Reincarnation: An Overview

Spring and the rebirth of plants

Observing Rebirth in Nature

The philosophy of reincarnation and cyclical life is deeply ingrained and historically well documented in the literature of Eastern cultures. From Yoga to Buddhism to Taoism, all the great monoliths of Eastern thought have always relied on the philosophy of rebirth to explain the rest of their theories and postulations about Reality and the purpose of life.

Eastern cultures typically view the Universe as undergoing endlessly repeating cycles. This emphasis on cyclical rather than linear progress is what most differentiates Eastern from Western thought. This emphasis on time being more like a circle than a line resulted not so much from the rigorous experiments common to Western science, but instead from the simple observation of Mother Nature in action: a task that requires no instruments beyond those inherent to the human body.

All around us we are witness to Nature’s endless cycles. The 365 day revolution of the Earth around the Sun – and our resulting experience of shifting seasons, hibernating animals, and entire species dying off for half the year and their offspring “reincarnating” for the other half – is one of the most obvious and dramatic environmental cycles we observe. The 29 day revolution of the Moon around the Earth, and our resulting experience of an endlessly waxing and waning orb in the sky, has provided generation after generation of humanity with a nightly reminder of cyclical change.

Then there is the 25,765 year precession of the equinoxes. This massive cycle, though easily ignored due to the fact that its observable movement happens very slowly in comparison to the quicker cycles already mentioned, had great influence on the theory of rebirth. Masters of astronomy, the ancients were well aware of this cycle and made the astute observation that during the course of one single round of the 25,765 year precession of the equinoxes, many civilizations would rise and fall as if they had never existed in the first place.

From this observation, the ancients of the East developed the idea that Time is a hierarchy of nested cycles. The implication of this is that the entire Universe is undergoing its own smaller cycle within a larger cosmic cycle. Because Time and everything in Nature is observed to transform and move in cycles, the future death of our universe must in reality be the birth of our universe in a new form. This is the theory of universal reincarnation. From this theory and its logic follows the more personal theory of individual reincarnation: the future death of our individual self must in reality be the birth of our individual self in a new form.

The colorful death of trees in autumn

The West & Scientific Skepticism

For those born in the West, the theory of reincarnation can be a bit hard to swallow. We Westerners have been trained to view life not as a cycle, but more as a line with a definite starting point and a definite ending point. Life absolutely begins at birth. Life absolutely ends at death.

The Western linear perspective on time is a direct result of the Scientific Method. According to this great paradigm of evidence-based research, the reason reincarnation does not exist is because there is absolutely no evidence that would even slightly suggest that rebirth exists. There is no evidence that life preceded birth and there is no evidence that life survives death. Lacking this necessary evidence to prove reincarnation, the obvious conclusion is that life absolutely begins at birth, and life absolutely ends at death.

So then, to the Western scientific mentality rebirth is the result of magical thinking. It is an indulgence of the imagination, a fanciful mental creation that clearly results from a fear of death and more specifically from the innate human confusion about how our experience of being an individual existence can possibly be reconciled with the mystery of non-existence before birth and the equally disturbing and much more relevant and pressing mystery of non-existence after death.

We thus are left with what would appear to be an irreconcilable rift between the observations and theories of Eastern and Western culture. How can reincarnation exist if there is no evidence to back up its lofty claims? How can reincarnation not exist if everywhere we look we see evidence of Nature bound to endless rounds of cyclical evolution?

Is there any way to bridge this gap of disagreement?

Water crashing into water

The Ocean and Its Waves

Just as the waves on the face of the ocean are different, so each individual is unique. However, in the depths of our nature, in the ocean itself, all individual existences are equal. (Roshi Yasutani)

The Binding Web of Identification

In order to settle the debate on reincarnation there is only one question that needs answering: Who am I?

Without much analysis we can state with confidence that who we are is a combination of four general experiences:

  1. Physical Body
  2. Emotional Body
  3. Mental Body/Consciousness
  4. Desire Body/Will Power.

These four categories of experience, taken together, constitute all of our existence on Earth. And yet, this aggregate, this collection of experiences that we call our “self” comes to our awareness via our external and internal senses. Therefore, what we normally consider to be our “self” is actually nothing more than the collective sum of sensory experience in the present moment, memories of sensory experience in the past and fanciful imaginations of what sensory experience will be like in the future. We base our entire sense of self on the information we receive through our senses.

