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scientific experiment on the moment of death (Read 3384 times)
juditha
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scientific experiment on the moment of death
May 12th, 2007 at 5:01pm
 
Hi  I remember a few years ago,i read of this scientific experiment,were they weighed this man just a couple of minutes before his death and after weighed him at the precise  time of his death and his body was 2 pound lighter,so these scientists were saying, this was when the spirit left his body,he lost 2 pound in weight.

Love and God bless   Love juditha
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Boris
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #1 - May 13th, 2007 at 2:22pm
 
I dont remember the exact amount, but  it was more like 2 ounces or less,
or at any rate a very tiny amount. I am an engineer, and I once offered to build a scale sensitive enough to detect this very tiny amount.

love, Boris
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Kranada
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #2 - May 13th, 2007 at 4:18pm
 
Yes, I also heard it was 2 ounces or so, a figure that could only be detected by a very sensitive scale. Even so though this happened to all the people that were weighed, they all lost a tiny bit of weight at the exact moment of death.
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #3 - May 13th, 2007 at 4:34pm
 
The version I recall involved several patients, all of whom were weighed as they expired. Results were somewhat variable, as I recall, but everyone lost weight.

What struck me was that the change in weight was very roughly equal to the fraction of body weight attributable to electron mass alone. That is, 1/1836 of mass. For a 100 kg mass, that gives roughly 1.8 ounces. The orthodox explanation, that this must represent abrupt water loss, never seemed to make sense to me. It's not impossible, but 1/4 cup of fluid evaporating abruptly in a matter of a very few minutes is unlikely. My basis for this is the number of times I've spilled water in bed and had to wait seemingly forever for it to dry - And then there's the famous "wet spot" that takes close to an hour to evaporate and probably represents a roughly equivalent amount of fluid.

Aside from the inevitable jiggles and bounces associated with motion, it doesn't sound like a very hard measurement problem. Might be an interesting thing to replicate. Maybe strain gauges on low profile, slightly flexible supports, that could be left unattended with a PDA size recorder?

A second thing to monitor might be the electrostatic field near the death bed, using a potential mill or chopped field meter, to see whether the global electrostatic lapse rate (about -3 kv/m as I recall, but I might be off) is disturbed. Unfortunately, putting a dying person in a Faraday Cage might be difficult to explain to hospice staff.

dave
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DocM
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #4 - May 13th, 2007 at 7:24pm
 
Oh please, people.

Spirit interpenetrates our plane but has no mass.  When a person dies, many things occur, physically speaking.  OFten, disgusting as it sounds the bladder empties itself or the bowels move.  This can change weight considerably, as can evaporation from mucous membranes after death.  Understanding the spiritual means believing in the nonphysical.  I can see making physical devices to detect the nonphysical.  Thomas Edison once wrote that he felt if any device could be created that would detect the nonphysical it might be based on electricity and radio.  He is also well known for an answer given as to the nature of electricity; when asked by a person what it was, he was quoted as saying:  "electricity IS, madame........use it wisely."

One could take patients in a hospice, who volunteered for study and study them by infrared technology, Ultrasound, MRI and other technoogies at the moment of death to pick up subtle changes of spirit.  Spirit does not have to be thought of as being subject to the laws of the physical world. 

Matthew

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dave_a_mbs
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #5 - May 13th, 2007 at 8:47pm
 
HI Doc-
Lets assume that the various versions of this experiment that have been run are actually valid, and that there is "evaporation" of a couple ounces of something.

In that case, you nailed the Big Question here - what is it that evaporates?

By its nature, life seems to be epiphenomenal to the material substrate upon which it rides, existing not in the substance, but in the organization of the substance. Hence the transition at death makes sense in terms of the organizational factors merely moving out of one container (body) and into a larger one (global context). This has little to do with weight changes. Aside from the trivial mass equivalent of the kinetic energy involved through Special Relativity, moving my arm does not make it heavier.

www.snopes.com/religion/soulweight.asp  tells us that

"The patient's comfort was looked after in every way, although he was practically moribund when placed upon the bed. He lost weight slowly at the rate of one ounce per hour due to evaporation of moisture in respiration and evaporation of sweat.

During all three hours and forty minutes I kept the beam end slightly above balance near the upper limiting bar in order to make the test more decisive if it should come.

