reincarnation

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  • embodiment in a new form (especially the reappearance or a person in another form)
  • "his reincarnation as a lion" a second or new birth the Hindu or Buddhist doctrine that a person may be reborn successively into one of five classes of living beings (god or human or animal or hungry ghost or denizen of Hell) depending on the person's own actions

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    ''"Past Lives" redirects here. For the 2002 Black Sabbath album, see Past Lives (album).''Reincarnation, as a doctrine or mysticismmystical belief, holds the notion that one's 'Spirit' ('Soul' depending on interpretation), 'Higher or True Self', 'Divine Spark', 'I' or 'Ego' (not to be confused with the ego as defined by psychology) or critical parts of these returns to the material world after physical death to be reborn in a new body. The natural process is considered integrative of all experiences from each lifetime. A new personality feature, with the associated character, is developed during each life in the physical world, based upon past integrated experience and new acquired experiences. Some Reincarnation theories express that usually rebirth is made each time in alternated female and male type of bodies. Also that there is interaction between pre-determinism of certain experiences or lessons intended to happen during the physical life, and the free-will action of the individual as they live that life. This doctrine is a central tenet within Hinduism, Sikhism, Jainism, Surat Shabd YogaSurat Shabda Yoga, some African religions, as well as various other religions teachings and esoteric philosophies. Most modern PaganismPagans also believe in reincarnation.Transmigration is similar but considers inter-species embodiments, whereas Reincarnation of a human being is always as a human being. Reincarnation is traditionally understood to be akin to the BuddhismBuddhist concept of Rebirth (Buddhist)Rebirth, but in fact the two concepts are very distinct philosophically - Buddhism teaches that there is no self to reincarnate. An alternative view is that the teachings of Buddhism might stress one aspect, the teachings of Hinduism might stress another aspect, but that an advanced Buddhist and an advanced Hindu would directly perceive the phenomenon of reincarnation identically.

    Overview - Belief in reincarnation is an ancient phenomenon; in various guises humans have believed in a afterlifefuture life since the Ancient Egyptians, perhaps earlier, and ancient graves containing both people and possessions may testify to beliefs that a person would have need for their treasured possessions once again despite physical death.In brief, there are several common concepts of a future life. In each of them either the person, or some essential component that definbes that person (variously called the soul or spirit) persists in continuing existence:
  • People live on this earth, and then live in some kind of afterlife for the rest of eternity - variously called heaven (paradise) or hell, or the Kingdom of the Dead, or some higher plane, or similar. They do not return to earth as such.
  • People die, but will return to the earth or are revived in some final Day of JudgementJudgement, or at some final battle (eg the Norse Ragnarok). They may go to heaven or hell at that time, or live again and repopulate the earth. This is often called an apocalyptic vision of the future.
  • People die, and are returned to this or another existence continually, their form upon return being of a 'higher' or 'lower' kind depending upon the virtue (moral quality) of their present life. This is often called Transmigration.
  • People die, go through Plane (cosmology)inner planes and return, re-birth, (usually or often) as new human beings. Strictly, it is this which is known as reincarnation (also called "rebirth"). In many versions, eventually there is the potential to escape the cycle, eg by joining God, Enlightenment (concept)enlightenment, some kind of self-realization, a born againspiritual rebirth, entering a spiritual realm, etc. (There is some confusion, in general society, between reincarnation and transmigration; see below for comparison)Beliefs in reincarnation or transmigration are widespread amongst religions and beliefs, some seeing it as part of the religion, others seeing in it an answer to many common moral and existential dilemmas, such as "why are we here" and "why do bad things sometimes appear to happen to good people". Reincarnation is therefore a claim that a person has been or will be on this earth again in a different body. It suggests that there is a connection between apparently disparate human lifetimes, and (in most cases) that there may even be covert evidence of continuity between different people's lifetimes, if looked for. Proponents claim this is indeed the case, whilst critics tend to reject the notion due to its metaphysicsmetaphysical implications or non-acceptance by science due to other possible explanations of the phenomenon not yet eliminated from consideration. Such evidence tends to be of three kinds:
  • Tradition commonly holds that certain people (such as the Dalai LamaDalai or Panchen Lamas in Buddhism) can be identified by looking for a child born at the time of their death, and by certain signs and knowledge that such a child has of their predecessor life beyond the norm. In the case of Buddhism there are well defined tests of such a child.
  • In Western culture, regression or near death experience has at times provided what are claimed to be past life memories, some of which can in theory be verified, and some of which might be tested for fraudulent claims. Some aspects of these tend to be quite consistent in some ways (beings of light, messages of love and peace, etc), a factor which to some people lends credence to the idea, and to others supports that "something" is going on but without certainty what that might be.
  • Last, for many people, the evidence is internal and empiricismempirical, personal belief or experience. This may not be proof as such, but to them, qualifies as sufficient evidence to believe it.Whilst science is perhaps not as scathing of reincarnatory belief as it is of many other metaphysical concepts, and many claims have been documented in a scientific manner, it is important to be aware that formally, mainstream science does not accept yet that reincarnation is a proven phenomenon, or that it happens. Many apparently proven phenomenon turn out to be illusional over time, and others, such as the soul, are often deemed by many to simply be unknowable, and hence by definition outside its province.

