body".
The model may be considered innovative because it dispenses with the materialist-reductionist "dying brain" and hallucinatory models of hard science researchers such as Susan Blackmore who dismiss such experiences and phenomena, while needing no bolstering from paranormal or mystical proposals set forth by OBE experts such as Robert Monroe that such experiences are "real" and proof of out of body travel to "other realms". It also has no need to refute the claims of researchers like Keith Augustine, who believe that a variety of physiological, neurological, and psychological explanations for near death experiences preclude them from being viewed in any way as empirical evidence for survival after death.
In his research Peake found no veridical or empirical confirmation that OBE and NDE experiencers ever actually left their bodies or were able to prove such through identifying targeted objects or through various other tests performed since the 1970s. Peake does not disagree with the findings of materialists like Blackmore but interprets such findings differently. He is also in line with the findings of Christopher C. French and other researchers and theorists who place emphasis on the role of the temporal lobes and especially temporal lobe epilepsy in facilitating near death experience.
Peake uses quantum physics, neurology, and theories such as David Bohm's Implicate Order hypothesis, Einstein-Rosen bridge model of wormholes, and Hugh Everett's Many Worlds Interpretation to show that astral travel and near death experience are actually a going within the brain and tapping into the holographic information which is enfolded in the human brain. His books regarding binary mind theory have been published internationally and verified by researchers such as acclaimed author Colin Wilson and Bruce Greyson of
The Journal of Near Death Studies.
 
< Prev   Next >