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I am not trying to be trite, I mean a viable afterlife, one that would allow us to use our Earthly experiences to reach a higher level of awareness and maybe even cooperation?

2007-05-25 07:30:41 · 17 answers · asked by MrsOcultyThomas 6 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

And, a life that we would enjoy?

2007-05-25 07:31:44 · update #1

17 answers

This is some interesting research on the subject:

Ian Stevenson is the former head of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Virginia, and now is Director of the Division of Perceptual Studies at the University of Virginia. He has devoted the last 40 years to the scientific documentation of past life memories of children from all over the world and has over 3000 cases in his files. Many people, including skeptics and scholars, agree that these cases offer the best evidence yet for reincarnation.

Dr. Stevenson's research into the possibility of reincarnation began in 1960 when he heard of a case in Sri Lanka where a child claimed to remember a past life. He thoroughly questioned the child and the child's parents, as well as the people whom the child claimed were his parents from his past life. This led to Dr. Stevenson's conviction that reincarnation was possibly a reality. The more cases he pursued, the greater became his drive to scientifically open up and conquer an unknown territory among the world's mysteries, which until now had been excluded from scientific observation. Nonetheless, he believed he could approach and possibly furnish proof of its reality with scientific means.

In 1960, Dr. Stevenson published two articles in the Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research about children who remembered past lives. In 1974, he published his book, Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation, and became well known wherever this book appeared by those people who already had a long-standing interest in this subject. They were pleased to finally be presented with such fundamental research into reincarnation from a scientific source. In 1997, Dr. Stevenson published his work entitled Reincarnation and Biology. In the first volume, he mainly describes birthmarks - those distinguishing marks on the skin which the newborn baby brings into the world and cannot be explained by inheritance alone. In his second volume, Dr. Stevenson focuses mainly on deformities and other anomalies that children are born with and which cannot be traced back to inheritance, prenatal or perinatal (created during birth) occurrences. This monumental piece of work contains hundreds of pictures documenting the evidence.

During his original research into various cases involving children's memories of past lives, Dr. Stevenson did note with interest the fact that these children frequently bore lasting birthmarks which supposedly related to their murder or the death they suffered in a previous life. Stevenson's research into birthmarks and congenital defects has such particular importance for the demonstration of reincarnation, since it furnishes objective and graphic proof of reincarnation, superior to the - often fragmentary - memories and reports of the children and adults questioned, which even if verified afterwards cannot be assigned the same value in scientific terms.

In many cases presented by Dr. Stevenson there are also medical documents available as further proof, which are usually compiled after the death of the person. Dr. Stevenson adds that in the cases he researched and "solved" in which birthmarks and deformities were present, he didn't suppose there was any other apposite explanation than that of reincarnation. Only 30% - 60% of these deformities can be put down to birth defects which related to genetic factors, virus infections or chemical causes (like those found in children damaged by the drug Thalidomide or alcohol). Apart from these demonstrable causes, the medical profession has no other explanation for the other 40% to 70% of cases than that of mere chance. Stevenson has now succeeded in giving us an explanation of why a person is born with these deformities and why they appear precisely in that part of their body and not in another.

Most of the cases where birthmarks and congenital deformities are present for which no medical explanations exist have one to five characteristics in common.

(1) In the most unusual scenario, it is possible that someone who believed in reincarnation expressed a wish to be reborn to a couple or one partner of a couple. This is usually because they are convinced that they would be well cared for by those particular people. Such preliminary requests are often expressed by the Tlingit Indians of Alaska and by the Tibetans.

(2) More frequent than this are the occurrences of prophetic dreams. Someone who has died appears to a pregnant or not as yet pregnant woman and tells her that he or she will be reborn to her. Sometimes relatives or friends have dreams like this and will then relate the dream to the mother to be. Dr. Stevenson found these prophetic dreams to be particularly prolific in Burma and among the Indians in Alaska.

(3) In these cultures the body of a newborn child is checked for recognizable marks to establish whether the deceased person they had once known has been reborn to them. This searching for marks of identification is very common among cultures that believe in reincarnation, and especially among the Tlingit Indians and the Igbos of Nigeria. Various tribes of West Africa make marks on the body of the recently deceased in order to be able to identify the person when he or she is reborn.

