He gave a name to the nameless — and in doing so, gave millions of people permission to speak of what they had seen at the threshold of death. Raymond Moody did not create the near-death experience. He simply listened to it, for the first time, without flinching.
Raymond Avery Moody Jr., M.D., Ph.D. is an American philosopher, physician, and author, best known for his 1975 book Life After Life, which introduced the term «near-death experience» (NDE) to mainstream culture and inaugurated modern scientific study of NDEs.
Discovery and Life After Life
Moody began collecting NDE accounts while studying philosophy at the University of Virginia in the 1960s — independently and before meeting Ian Stevenson, though both were at the same institution. His interviews with over 150 individuals who had been clinically dead or near death revealed a consistent set of experiences that had never been systematically documented.
The NDE Phenomenology (Moody’s Map)
Based on his original interviews, Moody identified 15 recurring elements:
- Ineffability — difficulty describing in ordinary language
- Hearing the news of one’s death
- Feelings of peace and quiet
- The noise — often described as buzzing, ringing, or music
- The dark tunnel
- Out of the body
- Meeting others — deceased relatives, spirit beings
- The being of light
- The review — panoramic life review
- The border or limit
- Coming back — often unwilling return
- Telling others — initial reluctance to share
- Effects on life — transformed by the experience
- New views of death
- Corroboration — verified out-of-body perceptions
Legacy
Moody’s work directly inspired the founding of the International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS) and a generation of researchers including Kenneth Ring, Bruce Greyson, and Pim van Lommel. Life After Life sold over 13 million copies worldwide.
Compare: Moody vs. Newton
| Aspect | Moody (NDE) | Newton (LBL) |
|---|---|---|
| Method | Retrospective interviews | Active hypnotic regression |
| State accessed | Near-death transition | Full between-life state |
| Duration covered | Minutes of clinical death | Hours/decades of interlife |
| Council/review | Life review reported; Council rarely | Council of Elders = central finding |
| Planning next life | Some NDEs mention «mission» | Full documented planning process |
«They told me my life was not over. They said I had to go back. I didn’t want to.» — NDE subject, Life After Life
Moody’s gift to the world was not proof. It was vocabulary. Before Life After Life, people who had died and returned carried their experiences alone, in silence, afraid of ridicule.
After Moody, they had words. They had community. They had the knowledge that 14% of cardiac arrest survivors had been where they had been — and seen the same light.
Critical Perspectives
Anecdotal evidence: NDE accounts are self-reported and retrospective. Response: van Lommel’s 2001 prospective Lancet study addressed this directly: 344 cardiac arrest patients, interviewed shortly after resuscitation, with 18% reporting NDEs during confirmed clinical death.
Oxygen deprivation: NDE experiences may result from anoxic brain states. Response: Some NDEs include verified accurate perceptions of the physical environment during cardiac arrest — impossible if only random neural firing.
Develop Your Reincarnation Intelligence (RQ)
Moody's gift to your RQ: He showed that asking the question "what do people experience when they die?" was not unscientific. He did it first. His methodological courage opened a field. Your equivalent: what question in your own life are you not asking because you've been told it's not a serious question?
For conversations about death: If someone you love is dying or has recently died, Moody's NDE accounts — the consistent peace, the encounters with loved ones, the reluctance to return — offer something more grounded than generic reassurance. The evidence suggests that what they're moving toward is not darkness.
- Entry point: Life After Life (1975) remains one of the most readable introductions to NDE research. Short, clear, written for general audiences.
This content is for informational and research purposes only and does not constitute medical, psychological, or psychiatric advice. If you are experiencing mental health difficulties, please consult a qualified professional.