Chalnoth
Senior Contributor
That research was flawed due to a small sample size and methodological problems:Come on, guys. Science has not only proved that the soul exists, but that it weighs under a hundred grams.
At the end of three hours and forty minutes he [a terminal patient who had been sitting on a bed upon a platform beam scale sensitive to two-tenths of an ounce] 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 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 ...
The bowels did not move; and if they had moved the weight would still have remained on 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 on the bed and could only have influenced the weight by slow gradual evaporation and therefore in no way could account for the sudden loss.
There remained but one more channel of loss to explore, the expiration of all but the residual air in the lungs. Getting upon the bed myself, my colleague put the beam at actual balance. Inspiration and expiration of air as forcibly as possible by me had no effect upon the beams ...
- Dr. Duncan McDougall, April 1907 (quoted in "Stiff" by Mary Roach).
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/02/20/1077072838871.html
Any time you see what seems to be an exciting scientific result that has never been followed up, you should take it with a grain of salt.
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