>>719677498
It doesn't have a name, but here's one.

Suppose that one's perception of time is dependent upon one's ability to process information. This is logical enough—your brain takes in stimulation from the senses, processes the data therein, and collates it into a meaningful mental state. This process is continuous, and the shifting from one mental state to another is what creates our sense of time. That what we think and sense now is distinct from what we thought and sensed before is how we reckon, at an experiential level, that time has passed.

If this is true, then what happens when our brain's ability to process information begins to fail during brain death? A brain which cannot process information, cannot create a sense of time. Time, essentially, does not pass for a dead person. A brain approaching brain death may, therefore, create an ever-slowing sense of the passage of time, such that from a dying person's perspective, they logarithmically approach, but never cross, the moment of death. The complexity of thoughts would also, obviously, collapse, inducing into the dying person a singular, simplistic experience stretched out into perceptual eternity, not unlike NDEs in which a person is simply traveling towards a bright light.

I hope this is suitably chuuni for you, anon.