At the end of three hours and forty minutes he expired and suddenly coincident with death the beam end dropped with an audible stroke hitting against the lower limiting bar and remaining there with no rebound. The loss was ascertained to be three-fourths of an ounce.

This loss of weight could not be due to evaporation of respiratory moisture and sweat, because that had already been determined to go on, in his case, at the rate of one sixtieth of an ounce per minute, whereas this loss was sudden and large, three-fourths of an ounce in a few seconds. The bowels did not move; if they had moved the weight would still have remained upon the bed except for a slow loss by the evaporation of moisture depending, of course, upon the fluidity of the feces. The bladder evacuated one or two drams of urine. This remained upon the bed and could only have influenced the weight by slow gradual evaporation and therefore in no way could account for the sudden loss."

This is one of several similar efforts that was easy to Google up. Obviously, simple rearrangement of internal chemistry, or its leakage to the outside into bedding, would have no discernable effect. So what is happening?

Similarly, if the soul were to come or go merely by virtue of changes in the location of arrangements of pre-existing elements, and if the nature of the soul is properly described as a matter of arrangement of elements, as opposed to being "made up out of matter", then what is measured is not the soul. OR, we wold have to identify various thoughts and feelings with various kinds of matter - like copper salts for thoughts about green things, or sodium ions for recollections of the ocean etc - which seems crazy to me. That's not the way things work. OR we have some new principle to deal with. I'm voting for the last option.

For this specific case, assume that the patient was thin, say 50 kg. Then we have about 110 lb, or 1760 ounces. For a body made up of 95% water, we can assume that it is all H2O, with fair accuracy. Let's look at mass ratios between leptons and baryons -

The baryon number of water is 2 (from 2H+) + 16 (from O=) = 2 + 16 = 18.
The lepton number of water is 2 (from 2H+) + 8 (from O) = 10.
The lepton to baryon number ratio is 10/18.
Making baryon mass equal to one, then lepton mass is 1/1836 of 10/18 of the total mass.

So the body has 1780 x 10/18 x 1/1836 ounces electrons, or 0.52 ounces of electrons. 

The expected change if the difference were due to electron loss is 0.52 ounces, and the observed difference was about 0,75 ounces. But, if the actual patient weight were 75 kg, that would give 100% of expectation. We don't know the actual weight. Further, the methodology was rather hasty and somewhat flawed. So we might (?) be able to relate the weight change to electron loss, but only as a guess.

If we had electron loss, it must re-ionize the death bed in some manner - further, this is MANY Coulombs of electrons (!!!), and would have to cause some kind of effects due to the huge current involved. I'd be inclined to look for a magnetic pulse. Similarly, the ionization of air is often sensed as a chill, meaning that a cold spot might be expected as well. Lack of electrical displays suggests that something else might be taking place.

Maybe we should look to neutrinos, since these carry momentum but no charge. Deaths don't seem to register on the Kamiokand neutrino detector, or any others, so that seems unlikely.

SO, what else is going on? Further, why was the same evidence not found when working with dogs?  In all probability, the answer is both simple, and deceptively elegant.

dave
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DocM
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #6 - May 13th, 2007 at 10:55pm
 
There are several factors to be taken into account, Dave.  Recently, it was found that in a section of Canada, near several huge glaciers, it was found that gravity is actually changed there, and you weigh a tiny percent less there as a result (you can Google this).  Scientists this week explain the effect in part to gravitational effects of these massive glaciers.  

So weight may be changed by many variables - but the quest to find the difference in weight before and after death holds no overall answer to the big questions.  Death is followed by widespread physical changes.  Loss of water from mucous membranes, urine and feces, widespread clotting of the blood when the heart stops, breakdown of the body by bacteria from the intestine with liberation of methane and other gas.  Admittedly, onlly certain changes could account for significant changes in body weight.  However, the described experiement was not well done.  It should have been a closed system that could account for the weight and change in content of the atmosphere to decide if there was a measureable object (soul) unaccountable for in the physical world.  I don't believe that the sould has "mass" per se.  

