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Old 02-21-2002, 06:12 AM   #21
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Quote:
Originally posted by marduck:
<strong>

Actually there is plenty of anecdotal evidence of reincarnation just nothing conclusive, The Strange case of Dorothy Eady, kids remembering people, places, events that happened before they were born, how they died and it being confirmed.
Anyway I am not convinced reincarnation actually happens, but to me it seems plausible.</strong>
You know, I keep hearing these claims. You might want to pick up a copy of "Reincarnation : A Critical Examination" by Paul Edwards, reveiwed here:

<a href="http://www.csicop.org/si/9901/reincarnation.html" target="_blank">http://www.csicop.org/si/9901/reincarnation.html</a>

Also see:

<a href="http://www.csicop.org/sb/9803/reincarnation.html" target="_blank">http://www.csicop.org/sb/9803/reincarnation.html</a>
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Old 02-21-2002, 08:25 AM   #22
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I suppose that the energy that makes us up is going to be around forever, and bits of it will probably find its way into other living things... but that's not really reincarnation, is it?
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Old 02-21-2002, 03:18 PM   #23
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That sounds more like the carbon cycle.
Unless our last thoughts, in the form of an electrical transmission, go on in space forever like old TV shows

[ February 21, 2002: Message edited by: marduck ]</p>
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Old 02-24-2002, 02:45 AM   #24
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Quote:
Originally posted by Mageth:
<strong>I guess that's why "I" am not a Buddhist. It don't make no damn sense.</strong>
It doesn't make sense to you.
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Old 02-24-2002, 03:17 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally posted by MortalWombat:
<strong>

You might want to pick up a copy of "Reincarnation : A Critical Examination" by Paul Edwards, reveiwed here:

<a href="http://www.csicop.org/si/9901/reincarnation.html" target="_blank">http://www.csicop.org/si/9901/reincarnation.html</a></strong>
Yes I might if it had anything to say about Buddhist reincarnation theory that is actually meaningful, sensible or valid.

Some New Agers reading it might see the kiss of death marching over the hill but what I see is an army of straw men and I'm not even vaguely impressed.

<strong>
Quote:
Also see:

<a href="http://www.csicop.org/sb/9803/reincarnation.html" target="_blank">http://www.csicop.org/sb/9803/reincarnation.html</a></strong>
Some woman in Northamptonshire or wherever tells whoppers about being an Irishwoman last time and uses faulty logic.

And?
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Old 02-24-2002, 04:05 AM   #26
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Waning Moon Conrad:'
Quote:
The Buddhism defines self as being an unchanging entity. Mind like everything else is in a constant state of flux. It's more of a becoming than a being.....and constantly so. It's logically coherent therefore, to say that there is no self as such.
Of course it is - you defined it in such a way that it didn't exist. The rest of us actually use the word, so we don't define it that way.

Quote:
A religion or philosophy or school of thought which says that beings (who are not static, unchanging selves-as-such, who are in a state of constant flux, who are lucid and aware (minds), transmigrate from existence to existence.

AND which says that we are beings, can extrapolating logically from its founding premises, legitimately say that we transmigrate.
Do its founding premises include a definition of "we"? Does it even vaguely resemble the definition the rest of us use?
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Old 02-24-2002, 06:56 AM   #27
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If we can exist as beings, without gods, why can't souls exist as beings, without gods?
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Old 02-24-2002, 07:12 PM   #28
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When I consider reincarnation, I don't think of myself being alive again after my death, but rather of someone in the future thinking along the same thought lines as myself and remembering people like myself/himself as having existed in past generations.

This sharing or projecting of common thoughts and experiences can feel very "connecting," when I think about it that way, even if it is somewhat delusional and fantastic.

In this personal context of my own comforting invention individual death becomes very unimportant.

joe
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Old 02-24-2002, 07:19 PM   #29
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As I see it, atheists who believe in reincarnation, lose some of their intellectual high ground by claiming the existence of something for which there is utterly no evidence.

Personally I see merit in both afterlife worldviews, and as such have no intellectual credibility whatsoever.
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Old 02-25-2002, 11:01 AM   #30
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When I consider reincarnation, I don't think of myself being alive again after my death, but rather of someone in the future thinking along the same thought lines as myself and remembering people like myself/himself as having existed in past generations.
This sharing or projecting of common thoughts and experiences can feel very "connecting," when I think about it that way, even if it is somewhat delusional and fantastic.

In this personal context of my own comforting invention individual death becomes very unimportant.


Nicely said, Joedad. I think of our genetic memory as a continuing evidence of ourselves in each generation. Within my DNA is the coded "experience" of my ancestor who came to New Amsterdam to find a husband and who died in 1670, giving birth to her ninth child; or my New England ancestor who must have gathered with hundreds of others in the church yard to hear George Whitefield speak during the Great Awakening. Furthermore, my genetic past goes forward in my children who have, besides my Northern European genetic memory, the Southern European story of their father's past and all the rich mix that carries.
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