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some problems with the idea of an afterlife (Read 27075 times)
orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #30 - Aug 5th, 2007 at 5:40pm
 
Bets, I will have to take your word for these things you say.But how would I go about experiencing it for myself, as you suggest?
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Never say die
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #31 - Aug 5th, 2007 at 10:59pm
 
[quote author=orlando123 link=1186155634/15#24 date=1186241947]Hi

While "western materialistic science" may sometimes be stuck in its ways an not open enough to new possibilities I disagree with the idea it is just a "belief system" - science is a system of seeking rational proof and repeatable experiements etc so people can agree between themselves that certain things about the world are facts (or the best hypothesis currently available). Science has given us modern medicine so mothers rarely risk dying in childbirth and children rarely die in infancy, both commonplace 100 years ago, and , for example , we have cheap air travel and computers and the internet. If we had continued to base everything just on traditions and dogmas, or just personal beliefs,  instead of studying and seeking factual information we would have none of this.

I agree with all of that  Cool and no doubt science and technology have enriched our material lives but at the same time, the search for spiritual understanding in the greater part of the world has become more marginalised.

But my main point was that it is a system just like religions that likes to present itself as an absolute authority on truth, neglecting counter acting arguments. So in that way it is a belief system because so many scientists 'believe' that scientific explanations are the only valid ones. The fundamental argument in any of this all comes back to an understanding of 'consciousness' the western materialist mind does not know much about this and the general public knows so little about all the research in psi and all the evidence of psychics and remote viewing projects which seem to suggest that consciousness is more than just a brain phenomena.

I am neither religious nor materialist. I do not believe that science and spirituality are so divided. When I read about things like sub-atomic phenomena and quantum physics I am seeing more and more links. I agree that if a phenomena exists it should have some 'rational' way of being understood. That's why I dedicated much of my spiritual exploration to following the work of 'spiritual scientists' for lack of a better term.
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vajra
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #32 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 10:11am
 
On science. The problem is not that it's not true in it's own limited context. But it's not the reality, it's just a mind made conceptual shorthand description of a much more complex reality. Which like most shorthand descriptions misses things.

One basic reason for this is that it's got hung up on reductionism  - on seeking to break things down into constituent parts to understand them. Many truths require an integrative approach if they are to be seen - the linking of ideas across disciplines and domains.

Another problem is that most so called scientists out of conditioning and/or fear and self interest deny the possibility that there are wider contexts in which so called Newtonian or relativistic science does not hold true.

Particle physics has for example long since demonstrated the limits of this model. (Heisenberg and Co.) Other work has long since demonstrated for example the impact of mind/observation on experimental outcomes, the reality of psychic phenomenon and the questionability of treating time as a separate dimension.

Writers like Gary Zukav, Frijtof Capra and Ken Wilber (who are respectable academics as well as integrative thinkers) have written at length about this situation and the broader more integrated view of reality it points to. Not to mention how this science is now proving in quantitative and experimental terms what the high spiritual traditions have long known intuitively.

The problem as ever is not the science, not what the thinkers are finding. It's rather a reflection of the fact that the respectable scientific culture/concensus/public stance will not even allow discussion of what conflicts with its prejudices. There are large areas where respectable academics dare not go for fear of having their reputations destroyed by their colleagues.

What's happening in undercover programmes targeted towards military use may be another matter, although the above factor may fortuntately be limiting this......
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #33 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 3:54pm
 
Good points, Vajra and Never Say Die. I am glad neither of you are the sort of people who insist of science as some sort of enemy to "real truth" anyway. yes, it is a shame if some scientists fear they cxan;t investigate certain areas without fear of ridicule and yes, I am sure "reductionistic"thinking can;t produce all the answers. But at the same time it is laudable to seek verifiable informatin about the universe and how it works. The problem with subjective experiences is just that - that they are subjective and can;t easily be repeated/copied/understood/verified by anyone else. That's not to say they don;t have validity and might not sometimes point to genuine "factual"truths, but they are hard to pin down. I don;t hold to the "science sand spirituality are two different kinds of truth"argument. Either something exists and is true or it doesn;t and isn;t. Or some things might only be true in as much as they give the experiencer entertainment or pleasure or affect his outlook in some way without them having any factual bearing on common experience or the world "out there". I think it's important then to try and find factual evidence for something like life after death and/or the possibility of existence outside the body which would be so tranformative for everyone if it was forthcoming, rather than hopes and anecdotes or even strongly held "beliefs" or assertions. I don;t need to "believe" that the sun will rise tomorrow, I can be very sure it will. It would be nice to have that sort of knowledge about surviving death. Most scientists are very skeptical about a soul becasue they have no hard evidence for one. If anyone could come forward and prove factually that they can go out of their body and bring back some information they could not have known or, for example, consistently and accurately communicate with the dead with no hit and misses and waffle and "cold reading" then honourable scientsits would have to say "OK here is something we don;t understand and that we have to investigate and take seriously". once the possibility that consciousness is seperate from flesh and blood is taken seriously then the rest should fall into place (ie considering the factual reality of other worlds and God and other intangible concepts). But if someone just says "I had this great vision where I went to the other world and did this and that" then scientists will not be very interested.
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #34 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 4:14pm
 