But who is it that is aware of sensory experience? Who is it that perceives the senses as they shift over time? When sensory experience arises at birth, who is it that becomes aware of experiencing? And when sensory experience is extinguished at death, what happens to that which had maintained awareness of the senses throughout life?

The Confusing Maze of Dualistic Experience

It should be recognized from the outset that the debate over reincarnation is only valid within the context of dualistic experience. Likewise, all of these existential questions are just so many twists and turns in the great maze that is dualistic experience.

The reason that these existential questions have no answers which truly satisfy and pacify the human mind is because dualism is not the entire truth of our existence. Our existential confusion can only be resolved when we begin to realize that although we experience ourselves as a separate individual existence living in a dualistic world, in the depth of our being we are actually all one and the same thing: the Universe. Like the countless unique waves of the one single Ocean, so are we the countless unique waves of the one single Universe. And though there be countless Universes in the course of endless time, these too are just so many waves and forms of one single Reality.

The theory of reincarnation is more like a test than it is a teaching. The skepticism of the West that declares that reincarnation cannot exist because there is no evidence to support such claims is absolutely valid. And yet, the observations of the East that Nature is in a constant state of cyclical evolution is also absolutely valid.

The only way to reconcile these two views is to completely abandon the belief that “I am.” This idea that you are some separate thing that persists throughout the mutations of space and time is the fundamental illusion that is inherited by all beings born into the Universe. Although the feeling that “I am” is valid, the intellectual justification and explanation for why you feel this way is what is the illusion. You most certainly are, but what you consider yourself to be is far from an accurate and precise account of what you actually are.

The Many Waves of the One Universe

Though one single Universe takes countless forms in the course of its evolution from cosmic birth to cosmic death, and though the birth of a multiplicity of individual forms over time is a necessity according to the law of evolution, and though we currently must struggle to experience our unity with that which appears separate to us in the presentation of our five senses…Still it is absolute fact that we are nothing more than the Universe observing Itself through Its own energy over the course of the time it takes the Universe to evolve from Its cosmic birth to Its cosmic death. The multiple variations in space and time that we experience to be separate existences are in reality just so many elastic manipulations of energy in the course of this one Universal life span.

Our own individual lives only gain meaning when seen within the context of that which exceeds us. Just as our individual lives in society only find meaning within the context of our greater collective culture and history, in the exact same way does our existential confusion – our inability to bridge the gap between birth and death – only find meaning, satisfaction, and reconciliation when we can rediscover that which is oh so obvious and yet oh so easy to dismiss: We do not exist separate from the Universe. Everything is always and forever integrally one existence, though always and forever appearing as many existences.

You are nothing more than a ripple of the cosmic ocean, a wave that soon will merge with that which it never left. Birth and death only exist in the context of a separative individual experience. To have an individual experience in a greater Universe is a given truth of existence in the Universe, but to believe that your individual experience is confined and absolutely separate from everything else that surrounds you is a false belief based on incomplete and inaccurate observations.

Our universal identity is fundamental. Our sensory identity is momentary and in constant flux. To cling to the sensory experience of individual identity without taking into account the greater universal identity is to live in an absolute self-created illusion.

The Unreal never is. The Real never is not. (Bhagavad Gita)

One planet = Billions of forms of intelligent life

On the Mat: Subscribe Today!

If you have any lingering questions or comments about Yoga, please take advantage of the Comments section below. For future updates and information on Yoga, please subscribe to the RSS Feed.

Thanks for reading…

On the mat.

References

Aurobindo, Sri. (1939). The Life Divine. Pondicherry, India: Sri Aurobindo Ashram Press.

Flood, G. (2001). An Introduction to Hinduism. UK: Cambridge University Press.

Kaplau, K. (Eds.). (1971). The Wheel of Death. New York: Harper Colophon Books.

Vyasa (1962). The Bhagavad Gita. (J. Mascaro, Trans.) UK: Penguin Books (Original work composed between the 5th and 2nd Century BCE)

Images used in this Post

Rebirth photo courtesy of Flickr user James Jordan published under the CC license.

