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Community attitudes toward near-death experiences: A Chinese study

Allan Kellehear3   Contact Information, Patrick Heaven1 and Jia Gao2

(1) School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Charles Sturt University-Riverina, Riverina, Australia
(2) Institute of Sociology, People's University of China, China
(3) Department of Sociology, La Trobe University, 3083, Victoria, Australia

Abstract  In a survey of Chinese attitudes toward near-death experiences (NDEs), 197 respondents were read a hypothetical description of an NDE and asked to choose from a range of explanations and social reactions that might approximate their own. Fifty-eight percent of respondents believed that NDEs were probably hallucinations or dreams. Less than nine percent believed the NDE was evidence of life after death. Rural and younger persons were more likely to react positively to NDErs. The results are discussed with reference to an earlier Australian study by Kellehear and Heaven (1989).

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2 newer articles

  1. Kellehear, Allan (1990) Five minutes after death: A study of beliefs and expectations. Journal of Near-Death Studies 9(2)
    [CrossRef]
  2. Becker, Carl B. (1991) Over my dead body there is an ideal utopia: Comments on Kellehear's paper. Journal of Near-Death Studies 10(2)
    [CrossRef]
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