child prodigies

In the last posting, we took a closer look at the popular Eastern concept of Reincarnation, where a soul may be born again and again, in various sentient forms, trying to earn enough good Karma points and the wisdom to achieve MOKSHA, or liberation from the cycle of rebirth.  Reincarnation would offer an explanation for the numerous discrepancies we see in this world, like a cosmic checkbook being balanced.  (And as a nerdy financial planner by day, the idea of a balanced checkbook disproportionately excites me.)

However like any spiritual topic, the existence of Reincarnation is yet unproven and always very debatable.  In part 1 of this article, I pointed out four contradictions that could be cited to form a case against it – 1) an increasing human population, 2) the ongoing extinction of various species, 3) babies and children dying young, and 4) a potential endless cycle of Karma with repeated mistakes over many lifetimes.

As an annoyingly indecisive and single agnostic who can’t commit to a man, much less an existential belief, it’s no surprise that I have four COUNTER arguments that could be made in FAVOR of the plausibility of rebirth, such as:

1)  Child prodigies – We all know that child prodigies are these pre-pubescent geniuses who exhibit an absurd amount of talent which normally would be attributed to a lifetime of learning, practice, and experience.  Instead, these half-pints gallivant around the world with their adorable cherubic faces and freak the bejesus out of us with their unexplainable skills in composition, painting, math, memory, dance, chess, or overall learning.

True, Mozart was born into a musical family and could have been nurtured by his environment to develop his abilities at an early age.  And yes, sometimes prodigies have exhibited irregular neurological configurations that could account for their brilliance as well.  But not all cases can be explained by upbringing or biology or other such logic.  Is it possible that these are old souls carrying with them the knowledge of a past life into a new one?

2) Past life memories and regression – There are enough detailed anecdotes of past life regression and memories that – at least in my mind – cannot be fully disregarded.  There are many thundering Atheists I know and fear who will angrily swat away these “anecdotes or examples” because they have not been proven under laboratory conditions, with James Randi, blah blah blah million dollars, and all that jazz.

But on my end, I am open-minded to reading about the studies of a prominent psychiatrist like Dr. Ian Stevenson who spent a huge part of his career researching and documenting past life memories, especially in children.  In his interviews, children who were born with certain physical or mental issues were able to explain how they incurred those injuries in a past life, and their stories and details were astonishingly confirmed by the family of the deceased person in question, sometimes from another part of the world entirely.

Reincarnation Hierarchy

I also read with skeptic but respectful fascination the descriptions of past-life regression Dr. Brian Weiss had noted with his patients during sessions of hypnosis.  His book was riveting, although I’m not even sure I believe in hypnosis, much less going back to a past life while under its spell. Hypnosis stage shows I’ve seen on YouTube have me partially convinced – watching germophobe Howie Mandel shake hands on AGT was quite persuasive – but I’m not fully there yet.

Could Dr. Ian and Dr. Weiss be quacks looking to fool all of us with their “woo-woo” theories?  (insert magic finger gesture here)  Sure … no doubt … entirely possible … I give it 50-50 odds.  But I can’t snobbishly and utterly dismiss such meticulously documented cases outright.

3)  Energy cannot be destroyed – If there is indeed a consciousness or soul energy that we possess (see Is Free Will the Property of Soul Energy?) that has the same traditional properties as other energies, then it would continue to exist once the human form disintegrates.  Because energy can neither be created nor destroyed.  So if we do have something akin to soul energy, it cannot dissolve or disappear once we die.

Another property of energy is that it is the ability to transform from one type to another.  In fact, this transformation is constantly happening, electric energy powering a microwave generates heat energy to warm a cup of tea.  Laser light or solar energy can also generate heat.  Kinetic wind energy can propel a windmill and circle back to producing electricity.  (My caloric food energy could transform to kinetic if I would move instead of flopping on the couch after brunch.  Instead I store up alot of potential energy.  😊)

Couch potato potential aside, energy is hardly ever static.  So it seems logical that soul energy – if it exists – would transform from one sentient type to another, whether human soul energy, animal soul energy, ghostly soul energy, or other, thus involving a constant cycle of rebirth.

4)  The eternity of time – Even if the Angry Atheists are right and it turns out there is no intelligence or plan behind the design of the universe and we are simply random products of the Big Bang, it stands to reason that whatever caused us to be born here in the first place would cause us to eventually be born again.  It might take a billion or many-illion years for the same random chemical reactions to reoccur, but if time is infinite and there is no end to the universe, then the odds are that we will one day spontaneously reignite or regenerate again.  So we’re damned if we do and damned if we don’t – i.e. we’re probably going to be reborn whether there is a higher power or whether there isn’t one.  In one situation, we may be able to determine our next avatar through our own free will and karmic earnings, in the other, we’re flotsam periodically being reborn into jetsam.

This is why I am perpetually confused – there are too many arguments to be made for and against the idea of Reincarnation.  I know that one can dismiss these theories as far-fetched and involving hypothesis upon hypothesis – or a tower of turtles. We can also attempt to offer scientific explanations for certain phenomenon that don’t involve the supernatural.

