Threshold:
terminal lucidity and the border between life and death
Overview
The first major account of terminal lucidity: the remarkable return of clarity and cognition at the end of life.
Terminal lucidity is a relatively common but poorly understood phenomenon. Near the end of life, many people — including those who have suffered brain injuries or strokes, or have been silenced by mental illness or deep dementia — experience what seems a miraculous return. They regain their clarity and energy, are able to talk with families and caregivers, recall their lives, and often appear to be aware of their nearing death.
In this remarkable book, cognitive scientist and Director of the Viktor Frankl Institute Dr Alexander Batthyány offers the first major account of terminal lucidity, utilising hundreds of case studies and his research in the related field of near-death studies to explore the mind, the body, the nature of consciousness, and what the living can learn from those who are crossing the border from life to death.
Astonishing, authoritative, and deeply moving, Threshold opens a doorway into one of life’s — and death’s — most provocative mysteries.
Details
- Format
- Size
- Extent
- ISBN
- RRP
- Pub date
- Rights held
- Other rights
- Paperback
- 234mm x 153mm
- 256 pages
- 9781915590664
- GBP£16.99
- 11 April 2024
- UK & Commonwealth (ex. Can)
- St. Martins Press
Praise
‘This is a terrific book. Dr Batthyány has created an enlightening examination of the phenomenon that is very familiar to those who care for the terminally ill and their families. Threshold should have a positive effect on the care of the terminally ill.’
‘Captivating … This engaging examination of consciousness in the borderland between life and death explores our sense of self, how our identities are tied to our bodies, and what happens when those links are severed. Threshold is guaranteed to challenge your concepts of who you are.’
About the Author
Professor Alexander Batthyány, PhD, is director of the Research Institute for Theoretical Psychology and Personalist Studies at Pázmány Péter Catholic University in Budapest, professor for existential psychotherapy at the Moscow Institute of Psychoanalysis, and director of the Viktor Frankl Institute of Logotherapy in Vienna. He is the author or editor of more than fifteen books, and his academic work has been translated into ten languages. He has also been invited to give lectures around the world. Batthyány divides his time between Vienna and the Hungarian countryside.