    Reincarnation vs. transmigration - sectstub

    Early development of the belief in reincarnation - This doctrine has its roots far back in primitive culture. According to some scholars, this idea developed out of three common beliefs: (1) that man has a soul, connected with the breath, which can be separated from his material body, temporarily in sleep, permanently at death; (2) that animals and even plants have souls, and are possessed to a large extent of human powers and passions; (3) that souls can be transferred from one organism to another. (This idea still has adherents in many schools of Hinduism, the oldest of extant modern religions)Alternatively, some consider that reincarnation as a phenomenon (not simply a belief) has been occurring through history, and has been discovered and re-discovered by societies both primitive and advanced.Reincarnation of human souls into non-human bodies is implied in totemism.

    Reincarnation in various religions, traditions and philosophies -

    Eastern religions and traditions -

    Hinduism - In India this doctrine was thoroughly established from ancient times. While metempsychosis was not established in the older sections of the Vedas, it was explicated first in the Upanishads (c. 1000 BC - AD 4), which are philosophico-mystic texts held to be the essence of the Vedas. The idea that the soul reincarnates is intricately linked to karma, whose first explication was also seen in the Hindu books of the Upanishads. The idea is that individual souls, jiva-atmanatmas pass from one plane of existence and carry with them samskaras (impressions) from former states of being. These karmic agglomerations on the soul are taken to the next life and result in a causally-determined state of being. In some schools of Hinduism liberation from samsara, the cycle of death and rebirth, is considered the ultimate goal of earthly existence. This is known as ''Moksha'', mahasamadhi (or nirvana) in Hinduism. Other Bhakti traditions assert that liberation from samsara is merely the begginning of real spiritualityspiritual life and beyond nirvana activities still continue, but that they are no longer of a worldly nature. Both sides agree on the pheomenom of reincarnation itself.Buddhism and Vedanta (in particular Advaita Vedanta) further promoted the notion of nirvana following the advent of the great Hindu sage Adi SankaraAdi Shankaracharya. The idea that stilling one's ''karma''s (actions) and becoming at one, harmonious, with all would free one, ultimately, from reincarnation, became a central tenet of Hinduism. It displaced more complex PuranasPuranic systems positing the gradual progression of a soul through 8,400,000 (sometimes more) lives until eventual awakening. Instead, it relied more on the idea of self-growth and enlightenment through Yoga. Buddhism differed in that it felt there was no soul to reincarnate and developed an elaborate complex of metaphysical explanations for temporary states of ego to explain rebirth.

    Buddhism - Since according to Buddhism there is no permanent and unchanging anattasoul there is no metempsychosis in the strict sense. However, Buddhism never rejected samsara, the process of rebirth or reincarnation; there is debate, however, over what is transmitted between lives.''See also: Rebirth (Buddhist)''In spite of the doctrinal beliefs against the idea of a soul, Tibetan Buddhists do believe that a new-born child may be the reincarnation of someone departed. In Tibetan Buddhism the soul of an important lama (like the Dalai Lama) is supposed to pass into an infant born nine months after his decease.The Buddha has this to say on !reincarnation.Ku tadanta? continued:"Thou believest, O Master, that beings are reborn;that they migrate in the evolution of life;and that subject to the law of karma we must reap what we sow.Yet thou teachest the non-existence of the soul!Thy disciples praise utter self-extinctionas the highest bliss of Nirvana.If I am merely a combination of the sankharas,my existence will cease when I die.If I am merely a compound of sensations and ideas and desires,wither can I go at the dissolution of the body?" 7Said the Blessed One:"O Brahman, thou art religious and earnest.Thou art seriously concerned about thy soul.Yet is thy work in vain because thou art lackingin the one thing that is needful. 8"There is rebirth of character,but no transmigration of a self.Thy thought-forms reappear,but there is no egoentity transferred.The stanza uttered by a teacheris reborn in the scholar who repeats the word. 9

    Jainism - In Jainism, gods reincarnate after they die. A Jainist, who accumulates enough good karma, may become a god; but, this is generally seen as undesirable since gods eventually die and one might then come back as a lesser being.

    Ayyavazhi - Ayyavazhi says all souls are continuously reborn unless they reach Dharma Yukam, a state of union with God.