(4) The most frequently occurring event or common denominator relating to rebirth is probably that of a child remembering a past life. Children usually begin to talk about their memories between the ages of two and four. Such infantile memories gradually dwindle when the child is between four and seven years old. There are of course always some exceptions, such as a child continuing to remember its previous life but not speaking about it for various reasons.

Most of the children talk about their previous identity with great intensity and feeling. Often they cannot decide for themselves which world is real and which one is not. They often experience a kind of double existence where at times one life is more prominent, and at times the other life takes over. This is why they usually speak of their past life in the present tense saying things like, "I have a husband and two children who live in Jaipur." Almost all of them are able to tell us about the events leading up to their death.

Such children tend to consider their previous parents to be their real parents rather than their present ones, and usually express a wish to return to them. When the previous family has been found and details about the person in that past life have come to light, then the origin of the fifth common denominator – the conspicuous or unusual behavior of the child - is becoming obvious.

(5) For instance, if the child is born in India to a very low-class family and was a member of a higher caste in its previous life, it may feel uncomfortable in its new family. The child may ask to be served or waited on hand and foot and may refuse to wear cheap clothes. Stevenson gives us several examples of these unusual behavior patterns.

In 35% of cases he investigated, children who died an unnatural death developed phobias. For example, if they had drowned in a past life then they frequently developed a phobia about going out of their depth in water. If they had been shot, they were often afraid of guns and sometimes loud bangs in general. If they died in a road accident they would sometimes develop a phobia of traveling in cars, buses or lorries.

Another frequently observed unusual form of behavior, which Dr. Stevenson called philias, concerns children who express the wish to eat different kinds of food or to wear clothes that were different from those of their culture. If a child had developed an alcohol, tobacco or drug addiction as an adult in a previous incarnation he may express a need for these substances and develop cravings at an early age.

Many of these children with past-life memories show abilities or talents that they had in their previous lives. Often children who were members of the opposite sex in their previous life show difficulty in adjusting to the new sex. These problems relating to the 'sex change' can lead to homosexuality later on in their lives. Former girls who were reborn as boys may wish to dress as girls or prefer to play with girls rather than boys.

Until now all these human oddities have been a mystery to conventional psychiatrists - after all, the parents could not be blamed for their children's behavior in these cases. At long last research into reincarnation is shedding some light on the subject. In the past, doctors blamed such peculiarities on a lack or a surplus of certain hormones, but now they will have to do some rethinking.

2007-05-25 11:25:16 · answer #1 · answered by Fluffy Wisdom 5 · 2 0

I have entertained the thought of reincarnation. If my only choice is to come back to earth, then I would opt for permanent death. I don't see the conditions on this planet improving.
If you are speaking of the traditional afterlife spoken of in the Bible, then I think the sleep in the grave until the resurrection is a good idea. I am so sleep deprived that some days I look forward to a nice long nap--with or without dreaming.
Guess I'm just having a bad day, huh?

2007-05-25 14:38:57 · answer #2 · answered by Me 6 · 1 0

The chances are infinitesimally small, similar to the possibility that I will have an opportunity in my lifetime to visit a planet currently orbiting Betelgeuse. But from that standpoint, however unlikely, I'm not confident enough to say that it is entirely impossible. Maybe the Vulcans are watching us from a distance with all the technology needed to set up a warp drive.

Isn't one of the proofs of God the statement that if human beings can imagine God, God must therefore exist? (I know that "perfection" is also an element of this proof.) It seems that if we can imagine it, it is POSSIBLE, but not necessarily actual.

2007-05-25 14:58:29 · answer #3 · answered by NHBaritone 7 · 1 0

Possibility, sure. Probability? Not so sure.

Within my own traditions, the family burial mound and "dying into the folds of one's ancestry" were always seen as the *likeliest* destination, and even there . . . it's unclear how much of that was considered metaphorical, even at the time.

