REINCARNATION - Theosophy.Net2024-03-28T09:17:53Zhttps://theosophy.net/forum/topics/reincarnation?commentId=3055387%3AComment%3A104056&feed=yes&xn_auth=noSo Herodotus reports that the…tag:theosophy.net,2012-01-09:3055387:Comment:1040562012-01-09T22:02:01.354ZDavid Reiglehttps://theosophy.net/profile/DavidReigle
<p>So Herodotus reports that the Greeks got the doctrine of reincarnation from the Egyptians. Blavatsky and her teachers say that the Egyptians got it from India much earlier, but also that there was direct contact between Greece and India during the classical age of Greece. This idea has long been rejected by classical scholars. Their longstanding rejection received a major challenge in 2002 with the publication of the extensive work by Thomas McEvilley titled, "…</p>
<p>So Herodotus reports that the Greeks got the doctrine of reincarnation from the Egyptians. Blavatsky and her teachers say that the Egyptians got it from India much earlier, but also that there was direct contact between Greece and India during the classical age of Greece. This idea has long been rejected by classical scholars. Their longstanding rejection received a major challenge in 2002 with the publication of the extensive work by Thomas McEvilley titled, "<a href="http://books.google.ca/books/about/The_shape_of_ancient_thought.html?id=vTfm8KHn900C&redir_esc=y" target="_blank">The Shape of Ancient Thought:</a> Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies". Its chapter four is "The Doctrine of Reincarnation," pp. 98-156. It begins:</p>
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<p>"The conviction that there were mutually formative contacts between the Greek and the Indian philosophical traditions goes back to antiquity -- Porphyry, for example, felt convinced of it. There were many clues from which this conviction could arise, but the most conspicuous one, without which the very question might not have been raised, is the doctrine of reincarnation: Though it is especially associated with India, reincarnation was also a standard teaching of most Greek philosophers."</p>
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<p>It concludes:</p>
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<p>"Finally, the early schools of Greek and Indian philosophy seem to have had more or less the same contents, though presented in different styles and combinations, like different branches of a single tradition."</p> Two famous verses on reincarn…tag:theosophy.net,2012-01-09:3055387:Comment:1039612012-01-09T18:34:00.457ZDavid Reiglehttps://theosophy.net/profile/DavidReigle
<p>Two famous verses on reincarnation from the Bhagavad Gita (trans. W. J. Johnson, The World's Classics, Oxford University Press, 1994):</p>
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<p>2.12: There never was a time when I was not, or you, or these rulers of men. Nor will there ever be a time when we shall cease to be, all of us hereafter.</p>
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<p>2.22: Just as a man casting off worn-out clothes takes up others that are new, so the embodied self, casting off its worn-out bodies, goes to other, new ones.</p>
<p>Two famous verses on reincarnation from the Bhagavad Gita (trans. W. J. Johnson, The World's Classics, Oxford University Press, 1994):</p>
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<p>2.12: There never was a time when I was not, or you, or these rulers of men. Nor will there ever be a time when we shall cease to be, all of us hereafter.</p>
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<p>2.22: Just as a man casting off worn-out clothes takes up others that are new, so the embodied self, casting off its worn-out bodies, goes to other, new ones.</p> Theosophical writers, as we k…tag:theosophy.net,2012-01-04:3055387:Comment:1028002012-01-04T15:44:02.297ZDavid Reiglehttps://theosophy.net/profile/DavidReigle
<div>Theosophical writers, as we know, say that humans cannot be reborn as animals. The religions that teach rebirth, however, say that humans can be reborn as animals. Theosophy holds that this is an exoteric or symbolic teaching, which must be understood esoterically and not literally. Here is a response to this idea by a modern Buddhist writer. It is titled, "The Buddhist Doctrine of Rebirth in Subhuman Realms," by Francis Story. It was reprinted in his book, Rebirth as Doctrine and…</div>
<div>Theosophical writers, as we know, say that humans cannot be reborn as animals. The religions that teach rebirth, however, say that humans can be reborn as animals. Theosophy holds that this is an exoteric or symbolic teaching, which must be understood esoterically and not literally. Here is a response to this idea by a modern Buddhist writer. It is titled, "The Buddhist Doctrine of Rebirth in Subhuman Realms," by Francis Story. It was reprinted in his book, Rebirth as Doctrine and Experience: Essays and Case Studies (Collected Writings, vol. II), Kandy: Buddhist Publication Society, 1975. It begins:</div>