Forest in autumn photo courtesy of Flickr user cuellar published under the CC license.

The tube photo courtesy of Flickr user sub_lime79 published under the CC license.

Blue Marble (Planet Earth), photo courtesy of Flickr user woodlewonderworks published under the CC license.

Power Over Life and Death

A letter from Jason to the Babelonians

The Mighty Babelers UniteIn a bold move, the Babelers have stormed the fortress of solitutde and taken the Babeled On series captive. Their motivation: to increase the number of Babeled On virtual round tables from twice a month to twice a week!

In this installment of Babeled On the founders were confronted with the following scenario:

A series of events has unfolded around you which inexorably led to the demise of an innocent.  In the moment you are affected so powerfully that you inadvertently heal the deceased, but there was a price to be paid for this miracle.  You accidentally took the life of another innocent nearby in your ignorance to this power you possess and the rules that govern it.  What do you do now?

Jack Gamble

I would probably shout something like “You son of a bitch” and “I didn’t ask for this.”

Afterward, I would simply find a criminal or someone more deserving of such a fate and use his life energy to heal the innocent whom I accidentally killed. One might ponder the moral and ethical implications of making such a choice, but the irrefutable fact is that the innocent has more claim to life than a murderer or rapist. In fact, what better way can an evil person repay their debt to society than by trading their life for an innocent?

If I couldn’t find a murderer or a rapist, than I would probably go with a telemarketer or maybe Hayden Christensen.

Andrew Blanco

With great power comes great responsibility.

Because these supernatural abilities came not by my choosing, the death of this innocent is not actually my responsibility. Because I had no control over this persons’ death, I technically have no blood on my hands.

However, I also realize that if I wanted to save this innocent life there remains a loop hole: I can sacrifice my life to save another. I can transfer my life to the body of the dead innocent, thereby closing the circle of innocent deaths.

Knowing full well that my sacrifice could save an innocent life, to not sacrifice myself would be tantamount to murder. To walk away and not trade my life to save the innocent would be to smear their blood all over my hands. At that point the responsibility would be all mine, and the guilt of knowing I could have saved a life would make the rest of life not worth living.

Greg Rineberg

As far as I see, I have a few options.

  1. I could be filled with so much sadness that I just heal the “other innocent” by sacrificing myself.
  2. I could drag the unfortunate soul to an area surrounded by vultures and drain their life force to heal the innocent person.
  3. I could take the life of another innocent to heal this innocent, but then alas I am stuck in a series of unfortunate events with no end in sight.
  4. I could take the innocent to Death Row and heal the innocent by killing a bad person.
  5. But then again, most likely, I would simply come to the conclusion that no matter what I do to fix my mistake, I would inevitably be doing the same thing to somebody else.  Who am I to play God?  Using this logic, I would simply “just walk away”.

Greg Molyneux

First I’d quit my day job and become a dusk bowl era carny roustabout. Sleeping under trucks is far more appealing than hopelessly waiting for your cubicle to morph into a penthouse corner office;but I digress.

[ad#babeled-ad-medium-square]

Upon my impromptu healing of the modern day Lazarus while inadvertently terminating the life of an involuntary passer-by I would find myself in the throws of an unmatched moral quandary. In my desire to undo the untimely death of an innocent I had inadvertently wrought the black hand upon another undeserving soul.  In this moment my life and the lives of men became inextricably woven in an ethereal fate.

My first instinct would be to sacrifice my own life in hope that the vitality I had stolen from another may return. Willingly falling upon my sword would seem the honorable thing to do. However, careful deliberation would suggest that destiny has empowered, or cursed, me with a gift that was meant to be employed.

With my purpose renewed, I would seek of the nearest NAMBLA safe house, and take down as many vile creatures as needed to restore life to the one who fell upon my first inexplicable healing. Alas, considering these scumbags are worth so little I would not be surprised if it took the whole meetinghouse just to regain a shallow pulse.

The ability to take life into your own hands is a power not to be taken lightly, and it is with good reason that it is reserved for the men who would be gods. The old axiom that ‘power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely’ must serve as fair warning in this case. If there is no balancing force present to maintain equity with one who can willfully transfer life with impunity the threat to humanity would be catastrophic. To that end it is evident that self sacrifice is my only clear choice.