In later records, it's obvious that "burial mound" and "barrow" have become metaphors for something else entirely---points of entry into the underworlds of Hel and Nastrond. Still later, the motifs of "Halls"---Valhalla, Folkvangr, etc.---enter the literature of Norse belief, and really, it must be said that such concepts had a far greater impact on heathen literature than on actual heathens.

If one looks unsentimentally at earliest practices among my Folk, there seems to be an operant sense of "Well, just in CASE" to most of the practices regarding burial, which because of the Norse tradition of treating symbolic/metaphorical imagery concretely and literally has led to a lot of misinterpretations by modern heathens raised on Jeebus and Heaven, or influenced by New Age faux-Buddhist ideas about reincarnation.

That said, the "boat burial" is the single most typical feature of Norse and Germanic graves, other than their inclusion within the community itself . . . and these boats, as Bauschatz points out, are always *securely anchored.* Given that wordfame was seen as one's only SURE form of immortality, Bauschatz wrote, it was as if early Norse recognized the possibility of there being something unknown and unknowable beyond the limits of memory; that one might indeed, as even one's descendants lost the memory of one's name, one's deeds, at long last slip one's mooring and . . . set sail into the Great Beyond.

2007-05-25 14:48:45 · answer #4 · answered by Boar's Heart 5 · 1 0

I believe that we will have an afterlife- eternal life in christ in heaven. I believe that we will have memories and regrets and joy there.
I think that we will have relationship based on our relationship with Christ now.

If we waste the free gift of salvation, how can we not regret sharing Christ? and living fully in Him?

I know a lot of people think that heaven is equal, but I believe that the judgement seat of Christ will say differently.

will be at a higher level of awareness? yes, how else could we be in a glorified body?

2007-05-25 14:38:52 · answer #5 · answered by 2ndchhapteracts 5 · 1 1

I do. I cannot believe that today we are here and tomorrow we will just vanish without a trace. The real me, is not my body but the consciousness or the soul within me, which is non-perishable and will be transferred to another body. Just like it is said in science that energy is neither created nor destroyed. The same principle applies to our body's energy i.e. our soul.

2007-05-25 14:42:07 · answer #6 · answered by P'quaint! 7 · 1 0

Lets go to God's word the bible for the answer, it tells us that the dead are uncouncience awaiting a ressurection in the future

(Ecclesiastes 9:5) . . .For the living are conscious that they will die; but as for the dead, they are conscious of nothing at all, neither do they anymore have wages, because the remembrance of them has been forgotten. . .

(Ecclesiastes 3:18-21) 18 I, even I, have said in my heart with regard to the sons of mankind that the [true] God is going to select them, that they may see that they themselves are beasts. 19 For there is an eventuality as respects the sons of mankind and an eventuality as respects the beast, and they have the same eventuality. As the one dies, so the other dies; and they all have but one spirit, so that there is no superiority of the man over the beast, for everything is vanity. 20 All are going to one place. They have all come to be from the dust, and they are all returning to the dust. 21 Who is there knowing the spirit of the sons of mankind, whether it is ascending upward; and the spirit of the beast, whether it is descending downward to the earth?

See how Jesus's friends viewed the fate of their brother Lazirus
(John 11:23-24) . . .Jesus said to her: “Your brother will rise.” 24 Martha said to him: “I know he will rise in the resurrection on the last day. . .

you see these personal friends of Jesus knew that their brother was only sleeping in death awaiting a ressurection in a future time

2007-05-25 14:57:52 · answer #7 · answered by zorrro857 4 · 1 1

Well i am a spiritual atheist, but when it comes to afterlife, im kind of agnostic. There is no proof of an afterlife, yet there can be one. I guess we are going to have to wait until we die to find out.

2007-05-25 14:34:09 · answer #8 · answered by DEPRESSED™ 5 · 1 0

yes
Rev 18-22
Matt 24-25
1 & 2 Thes
John 3:15-21

2007-05-25 16:37:16 · answer #9 · answered by robert p 7 · 1 1

Next Life is what you mean !


Cheers

2007-05-25 14:34:29 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It's possible.

Not probable - but I never claim to know everything.

2007-05-25 14:32:47 · answer #11 · answered by Joe M 5 · 2 0

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