Why do dead people who read and enjoy the Australian Journal of Parapsychology look to that journal for insights? This study, by its very existence, perhaps answers that question:
“Psychological phenomena in dead people: Post- traumatic stress disorder in murdered people and its consequences to public health,” Wasney de Almeida Ferreira, Australian Journal of Parapsychology, vol. 13, no. 1, June 2013, pp. 37-56. The study, which is peer reviewed, possibly by dead people, explains:
“Abstract: The aims of this paper are to narrate and analyze some psychological phenomena that I have perceived in dead people, including evidence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in murdered people. The methodology adopted was “projection of consciousness” (i.e., a non-ordinary state of consciousness), which allowed me to observe, interact, and interview dead people directly as a social psychologist. This investigation was based on Cartesian skepticism, which allowed me a more critical analysis of my experiences during projection of consciousness. There is strong evidence that a dead person: (i) continues living, thinking, behaving after death as if he/she still has his/her body because consciousness continues in an embodied state as ‘postmortem embodied experiences’; (ii) may not realize for a considerable time that he/she is already dead since consciousness continues to be embodied after death (i.e., ‘postmortem perturbation’ – the duration of this perturbation can vary from person to person, in principle according to the type of death, and the level of conformation), and (iii) does not like to talk, remember, and/or explain things related to his/her own death because there is evidence that many events related to death are repressed in his/her unconscious (‘postmortem cognitive repression’). In addition, there is evidence that dying can be very traumatic to consciousness, especially to the murdered, and PTSD may even develop.”
(Thanks to investigator Kelly Franz for bringing this to our attention.)
BONUS: Further pioneering work by Wasney de Almeida Ferreira appears in the journal Neuroquantology.