What about a change in electrical, magnetic or gravitational forces accounting for a change of weight?  It is possible that a transdimensional soul may effect a change on these variables and hence a minute change in weight.  What if, rather than the soul escaping, the scientist performing the measurement himself/herself expected the scale to change in weight and that expectation created a reaction in the machine itself measuring weight? (This has been shown to happen in Princeton's now defunct PEAR lab) If so, so what?  I don't believe this type of research is meaningful.  

One could study people entering the astral plane like Robert Bruce, and see if there was a minute change in weight in their bodies during that time.  Or people doing the Gateway voyage at TMI, and exploring Focus 27.  But where are we in the end here?  If countless consciousnesses and spirits exist, they would be all around us in a plane of thought.  They can either be measured in our dimensional plane in some way or they can not.  We also know in our physical world, that matter is neither created nor destroyed; it merely is constantly in flux with energy (e=mc2).

I think that scientific efforts would best be placed in attempting to verify life/consciousness after death and contact the departed in objective ways.  If contact were made in some ways, perhaps discarnate people could work in cooperation with physical people to answer many questions and understand things.  

M
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #7 - May 14th, 2007 at 3:51pm
 
Hi Doc-
I'm not going to argue for a soul with ponderable mass, nor that this was a perfect experimental trial - it obviously wasn't. But I have been curious for years about just what escapes and causes a loss of weight. My wife (geriatric nurse, familiar with watching people die) suggested that the body probably outgasses a good deal at death and she feels that a final bleeding off of CO2 and water vapor were involved. I think she figured it out.

Since beds and all were weighed, only gasseous exhaust might have caused weight changes.  For CO2, the molecular weight is-  12 (from C) + 32 (from 2 x O) = 44 grams = GMWt. The gram molecular volume is 22.4 liters = GMVol. For 28.3 grams per ounce, and observed weight change of half an ounce, we have 14 grams difference, or 14/44 GMVol = (14/44)*(22.4) liters. Or 7.12 liters of CO2 vapor involved. Then we ask whether we have 7 or 8 liters of volume in the lungs.

The capacity of the lungs is often estimated to be 6 liters, 8 liters for a large lung set, with about 2 liters not respired in a typical breath, so we have about 8 liters (give or take) which, if the lungs collapsed afterwards, would be the available volume to cause change. (If not, then the difference would be relative to the mass of nitrogen, GMWt=30 gm, that refills the lungs, so we'd have only 14 grams difference per 22.4 liters, and only 3 or 4 grams per lung volume.) Exhaustion of spent CO2 seems to me to be a possibility, it fits known data, and requires no new thinking.

I find this interesting, since I had noticed the similarity to lepton mass when I first hear of this type of study back in the '50s.  The mass of expired CO2 actually fits pretty well, and I'm satisfied that it is the cause of the change in weight. However, as an experiment, this was fascinating.

dave
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the_seeker
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #8 - Jul 15th, 2007 at 3:16am
 
aren't you guys missing one very obvious clue here - that supposedly the weight loss is always THE SAME for every person?

if the weight loss is the same for all, that's evidence towards it being a soul - if souls had a weight, perhaps they'd all weigh the same.

if the weight loss was different, that's evidence towards it being a physical thing, because different people are different sizes
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vajra
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #9 - Jul 15th, 2007 at 5:22am
 
It'd be nice to know what happens on death, but my personal view would not be to get too worried about it, or whether or not science has a theory to explain it.

It seems probable that when you include the non-physical as well as the physical that there are energies and processes in play both in the body and in general that science just doesn't have the framework to think about. Nor want to admit the existence of in many cases.

Add the likelihood  that whatever awareness/consciousness is it seems to be able to at will move into and perceive all sorts of realities ranging from your little finger to the great 'I Am' and it gets even more complicated.

For sure it's worth checking, but it's not obvious to an ordinary person like me to see how this might  involve a transfer of mass.....
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: scientific experiment on the moment of death
Reply #10 - Jul 15th, 2007 at 9:09pm
 
Actually, Seeker, Snopes reported a number of differences for different people, and they were NOT the same. 

This same measurement has been done by others, with comparable results, all of which appear to be explicable by the weight of CO2 and water vapor exhaled.

If you want to research this in more depth, I suggest that you look up more trials of the same nature, and then compare their data with the weight of estimated terminal exhalations. Perhaps you'll find something that was otherwise overlooked.

dave

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