yup so says the Hindu mythology.
2006-07-08 01:37:43
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answer #1
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answered by knu 4
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Copyright by Malcolm Gray 6/29/06
INTELLIGIUM (work in progress)
There is a force over all the universe which creates life. God further affects the evolution of life to more complex, aware and intelligent form for the realization and glorification of God. If we see ourselves as part of the collective consciousness of the life continuum, then a knowledge of good and evil is inherently evident. That which preserves and promotes life is good, that which harms and diminishes life is bad.
Some life must be sacrificed for the betterment or sustenance of other life forms.
If everyone knew we had to come back (reincarnation) then wouldn't we do things in this life to make the planet a better place to come back to? Now since most reasonable men would agree that to selflessly give of one's time and energy to preserving and improving the environment would be a good, virtuous Godlike thing to do, then maybe the analysis validates the premise
If we could control our population and live in harmony with nature our lives would be a wondrous joy. If we don't we will create hell on earth and suffer until our self destruction is complete.
Research space travel plan for astronomic events asteroid collision, escape before sun novas
2006-07-08 08:49:10
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answer #2
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answered by gray2mac 1
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You are a combination of your body and spirit. Together they are the soul. When you die your spirit leaves the body and in the resurrection the spirit and body are reunited. That is why it is said that your soul is saved or lost. Since I am part of the religious group I believe that my reincarnation will consist of this uniting. Then all that we have ever known will be remembered for good or bad. If you believe in any other reincarnation I don’t see how you expect to remember everything you once knew about a past life if you don’t remember everything about all your past lives now. If you can explain that to me I invite you to enlighten me.
2006-07-20 20:26:04
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answer #3
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answered by # one 6
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In all honesty, I don't know if reincarnation exists. IF human beings are like ENERGY (which we are made up of anyway!), then it may follow that when we die, the ENERGY doesn't disappear but just changes into another form (and maybe after THAT, it goes into the cosmic mix to form the next baby borned!)
In anycase, if i happen to Still be conscious when I am dead and gone and standing in line to reincarnate, AND i remember your question, I'll definitely pay u a visit and let u know the FULL STORY! :)
2006-07-08 08:48:44
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answer #4
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answered by cocodox 1
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I am open to the possibility of reincarnation. For me, it makes more sense than my soul going to some other place for all eternity. However, I believe that if there is such a thing, we would totally forget everything from before, which is why I think "channelers" are con artists.
2006-07-08 08:47:01
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answer #5
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answered by tianjingabi 5
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The Greek religious leader Pythagoras taught that after each death you stand before the Gods and look at yourself with their Divine Insight, perceiving all your flaws and imperfections and what lessons are most needed in the ongoing process of perfecting your soul. You then decide for yourself what your next life should be, so that you can most effectively learn them. In order to learn from experience you must enter each new lifetime as a tabula rasa, a blank slate on which life and experience may then write.
2006-07-19 06:39:54
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answer #6
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answered by rich k 6
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Almost everyone does forget details of their previous lives, but remnants of memory remain in everybody. People who are born with strong recollections of a past existence (I was born remembering) have a reason they chose to remember. It's a mixed blessing to have clear impressions of other realities.
The reason religion is so universally embraced, beyond all logic, is because the idea of eternity and beings who always existed is deeply appealing to us. We perceive a connection between that "divine forever" and our own reincarnative eternity. We may not be aware of our own foreverness, but we associate the echoes of our sense of eternity with the "inexplicably" familiar ideas of 'God' and religion.
Human beings sense with a feeling of certainty that which we do not know and cannot prove, and call it "faith". But what we refer to as 'faith' are memories lying deep in the threshold between the conscious and subconscious, memories of past exposure to religion in our previous lives. To many Christians, their deep (almost supernatural) rapport with the bible is an echo of other times, other lives in which the bible and its stories were always there. This familiarity running down deep in the soul gives Christianity a sense of authenticity that isn't easily shaken by science or logical argument. The figure of Jesus as a man who came from heaven, was born, died, resurrected and will return again strikes a profoundly intimate chord with Christians who sense an affinity between the Jesus identity and their own cycle of life, death and renewal.
Ironically, Jesus taught reincarnation, but so few have eyes to see this simple truth.
2006-07-10 09:21:29
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answer #7
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answered by Sweetchild Danielle 7
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Yes. That way, you can hopefully get a fresh start, forget old, bad habits and relationships, and start with a relatively clean slate. Subliminal learning, likes and dislikes tend to remain, and become a part of the overall personality. It also a chance to re-approach old, relationships, and fix them, if they need it. The process occurs over and over again, until one reaches Christ Consciousness, or, if you prefer, "Enlightenment".
2006-07-19 15:26:08
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answer #8
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answered by virgoascendant 3
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Yes I do. Yes we forget, no we don't. In reincarnation we create our own reality. Where we are now was due to our past lives. our memory of the past serves like a template where the energy of our spirit utilizes it for our next physical manifestation. Basically its very similar to dream where we engage characters and environment of our own thought that we created in our waking period. We don't remember the way we want it remembered but the reality we created reminds us of our past of we were.
2006-07-08 08:44:28
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answer #9
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answered by Frontal Lobe 4
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how fragile life is. freak accidents, motorcycle accidents, brain tumours. brains splattered on the platform, mangled bones, mothers gone mad. some dun even get the chance to reach their 20th bdae. to think i had thoughts of throwing away my life. thank You for stopping me then. felt really lucky for simply being alive, breathing n standing in the cabin wif my dear frens ard me crapping together.
life. a passing shadow, a candle in the wind. birth, a sunrise. death, a sunset. dust to dust, ashes to ashes.
sometimes i feel that life is an endless struggle, against the thgs dat are beyond our control and for the thgs dat we wanna keep close to our hearts. countless chances forsaken, silent tears of regret. their stories make me wanna cry. such twisted family backgrds. truly unexpected. children are the innocent ones that suffer frm broken marriages. nobody ever wanted to be born into a shitty family. but i guess no mothers want their kids to hate them. how do they tolerate such psychotic behaviour. it leaves emotional and physical scars. marks on the skin will fade, but the emotional turmoil could last a lifetime.
2006-07-22 06:29:05
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answer #10
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answered by Princess illusion 5
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i'm not certain of what will happen when i'm dead. i doubt i spend eternity doing anything though, that's much to long and couldn't be that exciting after 1,000,000,000,000 years...
if i am reincarnated then i'll remember a few of the basic things that my brain learned... i'll probably forget the things that required more complex connections in my brain, unless i figure out how to remember them in this life.
2006-07-08 08:39:21
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answer #11
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answered by sfrackow 1
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