The central conundrum of complex, structured experience during clinical cessation of brain function. During cardiac arrest,
EEG flatlines, global cerebral ischemia occurs, and the brain's integrative capacity is thought to halt. The
hard problem asks: How do individuals then report vivid, narrative, emotionally profound experiences—often with transformative after-effects—during this
period of no measurable neural activity? If consciousness is a product of brain function, it shouldn't be producing its most vivid "movie" when the projector is
broken and unplugged.
*Example: A patient "codes" for 10 minutes with no pulse or brain activity. Revived, they describe a detailed sequence: leaving their body, traveling, meeting entities, a life review, and a decision to return. The
hard problem is the cognitive paradox: forming new memories, processing language, experiencing selfhood, time, and emotion all require a highly integrated, energetic brain. The experience claims these highest-order cognitive functions were active when the biological hardware for them was in systemic failure. It's
like a
computer playing a stunning
4K video while fully powered down.*
Hard Problem of Near-Death Experiences (NDEs).