But if it exists, Reincarnation would help make sense of the discrepancies we see in the world.  It might give more meaning or at least longevity value to the struggles we face if they teach us wisdom that can be carried with us to other lifetimes.  It might give those who are attached to this world and their human avatar hope that the party will go on in some shape or manner.

But to be honest, despite my inability to dismiss it completely, I would be perfectly okay with Reincarnation not existing.  In fact I would prefer it.  I don’t like parties – an eternal dreamless nap in its place doesn’t sound too bad to me.  I don’t want to come back.  And I am especially not keen on being reborn as the chickens I consume for lunch for my own selfish pleasure.  I would probably have alot of bad karma to burn off and need to start all the way at the bottom of the totem pole as a type of mold.  I don’t want to be a fungus.  I don’t want to live my best fungus life.

Uninspiring and depressing I know – its soooooo not OpraChopra – but to each their own.  On my end, I’m perfectly okay with this life being my first, last, or only.  I don’t need a do over.  Unless I could come back as George Clooney.  Or at least Bo Obama.  Then maybe I’d think about it.

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We are Soul, divine units of consciousness. Atoms of God, in a sense, with the attributes of God within us. Our purpose, over our many lifetimes, is to recognize and manifest these God like qualities so that we can achieve God realization which is our destiny. Jesus did this. We are the "fallen angels" referred to in the bible. God created all the universes and tossed us down here to learn our lessons. We quite often started out in a plant or animal body, learning lessons in these bodies, although at a lower consciousness level than human. Then we move up to human bodies where we begin the purification process in earnest, struggling and suffering through many many lifetimes. We go to one of the lower heavens between lifetimes. These heavens are not of this physical plane but on adjacent parallel dimensions. Because we don't occupy these planes in our physical bodies.

it get s funnier each time a religious post comes on my feed ! If I'd said half of this I'd be put in a sanatorium!

There is no evidence of any supernatural or spiritual being. There is plenty evidence that primitive men who did not understand the world around them made this shit up. So sad that people still believe this crap and ignore the overwhelming science and history that show their stories to be bullshit.

No. Our kind of spirit only ever incarnates as human.

If you read in depth SCIENTIFIC review of bang theory you will understand the tremendous odds of creating ANY life. Therefore is it more rational to think the billion to one odd of male female zygote finding each other or a Devine being created us? Most people will not read a deep scientific analysis. They go for the synopsis. Chaotic evolution statistics can not possibly be true. There are many scientists who favor creation but grants are non existent to these men and women. True the is not lucrative. You can see this in the current gender debate. Scientificly there are two sexes anything else is a mental choice. The human form is in a three month embryo and it feels pain. There are many other scientific truths but we must READ, DIG, and cross check .

Just started your book. Very much enjoying it.

And she's buying a stairway to heaven...

There always seems to be one more rung of the ladder of success.

False prophets. There is no reincarnation. There are no different orbits. I know truth. I am happy to share it with others FOR FREE! Even to false prophets like yourself.

So, is the Sun Hell?

The Brothers Grimm had some pretty cool fairy tales too.

Read God Speaks by MeherBaba ,a book the biography of the soul from Nothing to Everything.

Thank god i'm an athiest

🤣

psycho..😱🤡

BUT DO YOU HAVE PROOF?  – my Atheist friend screamed in my face for the 10th time as we were debating a spiritual topic – one that HE had brought up.  I almost felt like throwing my plate at his smug mug but resisted.  I still wanted to eat the cake that was on it.

Why do Atheists like engaging in spiritual discussions if they keep interrupting them with rabid demands for proof?  If you’ve ever come across a fanatical Atheist, and made it through without peeing your pants, you’ll be familiar with their loud and agitated denouncements of any type of theory or belief that cannot be studied in a lab or through science.

I understand their demands because in many ways I am a skeptic as well – my friends think I’m wishy-washy but my official term for myself is Agnostic.   I constantly swing from theism to atheism depending on my mood, the day, and how much caffeine I’ve chugged.  Similar to Atheists, I cannot accept theories based simply on blind faith and man-made dogma.  And I do have atheistic inclinations often, especially when I see the latest news and get disgusted at all the suffering and evil that always seems to be surrounding us.   Watching ISIS cruelly slit a person’s throat or an innocent child being abused causes me to violently rebel against the idea of a higher, loving power in existence. 

Cosmic Circumstantial Clues

But overall, if I had to place my chips, I would ultimately bet that there IS a planned design to the universe, and there IS a higher plane of existence – a happier place we can go when we pass on (one where chocolate has negative calories).  In general I believe that we have free will and therefore there is a reason for our existence.

And when questioned, here is how I try to explain my theistic leanings to my scary Atheist friends:

We might not have proof, but we may have circumstantial evidence.  In both QUANTITY and QUALITY.

WHAT IS CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE?
Circumstantial evidence is defined as indirect evidence that establishes a conclusion by inference or reasoning.  It is generally considered weaker and less valid than direct proof, though in many cases, it is still enough to convict someone of a crime.  For example, you may not have witnessed me stealthily eating your piece of cake too, but the frosting on my lips would be a strong indicator of guilt.  Circumstantial evidence plays a big role in our justice system.  In the case of Casey Anthony and OJ Simpson, there was not enough circumstantial evidence to prove a crime, but it was strong enough to lead many to believe that they were guilty.  It is not always possible to find the smoking gun, but there may be a sufficient number of indirect clues that add up to a specific conclusion.

