
#Life after death man meets creator express co series
Stern’s series departs from Kean’s book by focusing on personal stories about encountering the afterlife. It’s hard sometimes to separate the two.” “But that’s really the only way to study it at the same time. “If you have these profound experiences in the process of, then you’re sort of joining your journalism with your personal experience,” Kean said. While researching for her book, a close friend to Kean died, bringing her work closer to home. Conan Doyle was nudged towards spiritualism following his son’s death.

Journalists and academics, like Kean and Conan Doyle, who explored the subject scientifically can’t help but be affected. With this particular subject, absolutely everyone is personally invested. When investigating life after death, objectivity isn’t really in the cards. “Everybody has to decide for themselves whether something has that meaning for them or not,” Kean added. But Stern admitted that such openness is also grounds for dismissal: “You could just say, people who are looking for signs will see signs.” You have to be willing to accept that a visit from a persistent cardinal or flickering lights can be signs from the dead.

The series also addresses how finding evidence of an afterlife almost always requires an open mind. Surviving Death tries to find the tricky balance between that Sherlock skepticism and Doyle’s openness to spiritualism. But Doyle was surprisingly more open to the possibility that there are people who could communicate with the dead, and even manifest them. In novels like The Hound of the Baskervilles, Holmes would pull back the curtain and disprove theories involving the supernatural and paranormal. “But they’re people that take it seriously enough to want to study it.”ĭoyle’s popular Victorian-era creation, Sherlock Holmes, was a skeptical, scientific mind. “They’re not necessarily believers,” Kean said.

Philosopher and psychologist William James, Sherlock Holmes author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Dr Ian Stevenson, who founded the division of perceptual studies at the University of Virginia in 1967, are some of the people who produced papers and manuscripts on paranormal investigations. She also pointed out that she is simply following a distinguished lineage of people who have gone down this path for hundreds of years before her. When the scientific world loves physical evidence, how do you build a persuasive argument for the metaphysical? Kean told the Guardian she enjoyed the inherent challenges of bringing investigative practices to find “truths that you can probably never get to”. Kean, who also appears in the series, brought a research-heavy scientific approach to discussing an afterlife, which can be a bit like using a stethoscope on a ghost. To do that Stern followed the lead from journalist Leslie Kean’s book, Surviving Death, which the series is based on.
