51 pages • 1 hour read
In the final section of the book, Junger delves deeper into near-death experiences. He notes that while medical science can explain phenomena like tunnels of light and out-of-body sensations through neurochemical processes, it struggles to account for the consistent reports of dying individuals seeing deceased loved ones. Junger emphasizes that these visions occur across diverse settings—from mud huts to hospital rooms, and car accidents to battlefields. He recounts personal experiences, including his mother’s vision of her estranged brother George, shortly before her death. Junger also shares a paramedic’s account of a 70-year-old woman who seemed to foresee her imminent death during a heart attack.
Junger extensively references William F. Barrett’s Deathbed Visions, a compilation of numerous similar experiences from previous centuries. He notes that the accounts in Barrett’s book are remarkably consistent, not only with each other but also with modern reports. Junger highlights cases in which individuals saw visions of recently deceased people whose deaths they could otherwise not have known about, such as the Frenchman Paul Durocq, who saw a friend who had died while Durocq was traveling. The author also mentions Barrett’s focus on the death visions of children, which Junger finds particularly persuasive.
By Sebastian Junger