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<div>"The question of whether a human being after death can take rebirth on a lower biological level has been debated for many years by Western Buddhists, particularly by those whose approach to Buddhism has been via theosophy, and whose interpretation of it has remained syncretic in spirit. The latest contribution to the subject is an article by Dr. Willem Roos of Sacramento, California, entitled 'Is Rebirth in a Subhuman Kingdom Possible?' ('The Maha Bodhi,' July 1967)."</div> Those interested in Advaita V…tag:theosophy.net,2011-12-28:3055387:Comment:1021862011-12-28T02:57:13.875ZCapt. Anand Kumarhttps://theosophy.net/profile/CaptAnandKumar
<p>Those interested in Advaita Vedanta's view on reincarnation may like to read the simpler explanation offered <a href="http://www.advaita.org.uk/discourses/teachers/reincarnation_sada.htm" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>
<p>Those interested in Advaita Vedanta's view on reincarnation may like to read the simpler explanation offered <a href="http://www.advaita.org.uk/discourses/teachers/reincarnation_sada.htm" target="_blank">here</a>.</p> Like with karma, its twin tea…tag:theosophy.net,2011-12-24:3055387:Comment:1021232011-12-24T04:54:47.545ZDavid Reiglehttps://theosophy.net/profile/DavidReigle
<p>Like with karma, its twin teaching of reincarnation seems to have been taken for granted in India. I do not know of any Sanskrit treatises that try to prove reincarnation. Of course, stories about it may be found in texts such as the Upanishads, and a few of these stories depict attempts to demonstrate it. A bigger question may be whether humans can be reborn as animals, as the Eastern religions generally teach, but Theosophy denies.</p>
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<p>The teaching of reincarnation is also…</p>
<p>Like with karma, its twin teaching of reincarnation seems to have been taken for granted in India. I do not know of any Sanskrit treatises that try to prove reincarnation. Of course, stories about it may be found in texts such as the Upanishads, and a few of these stories depict attempts to demonstrate it. A bigger question may be whether humans can be reborn as animals, as the Eastern religions generally teach, but Theosophy denies.</p>
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<p>The teaching of reincarnation is also attributed to Pythagoras in Greece. He is often considered to have taught rebirth as animals. In one of the early Theosophical books on the subject, E. D. Walker's 1888 Reincarnation: A Study of Forgotten Truth, this topic is brought up. He writes on p. 201, about Pythagoras:</p>
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<p>"Although his name is synonymous with the transmigration of human souls through animal bodies, the strong probabilities are that if this doctrine came from him it was entirely exoteric, concealing the inner truth of reincarnation. Some of his later disciples, especially the author of the work which is attributed to Timaeus the Locian, denied that he taught it in any literal sense, and said that by it he meant merely to emphasize the fact that men are assimilated in their vices to the beasts."</p>
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<p>It would be worthwhile for someone to try to find this Greek text, and quote exactly what he says on this question.</p> There is some interesting vie…tag:theosophy.net,2011-12-22:3055387:Comment:1020532011-12-22T01:47:50.083ZCapt. Anand Kumarhttps://theosophy.net/profile/CaptAnandKumar
<p>There is some interesting <a href="http://books.google.co.in/books?id=PGHXld75CCAC&pg=PA22&lpg=PA22&dq=U+G+Krishnamurti+reincarnation&source=bl&ots=0bGMVHSTnS&sig=WzKyBdY9bx8-fX9p1QNZP7P74aU&hl=en&sa=X&ei=H4nyTpfcM8_trQfy-_3wDw&ved=0CE4Q6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=U%20G%20Krishnamurti%20reincarnation&f=false" target="_blank">view on Reincarnation</a> from the other Krishnamurti (U G Krishnamurti) as he was popularly known.</p>
<p>There is some interesting <a href="http://books.google.co.in/books?id=PGHXld75CCAC&pg=PA22&lpg=PA22&dq=U+G+Krishnamurti+reincarnation&source=bl&ots=0bGMVHSTnS&sig=WzKyBdY9bx8-fX9p1QNZP7P74aU&hl=en&sa=X&ei=H4nyTpfcM8_trQfy-_3wDw&ved=0CE4Q6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=U%20G%20Krishnamurti%20reincarnation&f=false" target="_blank">view on Reincarnation</a> from the other Krishnamurti (U G Krishnamurti) as he was popularly known.</p>