I mean (assuming such a person could exist, which would seem fairly unlikely) a scientist who thought only things already understood and explained by current theories could possibly exist would be just as unhelfpful as a spiritual person who said anything he could possibly imagine, dream or believe is just as real as the fact if you drop something it falls down or if you shoot someone they get injured or die etc. There are no doubt many more things in Heaven and earth than dreampt of in our philosophies so far, but just imagining something or beliving it is somewhat less helpful to the world at large than proving some thing exists in a factual "scientific" way that most thinking people can agree on. And dull prosaic things like setting up an experiment where people can show repeatably that they went out of their body and saw a certain symbol written on a board etc would do this better than, eg telling people they can also have interesting spiritual experienes if they eat the right cactus or do the right series of meditations and visualisations etc.
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Starboom
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #35 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 7:23pm
 
Welcome to the boards, Orlando. I can't help you much with anything, as I'm new here myself, and a skeptic to boot. Actually, these past couple of days I've been wondering about two things:

1. Considering that infants die all the time around the world, what can reincarnated "spirits" possibly gain from such an experience?

2. Since some people experience a whole heap is crazyness, and others experience nothing when it comes to the supernatural, could it be that not everyone are immortal?

3. If we live on after death, and it's true that we're here to develop ourselves in the physical world...why do we seek spirituality at all? One would think it might detract from what we're supposed to do?

Yeah, my mind is troubled as usual. So feel free to put me to re...er..I mean, put my mind at ease!
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balance
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #36 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 7:39pm
 

Quote
1. Considering that infants die all the time around the world, what can reincarnated "spirits" possibly gain from such an experience?

For the greater part these infants that past ,very early are trying to teach, these are agreements made from the higher realms. Another reason maybe its new soul who hasn't incarnated before and because of this is just having a taste of the density they are about to enter, its a gift from the parent. there are many many reasons for these things.

Quote,
2. Since some people experience a whole heap is craziness, and others experience nothing when it comes to the supernatural, could it be that not everyone are immortal?

No, we are all immortal beings, its just about your personal progression, when your soul is ready it will have more physical experiences of the hole. In fact you and every soul here are experiencing all the time. Its just not as yet in your conscious mind , thats all.

Quote,
3. If we live on after death, and it's true that we're here to develop ourselves in the physical world...why do we seek spirituality at all? One would think it might detract from what we're supposed to do?

How could seeking to know yourself distract you from your purpose?
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Berserk2
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #37 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 7:40pm
 
"Actually, these past couple of days I've been wondering about two things:"

"1. Considering that infants die all the time around the world, what can reincarnated "spirits" possibly gain from such an experience?"
_____________________________________

One of the many factors that expose the implausibility of the reincarnation doctrine.  Other factors include the spurious nature of past life regression and the flaws in appeals the alleged past life recall of young children (Dr. Ian Stevenson's flawed research, etc.).  It is for good reason that the professional societies of hypnotism disdain the legitimacy of past life regression.  A couple of Stevenson's cases later proved to be cases in which the alleged past life was still alive AFTER the birth of the presumed "next life!"

2. "Since some people experience a whole heap is crazyness, and others experience nothing when it comes to the supernatural, could it be that not everyone are immortal?"
____________________________________________________________________

The Bible, atheist Howard Storm's NDE, and Bruce Moen's astral explorations all independently confirm that insight that soul annihilation can be the ultimate fate of some, who persistently spurn the spiritual path, and yet, cannot tolerate postmortem hellish planes.  Where these sources differ is in their preconceptions about how many choose the annihilation option.

3. "If we live on after death, and it's true that we're here to develop ourselves in the physical world...why do we seek spirituality at all? One would think it might detract from what we're supposed to do?"
___________________

But "what we're supposed to do" to seek intimate communion with God and then channel the love that flows from that communion towards others who may or may not God.  All other goals are ego-driven and contrary to our ultimate purpose.

