This preprint presents a rigorous theoretical analysis of two anomalous first-person near-death experiences (NDEs) reported by David Noel Lynch, utilizing the mathematical and metaphysical framework of the KnoWellian Universe Theory (KUT). The study examines a clinically significant NDE resulting from a high-speed vehicular accident in 1977, alongside a 2026 syncope-induced "near near-death experience" (nNDE). By applying KUT’s core formalisms—including Ternary Time, the Triadic Rendering Constraint (TRC), the KnoWellian Resonant Attractor Manifold (KRAM), and the Shimmer Equation—the authors provide a systematic, mechanistic mapping of classic NDE features onto precise quantum-cosmological field dynamics. The analysis demonstrates that the 1977 event aligns perfectly with a catastrophic TRC collapse, resulting in a KRAM-mediated life review, out-of-body remote viewing, and an encounter with the cosmic void. Furthermore, the 2026 episode represents a unique instance of a theoretically primed subject consciously recognizing the "Ultimaton" substrate and sensing the "Entropium" during the near-death transition. Crucially, the paper offers a novel reinterpretation of the "Voice Phenomenon" (often interpreted theologically in NDE literature). It identifies the voice not as an external divine entity, but as a relational attractor output generated directly by the cosmic memory manifold (KRAM) drawing upon the subject's own KnoWellian Resonant Emission Manifold (KREM). Bridging consciousness science, theoretical physics, and NDE phenomenology, the paper concludes by proposing six falsifiable predictions—including the Depth-of-KREM Hypothesis—to empirically test these claims and establish a new methodological precedent for theoretically informed NDE research.
David Noel Lynch (Sat,) studied this question.