    Western religions and traditions -

    Classical Greek philosophy - Some Ancient Greeceancient Greek philosophers believed in reincarnation; see for example Plato's ''Phaedo'' and ''The Republic''. Pythagoras was probably the first Greek philosopher to advance the idea.We do not know exactly how the doctrine of metempsychosis arose in Greece; most scholars do not believe it was borrowed from Egypt or that it somehow was transmitted from ancient Hindu thinkers of India. It is easiest to assume that earlier ideas which had never been extinguished were utilized for religious and philosophic purposes. The Orphic religion, which held it, first appeared in Thrace upon the semi-barbarous north-eastern frontier. Orpheus, its legendary founder, is said to have taught that soul and body are united by a compact unequally binding on either; the soul is divine, immortal and aspires to freedom, while the body holds it in fetters as a prisoner. Death dissolves this compact, but only to re-imprison the liberated soul after a short time: for the wheel of birth revolves inexorably. Thus the soul continues its journey, alternating between a separate unrestrained existence and fresh reincarnation, round the wide circle of necessity, as the companion of many bodies of men and animals." To these unfortunate prisoners Orpheus proclaims the message of liberation, that they stand in need of the grace of redeeming gods and of Dionysus in particular, and calls them to turn to God by ascetic piety of life and self-purification: the purer their lives the higher will be their next reincarnation, until the soul has completed the spiral ascent of destiny to live for ever as God from whom it comes. Such was the teaching of Orphism which appeared in Greece about the 6th century BC, organized itself into private and public mysteries at Eleusis and elsewhere, and produced a copious literature.The earliest Greek thinker with whom metempsychosis is connected is Pherecydes; but Pythagoras, who is said to have been his pupil, is its first famous philosophic exponent. Pythagoras probably neither invented the doctrine nor imported it from Egypt, but made his reputation by bringing Orphic doctrine from North-Eastern Hellas to Magna Graecia and by instituting societies for its diffusion.The real weight and importance of metempsychosis in Western tradition is due to its adoption by Plato. Had he not embodied it in some of his greatest works it would be merely a matter of curious investigation for the Western anthropologist and student of folk-lore. In the eschatological myth which doses the Republic he tells the story how Er, the son of Armenius, miraculously returned to life on the twelfth day after death and recounted the secrets of the other world. After death, he said, he went with others to the place of Judgment and saw the souls returning from heaven and from purgatory, and proceeded with them to a place where they chose new lives, human and animal. He saw the soul of Orpheus changing into a swan, Thamyras becoming a nightingale, musical birds choosing to be men, the soul of Atalanta choosing the honours of an athlete. Men were seen passing into animals and wild and tame animals changing into each other. After their choice the souls drank of Lethe and then shot away like stars to their birth. There are myths and theories to the same effect in other dialogues, the Phaedrus, Meno, Phaedo, Timaeus and Laws. In Plato's view the number of souls was fixed; birth therefore is never the creation of a soul, but only a transmigration from one body to another. Plato's acceptance of the doctrine is characteristic of his sympathy with popular beliefs and desire to incorporate them in a purified form into his system. Aristotle, a far less emotional and sympathetic mind, has a doctrine of immortality totally inconsistent with it.In later Greek literature the doctrine appears from time to time; it is mentioned in a fragment of Menander (the Inspired Woman) and satirized by Lucian (Gallus 18 seq.). In Ancient RomeRoman literature it is found as early as Ennius, who in his Calabrian home must have been familiar with the Greek teachings which had descended to his times from the cities of Magna Graecia. In a lost passage of his Annals, a Roman history in verse, Ennius told how he had seen Homer in a dream, who had assured him that the same soul which had animated both the poets had once belonged to a peacock. Persius in one of his satires (vi. 9) laughs at Ennius for this: it is referred to also by Lucretius (i. 124) and by Horace (Epist. II. i. 52). Virgil works the idea into his account of, the Underworld in the sixth book of the Aeneid (vv. 724 sqq.). It persists in antiquity down to the latest classic thinkers, Plotinus and the other Neoplatonists.