Jeff Ruemeli

Listen… In the words of Uncle Ben, “With great power comes great responsibility”. The first one down in the ground was an accident and that happens. Who knew that I could do that? You can’t control what you don’t understand. Time to move forward. I’ve seen enough comic book movies to understand how to use a superpower. Plus have no problem dealing death when the time comes. The problem is finding the life worth saving. But when I do I have a death list… JOE… (you know you’re first).

Up Next…

Steward of Fission and Sovereign of Control Rods, Jack Gamble, you have been officially tagged.

The Yoga Sutras: Book IV

Alpha Star

Kaivalya Pada

(Sutras 1-6)

Power is attained as a result of:

  1. Work in previous births
  2. Medicinal herbs and substances
  3. Repetition of mantras
  4. Austerity
  5. Samadhi

The evolution of Nature is the progressive unfoldment of energy and consciousness from a total and complete involution.  Though the various catalysts for evolutionary change are often mistaken as the direct cause of power, in reality these catalysts only remove the obstacles and impurities that block the realization of power.

The evolutionary emergence of the ego-sense results in the experience of a multitude of separate and distinct minds communicating with each other.  Although the desires and pursuits of these many minds vary, in truth they are all expressions of one Mind.

Of all these various evolved minds, only the minds born of meditation are free from the gravitational pull of habit.

(Sutras 7-11)

For the enlightened, karma is neither positive nor negative. For the unenlightened, karma is a mixture of positive, negative, and neutral, though at any time one of these three may predominate.

The fruit of karma directly results from the seed of desire. Though modified by intervening factors such as social class, location, and time, desire is always followed by the appropriate karmic situation due to memory and habit.

There is no beginning or end to desire, for the will to live is eternal.

Desires are held together by cause, effect, habit, and the perception of unique objects.  When these four disappear, so does attachment to desire.

(Sutras 12-17)

Nature exists apart from the Experiencer.  The infinite variety of experiences is due to the various stages of Evolution.

The existence of the evolving Universe is completely dependent on the three qualities of Nature: inertia, activity, and equilibrium. Transient objects exist because of the unique changes of these three qualities at any given moment in time and space.

Although Nature is in reality one Self, energy and consciousness, the apparent difference between two perceptions is due to the different evolutionary paths of the multiple minds. The Self is not dependent on the mind for existence, for it continues to exist whether or not it is perceived by the mind. The Self is either known or unknown to the mind because of the evolutionary growth of the mind.

(Sutras 18-29)

The modifications of the mind are always known to the Self due to the unchanging nature of the Self.

The mind is not self-luminous, for it can be observed as an object. The mind cannot perceive two things at once.  If one mind could perceive another mind, then there would be cognition of cognition, as well as confusion of memory.

The mind can only know its true nature through the self-reflection that occurs when the mind is completely stilled. The mind that is colored by the Seer in the Seen understands the infinite variety of Nature. The mind, though filled with innumerable habits and desires, always acts for the Seer. He who sees this distinction ceases to see the mind as the Seer.

With an inclination toward discernment, the mind gravitates toward enlightenment.  Thoughts that arise as interruptions to discernment are due to habit.

Habits are removed by:

  1. Reabsorbing habits into their cause
  2. Meditation
  3. Unbroken discernment

Enlightenment dawns for they who give up the desire for enlightenment and exercise discernment between the mind and the Seer.

(Sutras 30-34)

From enlightenment follows freedom from karmic suffering.

With the removal of all distractions and impurities, it becomes obvious that what can be known by the mind is superficial when compared to the existential knowledge of enlightenment. Upon achieving enlightenment the yogi experiences the transcendence of time and space.  From this experience, the infinite succession of singular moments becomes apparent.

With the knowledge that dawns from enlightenment, time and space no longer serve any evolutionary purpose in relation to the realization of Selfhood. The Self then becomes established in its fundamental nature, which is the original Awareness.

END OF BOOK

Old Pages

On the Mat: Subscribe Today!

If you have any lingering questions or comments about Yoga, please take advantage of the Comments section below. For future updates and information on Yoga, please subscribe to the RSS Feed.

Thanks for reading…

On the mat.

Images used in this Post

Old Pages photo courtesy of Flickr user Brittany G published under the CC license.

