Niemz also addresses a new branch of mortality research, the so-called
near-death experiences. With his scientific novel
Lucy mit c (Books on Demand, 2005), he became well known to a wide audience for comparing near-death experiences with effects in
Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. Niemz comes up with a new, physical explanation of near-death experiences: The so-called "searchlight effect" makes us perceive a dark tunnel with a bright light at the other end. Light itself is cosmic memory and provides the life review that is frequently reported by the dying. Niemz' novel
Lucy mit c was the first self-published book ever to appear on the German non-fiction bestseller list
Gong.
Lucy im Licht (Droemer, 2007), the second volume of his Lucy trilogy, and
Bin ich, wenn ich nicht mehr bin? (Kreuz, 2011) also turned into German bestsellers. With the royalties of his Lucy trilogy, Niemz founded the charitable and non-profit foundation
Stiftung Lucys Kinder. The foundation is committed to ensuring that children from the poorest countries in this world also have access to love and understanding. In his book
Seeing Our World Through Different Eyes (Wipf & Stock, 2020), Niemz invites us to understand the world through the Eastern concept of
Advaita (in English: non-duality). Many terms that we conceive as opposing (space and time, being and becoming, chicken and egg, creator and creation) would actually be two sides of the same coin. In his book
Wie geht leben? (Allegria, 2021), Niemz goes even one step further and solves the duality. He replaces nouns with verb forms. Viruses, bacteria, and cancer cells would primarily be processes rather than objects: an informing ("vir-ing"), an acting ("bacteri-ing"), and a miscommunicating ("cancer-ing"). Niemz even conceives us human beings and God as verb forms. By doing so, he closely follows
Alfred North Whitehead and his
philosophy of organism. == Awards ==