    Judaism and Kabbalah - Classic works of the Kabbalah, ''Shaar ha Gilgulim'' ("Gate of Reincarnations") of Arizal or ''Isaac Luria'', describes complex laws of reincarnation ''gilgul'' and impregnation ''ibbur'' of 5 different parts of the soul. It shows many references of reincarnation in the Hebrew Bible (the Tanach).The notion of reincarnation is not openly mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. The classical rabbinic works (midrash, Mishna and Talmud) also are silent on this topic. These beliefs originally existed among the gnostics and other non-Jewish faiths. Although how this occurred is still a matter of debate among Jewish historians, the doctrine of reincarnation eventually made its way into the mainstream of Jewish mysticism. The concept was elucidated in an influential mystical work called the ''Bahir'' (Illumination) (one of the most ancient books of Jewish mysticism) which was composed by the first century mystic Nehunia ben haKana, and gained widespread recognition around 1150. After the publication of the ''Zohar'' in the late 13th century, the idea of reincarnation spread to most of the general Jewish community.While ancient Greek philosophers like Plato and Socrates attempted to prove the existence of reincarnation through philosophical proofs, Jewish mystics who accepted this idea did not. Rather, they offered explanations of why reincarnation would solve otherwise intractable problems of theodicy (how to reconcile the existence of evil with the premise of a good God.)Rabbis who accepted the idea of reincarnation include Levi ibn Habib (the Ralbah), Nahmanides (the Ramban), Rabbenu Bahya ben Asher, Rabbi Shelomoh Alkabez and Rabbi Hayyim Vital. The argument made was that even the most righteous of Jews sometimes would suffer or be murdered unjustly. Further, children would sometimes suffer or be murdered, yet they were obviously too young for them to have committed sins that God would presumably punish them for. Jewish supporters of reincarnation said that this idea would remove the theodicy: Good people were not suffering; rather, they were reincarnations of people who had sinned in previous lifetimes. Therefore any suffering which was observed could be assumed to be from a just God. Yitzchak Blua writes "Unlike some other areas of philosophy where the philosophic battleground revolves around the truth or falsehood of a given assertion, the ''gilgul'' debate at points focuses on the psychological needs of the people." (p.6)Other rabbis who rejected the idea of reincarnation include Hasdai Crescas, Yedayah Bedershi (early 14th century), Joseph Albo, Abraham ibn Daud and Leon de Modena. Crescas writes that if reincarnation was real, people should remember details of their previous lives. Bedershi offers three reasons why the entire concept is dangerous: (a) There is no reason for people to try and do good in this life, if they fear that they will nonetheless be punished for some unknown sin committed in a past life. (b) Some people may assume that they did not sin in their past life, and so can coast on their success; thus there is no need to try hard to live a good life. In Bedershi's view, the only psychologically tenable worldview for a healthy life is to deal with the here-and-now. (c) The idea presents a conundrum for those who believe that at the end of days, God will resurrect the souls and physical bodies of the dead. If a person has lived multiple lives, which body will God resurrect? Joseph Albo writes that in theory the idea of gilgulim is compatible with Jewish theology. However, Albo argues that there is a purpose for a soul to enter the body, creating a being with free will. However, a return of the soul to another body, again and again, has no point. Leon De Moden thinks that the idea of reincarnation make a mockery of God's plans for humans; why does God need to send the soul back over and over? If God requires an individual to achieve some perfection or atone for some sin, then God can just extend that person's life until they have time to do what is necessary. de Modena's second argument against reincarnation is that the entire concept is absent from the entire Bible and corpus of classical rabbinic literature.The idea of reincarnation, called ''gilgul'', became popular in folk belief, and is found in much Yiddish literature among Ashkenazi Jews. Among a few kabbalists, it was posited that some human souls could end up being reincarnated into non-human bodies. These ideas can be found in a number of Kabbalistic works from the 1200s, and also among many mystics in the late 1500s. A distinction was made, however, between actual Transmigration and this form of reincarnation; the non-human subject had its own soul already, the human soul simply 'rode along with' the rock, or tree, or giraffe waiting to be 'elevated,' that is, to be raised to a higher level and to gradually approach the level of human again. The cow eats the grass, elevating the soul within it, the soul rides with the cow a while until a person eats the cow, and the soul is elevated to the max. Rabbi Chaim Vidal, when asked how he came to be the foremost desciple and sole transmitter of the teachings of his teacher, the great Issac Luria, credits, not study or mitzvot, but his diligence in blessing his food: "For this way I elevate the souls therein. These souls then become my witnesses in the Heavenly Realm, and empower me to receive even greater revelations.""Over time however, the philosophical teaching limiting reincarnation to human bodies emerged as the dominant view. Nonetheless, the idea that one can reborn as an animal was never completely eliminated from Jewish thought, and appears centuries later in the Eastern European folk tradition". Simcha - Paull-Raphael,''Jewish Views of the Afterlife'', p.319While many Jews today do not believe in reincarnation, the belief is common amongst Orthodox JudaismOrthodox Jews, particularly amongst Hasidic JudaismHasidim; some Hasidic siddurim (prayerbooks) have a prayer asking for forgiveness for one's sins that one may have committed in this ''gilgul'' or a previous one.

    Gnosticism - Many Gnostic groups believed in reincarnation. For them, reincarnation was a negative concept: GnosticismGnostics believed that the material body was evil, and that they would be better off if they could eventually avoid having their 'good' souls reincarnated in 'evil' bodies.The Gnostic messianic.nazirene.us - Gospel of the Nazirenes - Chapter 69:1. As Yeshua sat by the west of the temple with his disciples, behold there passed some carrying one that was dead, to burial, and a certain one said to Him, "Master, if a man die, shall he live again?"''2. He answered and said, "I am the resurrection and the life, I am the good, the beautiful, the true; if a man believe in me he shall not die, but live eternally. As in Adam all (1997 = are bound to cycles of rebirth) die, so in the Messiah shall all be made alive. Blessed are the dead who die in me, and are made perfect in my image and likeness, for they rest from their labors and their works do follow them. They have overcome evil, and are made pillars in the temple of my God, and they go out no more, for they rest in the eternal."''3. "For them that persist in evil there is no rest, but they go out and in, and suffer correction for ages, till they are made perfect. But for them that have done good and attained to perfection, there is endless rest and they go into life everlasting. They rest in the eternal."''4. "Over them the repeated death and birth have no power, for them the wheel of the eternal revolves no more, for they have attained to the center, where is eternal rest, and the center of all things is God." ''The texts contains several parallels to the Gospels, which are, though, traditionally interpreted differently in their context: "I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes in me shall never die. '' John 11:25f RSVHim who overcomes I will make a pillar in the temple of my God. Never again will he leave it.'' Revelation 3:12 (NIV)

    Christianity - See Bible and Reincarnation.

    Islam - The Quran says, "God generates beings and sends them back over and over again until they return to him". The Sufis as a group attemtped strongly to preserve this belief in reincarnation, in the East.

    First American Nations - Reincarnation is an intrinsic part of many Indigenous peoples of the AmericasNative American and Inuit traditions. Regardless of the actual religious beliefs and practices of today's Native Americans, with varying religious beliefs, the idea has survived for centuries. In the now heavily ChristianityChristian Polar regionPolar North (now mainly parts of Greenland and Nunavut), the concept of reincarnation is enshrined in the Inuit language. The survival of the concept of reincarnation applies across the Nations in varying degrees of integrity. The Nations are, of course, now sandwiched between Eastern Native and Western traditions.