Don

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betson
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #38 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 10:24pm
 
Hi Orlando123,

Re: how to notice these slight physical actions in the face of spiritual experiences:

If you meditate or just sit quiet and relaxed, you can learn to watch for your body's subtle responses to stray thoughts that come when you're trying to think of nothing. Gradually you'd develope a collection of them wherein you would find patterns that lead you to these possibilities. Then when you went OB or phasing or whatever you call it to get to the afterlife, you'd be ready to add those more important sensations to your collection.
Perhaps I'm too introspective regarding those 'sensitivities'. Anyone with much of an outer life wouldn't have time to do this 'collecting.' The Myers-Briggs Personality Profile (free on some websites) is a good way to find out one's inclination to learn from inner or outer experience. I'm way over in the inner side, whereas they recommend more of a balance.

Anyway, I just wanted you to know that for some the spiritual is proven, although I agree with Bruce that each person has to prove it to believe it.--and that leads us back to the exercises he's designed in his Afterlife Knowledge Guidebook.  They are the quickest way.

Bets
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There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
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Never say die
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #39 - Aug 6th, 2007 at 11:44pm
 
Hi orlando, I'm just curious as to how you came about this site. I recall recommending this site to someone called orlando098 at youtube.com
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Starboom
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #40 - Aug 7th, 2007 at 7:33am
 
Thanks for answering my questions. I must come back some other time to possibly ask more, though, I don't have the time right now.
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #41 - Aug 7th, 2007 at 12:52pm
 
Never say die wrote on Aug 6th, 2007 at 11:44pm:
Hi orlando, I'm just curious as to how you came about this site. I recall recommending this site to someone called orlando098 at youtube.com


Yes, that was me . Hi!
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orlando123
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #42 - Aug 7th, 2007 at 12:55pm
 
balance wrote on Aug 6th, 2007 at 7:39pm:
Quote
1. Considering that infants die all the time around the world, what can reincarnated "spirits" possibly gain from such an experience?

For the greater part these infants that past ,very early are trying to teach, these are agreements made from the higher realms.


I would feel more comfortable if you prefaced things like this with something like I think that... or In my opinion ... how do you claim to know this is how it works?

On this topic though, what about unborn children who are aborted? Or do you have a theory about what precise moment the soul joins the body (ie maybe in most of these cases they don;t have one yet?). If it's a late stage abortion and the child was well developed and had a soul then that would seem an especially pointless exercise..
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vajra
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #43 - Aug 7th, 2007 at 1:22pm
 
Just theorising but it seems to me that in order to understand the possible point of very short stays in this life that you have to look at the situation from the total or integrated perspective as well as that of the new arrival.

Quite apart from the fact that there may be a lesson for the arrival to learn even in that short stay, the point of the arrival may also be to teach something to the others concerned like the Mother, the family, and maybe even the broader society.

I suspect that short duration doesn't necessarily mean much - think of cause and consequence effects where tiny factors can trigger enormous consequences. The butterfly effect....

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dave_a_mbs
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Re: some problems with the idea of an afterlife
Reply #44 - Aug 7th, 2007 at 4:42pm
 
Berserk2-
FYI - professional hypnosis circles do NOT disdain past life material and past life regression as unworthy of their consideration. In fact, what they disdain is "arm chair theorists" who get a wild hair up their RAS and spew out a bunch of metaphysical mumbo jumbo that is neither based on observation, nor predictive of outcomes. (RAS = Reticular Activating System - brainstem) Their counterparts are those with a mind closed to any but their own previous beliefs.

As a good place to enlighten yourself in this area, look up www.iarrt.org the International Association for Regression Research and Therapy. These are people who practice non-leading hypnotic methodology by which reports remain relatively pure. The problem is that it is terribly hard to do science in such a setting because of the difficulty of establishing experimental controls. They offer training - their convention is coming up soon, you might enjoy it.

Another interesting place to look might be Dr Shelley Stockwell-Nicholas' International Hypnosis Federation, from whom you can get a pretty fast overview of competent hypnotic methodology, as well as the basics of past life work. www.hypnosisfederation.com

Dr Edith Fiori was a pioneer in this area of therapy, but those who DO DISDAIN past life work and suchlike turned out to be the California Board of Behavioral Sciences who acted to sanction her for doing psychotherapeutic work outside of known approved styles and methodologies. So its the orthodoxies who are afraid of ghosts. For the rest of us, it just means adopting a suitable clinical style and proceeding as before.

dave
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