One of the family representatives who had participated in the Delphi experiment took it upon himself to describe the events, while the others would simply follow his description, and only if they happened to have different opinion were they to raise their hand and complement the description at the point where they thought they had observed something additional or different. Yet, in all probability, this would not be necessary. Indeed, no complementation was needed since everyone had the same experience, as already referred to. They all felt or ‘experienced’ exactly the same thing, as if they were an integrated body or entity, possessing the same intellectual and perceptual faculties and the same brain. This fact was of course of great importance and a further confirmation would be an added