    Norse mythology - Reincarnation also appears in Norse mythology, in the ''Poetic Edda''. The editor of the ''Poetic Edda'' informs the reader that Helgi Hjörvarðsson and his mistress, the valkyrie Sváva, whose love story is told in the ''Helgakviða Hjörvarðssonar'', were reborn as Helgi Hundingsbane and the valkyrie Sigrún. Helgi and Sigrún's love story is the matter of a part of the ''Völsunga saga'' and the lays ''Helgakviða Hundingsbana I and II''. They were reborn a second time as Helgi Haddingjaskati and the valkyrie Kára, but unfortunately their story, ''Káruljóð'', only survives in a probably modified form in the ''Hrómundar saga Gripssonar''.

    Contemporary movements and thinkers -

    New religious movements - At the Renaissance we find the doctrine in Giordano Bruno, and in the 17th century in the theosophist Jan Baptist van Helmontvan Helmont. During the classical period of German literature metempsychosis attracted much attention: Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGoethe played with the idea, and it was taken up more seriously by Gotthold Ephraim LessingLessing, who borrowed it from Charles Bonnet, and by Johann Gottfried von HerderHerder. It has been mentioned with respect by David HumeHume and by Arthur SchopenhauerSchopenhauer. Modern theosophy, which draws its inspiration from India, has taken metempsychosis (or rather reincarnation as a cardinal tenet; it is, says a recent theosophical writer, "the master-key to modern problems," and among them to the problem of heredity. The idea of reincarnation is also part of the New Age culture.Today, among newer movements, belief in reincarnation is widespread in New Age and NeopaganismNeopagan circles. It is an important tenet of Theosophy, and central to Spiritism, founded by Allan Kardec.Toward the Light is an example of a contemporary work originating in the western world, which very detailed accounts for reincarnation.

    Scientology - See also the article Scientology beliefs and practicesScientology is another new religion that accepts past lives and holds that all beings are truly immortal, although in a variety of levels of awareness. In Scientology,without karma or personal wisdom, a person's own actions, reactions, and decisions are sufficient to ensure a great deal of adventure, boredom, and strife, along with all the combinations of problems that can be experienced in life. In this context, a lack of personal responsibility and other factors can act together to create something that is similar to karma in other belief systems. Scientology does not focus on the doctrine of karma as commonly believed (i.e. a mechanism of divine justice). The term karma is not generally used.The first writings in Scientology regarding past lives date from around 1951 and slightly earlier. The controversy brought the subject to public awareness, and was followed by such cases (not related to Scientology) as Bridey Murphy in 1952Much of the controversy involving Scientology arises from the logical extension of the concept of past lives to what is effectively eternity. In this context, past lives not only take place prior to Earth, but also in non-Earth civilizations, and even in universes prior to this one, where conditions and rules of existence can be different. One could even have past lives in civilizations where advanced technology was common and/or routine. Thus a person who once lived in a world destroyed by nuclear war could become upset living in a world where nuclear power has been re-discovered. Scientology does not look to Theosophical writings for explanations on the system of past lives, or for a cosmology. Scientology does not assume that beings in the between life area necessarily have the best interests of the individual at heart (it varies), and that the path to increased awareness is not a guaranteed thing. Scientology also holds that people are composite beings, in that there is a body awareness which can have recalls in parallel to the genetic line. This entity is separate and distinctly different from the spirit, called a thetan in Scientology. Scientology procedures exist to address this body level awareness, although primary consideration is given to the liberation of the Spirit.Scientology does not consider the lack of awareness of past lives to be a good thing. It attributes the general amnesia of past lives to a variety of causes, including, but not limited to, pain, unconsciusness, lack of personal responsibility, and even the decision to forget what had just transpired.

    Seth Jane Roberts - In the Seth series of books Seth Jane RobertsJane Roberts talks about reincarnation and life after death. Seth believed that time and space are basically illusions. Consistent with this view, Seth argues that only parts of each person incarnate (appear in physical reality). This last argument is part of Seth's view that man is a multi-dimensional entity simultaneously alive in many contexts.

    The New Age movement - There are many people nowadays who allegedly "remember" their past lives and use that knowledge to help them with their current lives; this kind of occurrence is fairly central to the New Age faith. Some of the people who remember claim simply to remember without any effort on their part. They simply "see" previous times and see themselves interacting with others.