Close-Up of a Star in H-Alpha photo courtesy of Flickr user makelessnoise published under the CC license.

References

Satchidananda, Sri S. (1978). The Yoga Sutras. Virginia: Integral Yoga Publications

Feuerstein, Georg (1979). The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. Vermont: Inner Traditions International

Vishnu-devananda, S. (2006). Meditation and Mantras. Delhi: Montilal Banarsidass Publishers

Babeled On: Aliens From Outer Space

A letter from Gregory to the Babelonians.

The Mighty Babelers UniteOn the first Tuesday of every month the Babelers will be hosting a Babeled On virtual sit-down where the founding fathers ruminate over a topic of interest.  The topic of my choosing was distributed via email and all responses were only seen by myself until now in order to maintain the integrity of the discussion as well as keep all thoughts in a vacuum.

At the end of this week, NASA will launch the Kepler telescope and the objective is to seek out other distant Earth-like planets.  It was with this information that I chose the topic:  Aliens From Outer Space.

Jack Gamble

I for one am sick and tired of Aliens from Outer Space coming all up in here with their fancy laser beams and pimped out speeder bikes.  Who do they think they are?

Hey you, Mr. I’m so cool cause I’m from another planet, if you can master interplanetary travel and reach speeds faster than light then maybe you wouldn’t mind paying your stinking taxes!

If your strong enough to pull the ears of a Gundark then maybe you wouldn’t mind getting a job and doing some manual labor.

I don’t care if you can make the Kessel Run in five parsecs, when you’re in my town you can obey the posted speed limits!

These Aliens are criminals.  Why just the other day an Alien was arrested in Amarillo, Texas for robbing a liquor store and it turns out the he already had death warrants in five systems!

I am in favor of building a wall around our planet to keep these Aliens from Outer Space on their side of the cosmos.

Oh yea, one more thing, stop sucking our brains.

Andrew Blanco

Aliens have to exist. Otherwise there is no explanation for why the Spaniards are such a superior people.

Jeff Ruemeli

Aliens from outer space exist. Well life in outer space exists. Did you know there are more stars in the universe as there are grains of sand on all the beaches of the world? Wild. And did you know most of those stars have planets orbiting them? Super wild. However given our present viewing devices we cannot yet see the small rocky inner planets of alien solar systems. This is because rocky planets are made of heavy elements which are pulled closer to the star and the light from the star blocks our view of said planets. We only know they exist due to the wobble of the star as it’s pulled by its child planets revolution. Life, as we know it, would most likely be found on the rocky inner planets due to the heat from the sun and terrafirma.

[ad#babeled-ad-medium-square]

That’s how our life exists on earth. Although on earth, we find life wherever we think no life can exist. Such as Death Vally, the far polar regions, the bottom of the sea, sulfur vents, deep in caves, the list goes on. So our ideas of life become increasingly altered as we discover more and more on our mother planet. Not all life on earth is carbon based. So when looking to space life is not to be anything of what we can expect or imagine. To make matters even more intense stars are millions even billions of light years away. To look upon them is to look deep into the past. Some stars are so old (or that far) that we are looking at something that was there before the creation of the earth. So life might be on another planet but we are totally unable to see it or conceive it. So there are an inconceivable amount of possible worlds, with possible life that we have just started to realize is as strange as we can imagine and they are in another part of time that we can’t see.

Life’s a bitch ain’t it?

Jason Morgan

Contrary to Star Trekkian and Star Warsian alien premises, alien life on other worlds will more often than not be simplistic, microscopic organisms.  The conditions for that type of life can be met in a wider variety of environmental conditions and therefore have a higher probability of existence on many rock planets around the universe.  There may indeed be higher forms of life on worlds in the universe given the incomprehensible amount of possible planets that could provide the proper environmental conditions.

As you may have noticed, I do not even entertain the notion that life may only exist on Earth.  That is simply illogical when given the statistical probability of the proper elements and environment being present somewhere else in the universe.  There are more galaxies in the universe than there are grains of sand in every beach on Earth, and each galaxy safely represents several hundred million stars, each with the possibility of having a planet capable of supporting life orbiting it.

