Rondele
Ex Member
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Hi Don-
In a story about Melvin Morse in Feb RD, it talks about Morse's visit with Ian Stevenson. "Ok, Ian. What's the bottom line? Is reincarnation real or not? You've studied it for 25 years now. What conclusion have you reached?"
"It's a gray area," Stevenson replied.
"That answer stuck with Morse. 'I've started to wonder if that's the best answer any of us in this field will be able to give.'
"Morse takes a deep breath. At times, it seems as if the universe itself is preventing him from finding the answers he seeks."
'I tell you, there's a mind at work here,' he says. 'One that is perversely skewed toward keeping us from ever proving its existence.'
Morse pretty much sums up my own feeling about researching the afterlife. I would be willing to bet that 20 years from now, assuming the world hasn't blown up and we are all still alive and Bruce's website is still up and running, that we would find pretty much the same kinds of questions, speculations, and theories that we find right now on this conversation board.
Roger ps- I agree, the story about Rea and the rose is intriguing. However, I'm not related to her father. I was just a close friend of the grandson of the author (Rev Howell Vincent). And for me, the most compelling part of the book was Vincent's brief discussion of retrievals, especially since the main purpose of the book was to describe the afterlife contacts with his deceased daughter!
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