    Common variations in the belief - In recalling past lives, there are a number of variations that need to be examined, which are important to its adherants.In the Urantia Book, reincarnation is does not always happen. Reincarnation takes place among those souls who have devined the devine meaning and purpose and signification of their life, basically having evolved sufficiently to awaken some form of immortal awareness. Otherwise, death is a permanent affair. The cosmology of the Urantia Book is very complex, but is similar in some regards to the system seen in Theosophy.Theosophical texts maintain that people are constantly evolving, gradually becoming one of the Ascended Masters. In this system, one may be incarnated anyplace in the chain of life, and this is often in connection with life lessons that need to be learned. One often meets with ones spirit guides, one of the Ascended masters, etc. in order to plan the major events for the next life. The element of karma in reincarnation is often seen as a system of devine justice. See also Elizabeth Clare Prophet for a modern exponent of Theosophy.In many common new age beliefs, past life recalls involving lifetimes within the historical record (real or supposed, including legendary places such as Atlantis) are commonly accepted. It is sometimes beliefed that prior to that there was a succession of lifetimes in other lifeforms where one was working to become Human. Lifetimes outside the context of earth are rarely acknowledged.Often, the doctrine of karma as commonly believed is seen to be a mechanism of divine justice, imposed or enforced by rules of the universe. One variation is what one does, comes back to you multiplied three fold.In Tibetan Buddhism one finds the concept of the Six Worlds, where dependant on the quality of one merit or karma, one is re-incarnated as a citizen of one of the six Worlds, these being the world of Gods, World of DemiGods, World of Men, World of Animals, world of Demons, and the world of Hell. The advantadge of the Human realm is that this is the only place where it is possible to achieve enlightenment, and so pass beyond the cycle of suffering. Incarnations in other realms and worlds are acknowledged, but usually this is considered so long ago that it is not very relevant.Theosophical and other related beliefs systems explain the common inability to not remember past lives as a part of the devine plan, and that this is a good thing for a variety of reasons.An interesting variation can be seen in the work of Author Peter Novakdivisiontheory.com, who proposes that reincarnation is part of a larger scheme, where soul and spirit are two different entities, united as one during one's lifetime, and which separate at death, in a process he calls consciousness division or Division Theory. The division of consciousness is not considered to be a good thing.

    Evidence of reincarnation - The most detailed collections of personal reports in favor of reincarnation have been published by Dr. Ian Stevenson in works such as ''Reincarnation and Biology: A Contribution to the Etiology of Birthmarks and Birth Defects'', which documents thousands of detailed cases where claims of injuries received in past lives sometimes correlate with atyptical physical birthmarks or birth defects. Perhaps the most significant anecdotal evidence in this regard is the phenomenon of young children spontaneously sharing what appear to be memories of past lives, a phenomenon which has been reported even in cultures that do not hold to a belief in reincarnation. Upon investigating these claims, Stevenson and others have identified individuals who had died a few years before the child was born who seem to meet the descriptions the children provided. In the most compelling cases, autopsy photographs reveal that the deceased individuals have fatal injuries that correspond to the unusual marks or birth defects of the child; for example, marks on the chest and back of a child line up precisely with the bullet entry and exit wounds on the body of an individual who has been shot. However, Stevenson cautions that such evidence is ''suggestive'' of reincarnation, but that more research must be conducted.

    Objections to reincarnation - Objections to metempsychosis include: that personal identity depends on memory, and we do not remember our previous incarnations. An answer given by Hindu philosophers (like Swami Vivekananda) is that though we do not remember our infanthood, we cannot deny its reality. Another common answer is that this perforce requires the limiting of memory to the known life, thus creating a circular argument; the past life cannot be real because they are not remembered, because whatever it is that is claimed to be a memory does not meet the definition of memory as belonging to this life only, and therefore cannot be considered a memory.Another philosophical answer is that the soul, or whatever it is that lives these hypothetical multiple lives, is influenced throughout all its qualities by the qualities of the body, and as bodies vary, whatever travels between them would not be the same consciousness. If the soul of a dog were to pass into a man's body, the argument goes, it would have to be so changed as to be no longer the same soul; and so, in a less degree, of change from one human's body to another. Some scientists and skeptics, such as Paul Edwards (philosopher)Paul Edwards, have analyzed many of these anecdotal evidenceanecdotal accounts. In every case they found that further research into the individuals involved provides sufficient background to weaken the conclusion that these cases are credible examples of reincarnation. Others, such as philosopher Robert Almeder, having analyzed the criticisms of Edwards and others, say that the gist of these arguments can be summarized as "we all know it can't possibly be real, so therefore it isn't real", a well known logical fallacy traditionally called an Argument from ignoranceArgument from Lack of Imagination.Critics who claim that reincarnation is impossible often espouse the alternate theory that a large number of mental phenomena such as memory and ability are already accounted for by physiological processes; and may point to moral and practical inconsistencies in the various theories of reincarnation. To the materialismmaterialistic mind, Occam's Razor would then seem to dictate that the critical view is to be preferred, as it demands no extraordinary new evidence beyond what is already known to science.A more skepticismskeptical view is that without conclusive evidence showing that reincarnation exists (regardless of the current state of science), the theory of reincarnation cannot be considered to be a valid scientific theorytheory worthy of formal scientific recognition and acceptance. Some skeptics explain the abundance of claims of evidence for reincarnation to originate from selective thinking and the psychological phenomena of false memoryfalse memories that often result from one's own belief system and basic fears, and thus cannot be accounted as empirical evidence. Another argument often made is that claims of reincarnation by casual adherents are usually of having been some famous historical figure instead of being another animal or an insignificant person. This argument, however, is seldom substantiated with a quantitative count of famous and non-famous reincarnation claims, and many accounts are of peasant or other little known people.Because of such skepticism, many people who feel they may have lived a past life tend to be quite circumspect which whom they discuss this.