Greg Molyneux

No question I’m a believer.  But I am a believer with particular stipulations.  I vehemently refuse to accept they are little green men with gargantuan oblong heads and obsidian colored football shaped eyes.  Instead they are all modern clones of Lynda Carter circa 1976 (Wonder Woman).  It is clear, from my consultations with the Pythia that these Aliens from Outer Space are desperately seeking underachieving male bloggers hailing from a marble colored planet basking in the light of a middling sun, to sire the next generation of their waning race.

Let it be clear that I am willingly putting myself up for abduction.  With simple e-mail correspondence or a quick text to my Storm I will eagerly reveal the coordinates of my place of origin and begin the preparations for becoming an interstellar Abraham.  New slippers are on order and my best smoking jacket has been recently pressed.  I know this means that I have to leave the unrivaled excitement of my current life behind, but I am willing to make this sacrifice for the betterment of my mankind mankind.

Next Month. . .

Tag, you’re it, Man Overboard.

Smart Spanish V

“Los sabios no tristen para los que viven, y no tristen para los que mueren. Desde el mundo de los sentidos se viene el calor y el frío, y el placer y el dolor. Vienen y van: son transitorios. Nunca es el irreal: el Real nunca no es.”

Translation

“The wise grieve not for those who live; and they grieve not for those who die. From the world of the senses comes heat and comes cold, and pleasure and pain.  They come and they go: they are transient. The unreal never is: the Real never is not.” (The Bhagavad Gita)

Life

Life means many things to many different people. Life, to me for instance, is defined as any organic molecular structure containing DNA with the means to produce similar organic molecular structures. I acknowledge that there are numerous other definitions, one of which may resonate with your personal beliefs more than the definition I have offered.

Suppose, for the sake of this discussion, that you agree with this basic definition, which assumes your belief in chemistry. A human being is created from two reproductive cells each containing one half of the DNA in each non-reproductive human cell. From this union an entire human body is produced. This process is similar in many organisms.

Human Embryo

Human embryo 7th week of pregnancy

In a more simplistic sense, but very much analogous way, single-celled organisms reproduce either sexually (a process basically the same as the human example above) or asexually. Asexual reproduction involves the DNA of the cell replicating itself, with the help of various enzymes (protein molecules). The cell then buds off a portion of its cell membrane and contents along with the duplicate set of DNA, thus creating a new cell in the likeness of the original.

[ad#babeled-ad-medium-square]

DNA is a tricky molecule. It has the molecular coding to produce protein structures; which in turn, are sent orders and materials (energy and molecules) from the DNA to produce other structures. All of these structures have a function and a set of assembly and installation instructions to ensure they are placed in the proper location to perform their function. DNA is the central organic molecule that brings order to the surrounding environment to create life.

This is why DNA is the root of all life and why, as a compound, it is so special. From where did it come? DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is a combination of building blocks called nucleotides. Nucleotides are comprised of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. These three things are made up of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Phosphorous atoms. Nucleotide formation is a natural chemical reaction when these atoms are present in the same time, place and given a set of proper environmental conditions.

DNA

DNA

These atoms were produced in a cosmic explosion billions of years ago when a giant conglomeration of blazing gas expelled its contents into the universe in a glorious death cry. This process occurs fairly frequently when looking at the aggregate universe even though each individual Supernova may occur after several billions of years of life for the star. Is it statistically impossible that somewhere else in the universe these atoms were joined in a similar set of environmental conditions, and produced nucleotides and so on to DNA?

I am no statistician, but I think it is actually a likelihood that DNA has been produced somewhere other than this lonely rock planet orbiting a middle-aged, inglorious star on the outskirts of the suburbs in an ordinary spiral galaxy amongst the incomprehensible vastness of the universe.

Fear not, believers in Intelligent Design, for there is a place for your beliefs in this exploration. Recently there have been some noble attempts and excellent theories postulated about the creation of the universe and the basic properties of its materials; however, none of these theories have yet to be, or even are on the horizon of being, proven through scientific observation. Thus, the set of conditions and properties of the universe which led to the creation of all that we see is still a mystery. And, given the fact that incredibly minute deviations in the properties of subatomic particles would lead to a universe that contained no matter or interaction between particles, I would say that there was a great degree of precision imbued upon the fundamental set of building blocks.

Human embryo picture courtesy of Flickr user euthman