Abstract
What psychological needs are served by the out-of-body experience (OBE)? On the basis of a review of the literature in rather diverse areas several hypotheses on this issue are formulated in terms of Murray''s conceptual system of manifest needs. A simple survey of the need profiles of students reporting OBE provides support for only one of the hypotheses, i.e., that such individuals are concerned with and attentive to their mental processes. Unanticipated by the literature was the finding that people reporting OBE exhibit low levels of need for achievement and need for deference. If a sophisticated theory of the OBE is to be developed, much more research must be conducted into the psychological, parapsychological and neurophysiological correlates of the phenomenon.