    Theories put forward to explain the phenomenon -

    A theory of reincarnation - A belief in reincarnation does not discount the existence of heaven, hell, or a final judgment. There are a number of small children who have reported having memories of past lives prior to their present life, and some also report being able to recall a time between lives (see books by Dr. Ian Stevenson, Carol Bowman, Dr. Jim B. Tucker, and Elisabeth Hallett). In some cases these children have also reported being in a place like heaven between lives, and sometimes that they were given some degree of choice as to whether and when to be reborn, and even in selecting their future parents. Some of these children claim that being reborn is not necessarily a punishment for past bad "karma", but rather an opportunity for a soul to grow spiritually. Additional lifetimes could give individual souls a greater opportunity to accomplish more for God, if that is a person's goal, and to develop better character traits. Eastern views of reincarnation vary and several parallels with this idea are to be found in certain branches of Hinduism and Buddhism.A more dramatic idea is espoused in at least one account, of a woman who was raped at age 37, and was treated amongst other ways, with regression therapy. It seems she was attempted to be regressed prior to her birth, and reported that she had decided that a traumatic incident would be needed at around that time, to change her life from its previous path. If such accounts were true, they would have profound implications for human life.

    See also -
  • gilgul, ibbur
  • Hinduism, Hindu philosophy, Atman (Hinduism), karma, tantra, yoga
  • Buddhism, Anatta, Vajrayana, Mahayana, Theravada, Rebirth (Buddhist), Tulku
  • Edgar Cayce,Edgar Cayce on Karma -- Carol Bowman
  • Afterlife -- Bible and Reincarnation -- Death -- Life
  • False memory
  • Metempsychosis
  • Esoteric Christianity

    References -

    Scientific publications - Dr. Ian Stevenson, M.D. is Director, Division of Personality Studies and Carlson Professor of Psychiatry, both a part of the Department of Psychiatric Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, healthsystem.virginia.edu. Ian Stevenson publishes only for the academic and scientific community, and his writing—densely packed with research details and academic argument—is difficult for the average reader to follow. Dr. Ian Stevenson offers convincing scientific evidence for reincarnation:
  • Dr. Ian Stevenson, ''Reincarnation and Biology: A Contribution to the Etiology of Birthmarks and Birth Defects'' ISBN 0275952835
  • Dr. Ian Stevenson, ''Children Who Remember Previous Lives: A Question of Reincarnation, revised edition'' ISBN 0786409134
  • Dr. Jim B. Tucker, ''Life Before Life: A Scientific Investigation of Children's Memories of Previous Lives'' ISBN 0312321376
  • Paul Edwards (philosopher)Paul Edwards, ''Reincarnation: A Critical Examination'' ISBN 1573929212Emily Williams Cook, Bruce Greyson, e Ian Stevenson, published at the Journal of Scientific Exploration, U.S.A. 1998:
  • ''Do Any Near-Death Experiences Provide Evidence for the Survival of Human Personality after Death? Relevant Features and Illustrative Case Reports'' ? sedna.no.sapo.pt - pdfDr. Pim Van Lommel, Dutchman, Cardiologist, Division of Cardiology - Hospital Rijnstate. Published 13-year study, at the world leading medical science journal "The Lancet" in 2001 (358: 2039-45), of NDEs observed in 10 different Dutch hospitals with survivors of cardiac arrest:
  • ''Near-death experience in survivors of cardiac arrest: a prospective study in the Netherlands'' merkawah.nl - www sedna.no.sapo.pt - pdf
  • ''A Reply to Shermer: Medical Evidence for NDEs'', 2003, !skepticalinvestigations.org - wwwProf. Dr. David Fontana, Cardiff University and Liverpool John Moores University, UK, published at magazine "ParaDocs", Finland 2003:
  • ''Does Mind Survive Physical Death?'' sedna.no.sapo.pt - pdfDr. Anabela Cardoso, University of Minho, Portugal, published at magazine "ParaDocs", Finland 2003:
  • ''ITC Voices: Contact with Another Reality?'' sedna.no.sapo.pt - pdfNeal Grossman, Ph.D. in The History and Philosophy of Science from Indiana University, and associate professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago, published at the Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS) in 2002:
  • ''Who's Afraid of Life After Death? Why NDE Evidence is Ignored'' noetic.org - www.

    Literature -
  • Elizabeth Clare Prophet, Erin L. Prophet, ''Reincarnation: The Missing Link in Christianity'' ISBN 0922729271, 1997
  • Brian L. Weiss, Dr., ''Only Love is real: the story of soulmates reunited'' ISBN 0446519456, 1996
  • Joseph Head and S.L. Cranston, editors, ''Reincarnation: The Phoenix Fire Mystery'' ISBN 0-517-56101-8, 1994
  • Gary Doore, ''What Survives?'' ISBN 0874775833, 1990
  • Gina Cerminara, ''Many Mansions: The Edgar Cayce Story on Reincarnation'' ISBN 0451033078, 1990
  • Brian L. Weiss, Dr. , ''Many Lives, Many Masters'', ISBN 0671657860, 1988
  • Max Heindel, ''The Rosicrucian Mysteries'' (Chapter II: rosicrucian.com - The problem of Life and its solution), ISBN 0-911274-86-3, 1911
  • Max Heindel, ''The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception'' (Part I, Chapter IV: rosicrucian.com - Rebirth and the Law of Consequence), ISBN 0-911274-34-0, 1909