In the case of my spiritual inclinations, I may not have conclusive evidence to support them, but they have been formed due to the cosmic circumstantial clues that seem to surround us.  I am referring to child prodigies, ghost sightings, NDE (near death experiences), past life memories, small miracles, ESP, and more.

Normally I am not a superstitious person.  If a mirror breaks, I figure my beauty was simply too breathtaking for it to behold.  In addition, I am not ruling out the possibility that all of these phenomenon are simply fake stories or concepts and that none of the above exists.  That could be so.

QUANTITY AND STATISTICAL SIGNIFICANCE
However, it’s hard to dismiss the statistical significance of SO many stories existing of supernatural phenomena.  Can they ALL be false?   It seems highly unlikely. Perhaps. But unlikely.  Maybe the idea of vampires or zombies or levitation or séances doesn’t resonate with me.  And I’m pretty sure the Easter Bunny isn’t real.  But I can’t dismiss everything.

Even if one idea is fake, and the next, and the next, surely one of the numerous supernatural stories we’ve heard is true?  After all there are hundreds of thousands of them over the centuries, from exorcisms to haunted houses to past life memories to child prodigies to mind reading to fortune telling.  I am sure there is a way to discount and ignore each story on its own – and indeed, none of them have ever been provable or measurable through repeatable, scientific measures.  But taken as a whole, and looked at from a macro perspective, surely there must be SOME FIRE with this much smoke? 

QUALTITY, CONSISTENCY, AND CREDIBILITY
Besides the sheer QUANTITY of supernatural stories in circulation, the QUALITY of some of those stories, as well as the storytellers, also seems to influence my beliefs.  The fact that so many NDEs exist with similar variables – a bright light, an intense feeling of love, a knowledge of one’s surrounding events even while the brain was supposedly dead – all these stories seem to match one another across time, geography, cultures, and people.  Like many skeptics, my first reaction is to dismiss such experiences as hallucinations.  But when thousands of NDE stories are so consistent in detail they seem more believable.

Child prodigies like Mozart did and do exist, and though we might argue that their upbringing and genetic makeup created their genius, not all child prodigies can have their unexplainable talents attributed to a nurturing environment.  One can’t completely dismiss the possibility that a wise, talented old soul may have been reincarnated into a new body.

Credible storytellers such as doctors and surgeons who swear they’ve seen unexplained miracles at play in the operating room, and former atheists turning deists due to some personal experience, also budge my needle from skepticism to belief.  The Scalpel and the Soul was written by a Harvard neurosurgeon who detailed various unexplainable experiences with his patients which he ultimately attributed to something not yet understood by science.  I’m not saying every medical or scientific professional is unquestionably certified as an author of such recountings – many could very well have cashed in on their reputations and schemed to make money with such books.  But they do lend weight to the growing pile of cosmic clues.

In my own personal experience, I’ll admit to being a little spooked when a friend of mine – who I’ve known to be a scientist and hard-core Atheist for most of her life – startled me a few years ago when I went to her new home for a housewarming party and she breathlessly swore that her last house was haunted.  She gave me several examples of incidents that had occurred.  I finally had to cut her off after hearing a few of them, I was scared I’d go home and not be able to sleep at night.  These creepy incidents were the main reason she had moved.   Astonishingly, she  is now open to the possibility of the supernatural.  I realize that none of you would know my friend and how surprising this was for me, but think of it as the equivalent of a Bill Maher or the former James Randi coming out of the closet and suddenly admitting they believe in a God or ghosts.

NO SMOKING GUN BUT COPIOUS COSMIC CLUES . . . 
As an Agnostic, my needle will never be at 0 (atheism) or 100 (theism).  But it does seem to waver between 30 and 80 depending on the latest I’ve heard or experienced.

It is hard to explain all this to a thundering, red-faced Atheist who is understandably angry at organized religion for all it may have done to foster wars, persecution, and suffering.  To them the burden of proof is on a Theist, not themselves.  And when concrete, indisputable proof is not forthcoming, it is not surprising that many turn away from any kind of belief in a planned design or higher power.

But for many of us Agnostics, we are open-minded and unable to dismiss the copious cosmic clues that surround us daily.  There are too many stories and storytellers who have described time and again, supernatural phenomenon that cannot be explained.  For many of us, there is enough circumstantial evidence to point to the likely conclusion that there is, indeed, a soul or consciousness or a better place we can go when we pass on.   And it is for this reason that I now talk nicely to the monsters under my bed – just in case they exist.

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I think some of them are true but is it in the brain only or in the physical we don t know it even if we expérience it

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. If it exists, prove it using rigorous scientific methodology and peer review. Show me a credible collection of white papers and thesis on ghosts and I will happily reclassify Ghostbusters as non-fiction.

NONE are TRUE and never have been.

Rational people have better things to do than grant unwarranted credibility to every half-assed delusion.

True

Fake,everyone of them.

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