    External links -
  • ? spiritwritings.com - The Spirit's Book, by Allan Kardec
  • krishna.com - "About Reincarnation," discusses traditional Hindu teachings, empiric evidence, and skeptical objections.
  • csicop.org - A CSICOP review of ''Reincarnation: A Critical Examination''
  • spiritual.com.au - Articles on reincarnation
  • krishna.com - ''Bhagavad-gita'' online Includes Lord Krishna's classic teachings about reincarnation (especially in chapters 2, 8, and 15.)
  • childpastlives.org - Children's Past Lives
  • etext.lib.virginia.edu - Dictionary of the History of Ideas: ''Death and Immortality''
  • aaple.com - Dr. Morris Netherton's Past Lives Therapy
  • kabbalaonline.org - Gate of Reincarnations - classics
  • ial.goldthread.com - In Another Life, documentary project including streaming video interviews and articles.
  • sedna.no.sapo.pt - International SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH into 'the Survival after physical death'
  • lioncity.net - Reincarnation in Buddhism
  • skepdic.com - Reincarnation, from the skeptic's dictionary
  • veda.harekrsna.cz - Reincarnation: Pros and Cons
  • rosicrucian.com - Rosicrucians: Rebirth, the Master Key
  • zyworld.com - Rosicrucians: The Cycle of Life
  • ? wn.elib.com - Rudolf Steiner, ''How Karma Works''
  • thirtysevenbooks.com - Shaar ha Gilgulim of ARI
  • katinkahesselink.net - Theosophy on reincarnation
  • healthsystem.virginia.edu - University of Virginia - Division of Personality Studies (DOPS)
  • veda.harekrsna.cz - Vedic cosmology – relation to samsara
  • vijaykumar.com - Vijay Kumar God Creation Reincarnation
  • !amanecerespiritual.tripod.com< /a> - Spiritual Dawn - Morality and Philosophy Essay - ReincarnationSpirituality Category:Philosophy of !mindCategory:SpiritualityCateg ory:EsotericismCategory:Reinca rnation !da:Reinkarnationde:Reinkarnati oneo:Reenkarnigxoes:Reencarnac iónfr:Réincarnationit:Reinca rnazionehe:גל• 0;ול? !נשמו&# 1514;nl:Reïncarnatieja:้ 8;生pl:Reinkarnacjapt:Re encarnaçãofi:Jälleensyntymi nensv:Själavandringzh:%E8%BD% 89%E4%B8%96'''
  • Websites


    A New Consciousness Bible
    Q & A interview transcripts, journals and photographs document events usually equated with the 'supernatural' or 'miraculous.' The author apprenticed as a 'carpenter in the Hollywood dream factory' before becoming an author with this book in 1997.
    http://www.testament.org/

    Pyramid energy
    development of energy pyramids, spiritual arts, energytraining, research in the use of kundalini yoga, chakrahealing, feng shui
    http://www.pyramidenenergie.org/

    The Rational Spirituality Movement website
    The Rational Spirituality Movement is a worldwide association of individuals who share a common spiritual worldview based on reincarnation and karma. This worldview is unique because it is based on rationality and analysis of modern evidence, not on faith and belief in revealed wisdom, and because it places the emphasis on karmic learning and personal responsibility. The evidence comes primarily from theoretical physics, near death experiences, children who remember past lives, and past life and interlife regression.
    http://www.rsmovement.org

    Kyborg Institut & Verlag
    Entwicklung von Energiekonzepten auf der Basis dea Kundalini Yoga, Entwicklung der Energiepyramiden.
    http://www.kyborg-institut.de/

    Kyborg Institut & Verlag
    20 Jahre Forschungs und Praxis für das Verständnis von Mensch und Energie auf der Basis des Kundalini Yoga, Entwicklung der Energiepyramiden und neuer, magischer und spiritueller Instrumente
    http://www.kyborg-institute.org/

    The Esoteric Philosophy Homepage
    A comprehensive collection of articles on Esoteric Philosophy from various sources. Includes a great links page to sites on esotericism.
    http://www.esoteric-philosophy.net/

    Katinka Hesselink Net
    Personal website with many articles on karma, reincarnation, buddhism, sufism, fourth way and theosophy. With spiritual quotes by people like Jiddu Krishnamurti, Gurdjieff, Blavatsky and the Dalai Lama.
    http://www.katinkahesselink.net/

    Many Paths to One Goal?
    Investigates whether world religions are complementary and equally true, especially focusing on comparisons between Christianity and Eastern religions.
    http://www.comparativereligion.com/

    The Tipperary Stairs Company
    Design and manufacturing of extremely high quality staircases and handrailing systems in glass steel and wood.
    http://www.geocities.com/tipp.stairs

    First Spiritual Temple: A Christian Spiritualist Church (USA)
    A Non-Denominational Christian Spiritualist Church, deeply embedded within the philosophy of Spiritualism. Making Sense of God, Christ, the Gifts of the Spirit, and Mediumship. Site contains a number of major articles on Spiritualism.
    http://www.fst.org/

    Near Death Experiences and the Afterlife
    Profiles a large number of Near Death Experiences and deals with related psychic and religious phenomena.
    http://www.near-death.com/

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