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Spirituality & Mysticism
Reincarnation, multidimensional reality & simultaneous time
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<blockquote data-quote="Rosco..Jones" data-source="post: 95091" data-attributes="member: 2729"><p>Reply to ElementalDissonance, post: 94592, member: 6064</p><p></p><p>This basically seems to be a Buddhist view filtered through the perspective of quantum physics.</p><p></p><p>As for your questions, I believe that Buddhists say that your current life is the sum of all previous lives, and therefore carries all the baggage and spiritual realizations of those lives. So the life you are living "now" is the most important, as this is the one in which you may find liberation through transcendence.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: #00b300">The similarity to Buddhism has been commented on. The key difference is the Buddhist view looks at time as being linear with lives occurring sequentially. Lives take place one after another with one having to be ended before the next can begin at a later time. Each new life falls under the effects of Karma and must make up for errors committed in previous lives. The life you are living "now" would be the only one that is "real". Past lives are over and done with, those identities lost, existing only as memories of an earlier time. The goal is to reach Nirvana, which is a transcendent state free from suffering and our worldly cycle of birth and rebirth, where spiritual enlightenment has been reached and attaining a state of perfect peace and freedom. </span></p><p><span style="color: #00b300">Does it end there and become stagnant or do we continue to learn and grow? </span></p><p><span style="color: #00b300"></span></p><p><span style="color: #00b300"> </span></p><p><span style="color: #00b300">The big difference I am pointing out is that between a linear/sequential time and a simultaneous/present time. After death you may <u>choose</u> to live additional physical lives. You are not obligated to do so to make up for errors in the life you have just lived. Experiences and lessons learned in each are shared with other simultaneous lives, whether they be located in the future or past. Also, EACH life is on its own path of growth and development and not just a small part of the history of the next life that takes place in a relative future.</span></p><p></p><p>So is your question, "Why aren't all lives equal in value if they are all occurring simultaneously." I must admit, I didn't really get the whole intention behind your post.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: #00b300">My intention was to introduce another perspective on the concept of reincarnation. This incorporates the changing view of reality from a single line sequential time 3D reality to a simultaneous time multidimensional reality. Essentially this is a paradigm shift similar to that of the geocentric flat Earth perspective changing to a heliocentric round Earth perspective. While the multidimensional/simultaneous time viewpoint is becoming more widely accepted, the vast majority of people do not even consider it as a possibility.</span></p><p></p><p>An interesting by-product of your perspective is that you could have memories of future lives, and you could have past lives that you haven't lived yet. Fascinating ideas.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: #00b300">You hit the nail right on the head with this comment. If you expand this line of thought a bit further and allow for the idea of timelines branching as different choices are made, you can have memories of your present life in which alternate choices were made. This involves sideways in time and alternate parallel realities. Consider the possibility that your life experience is but one timeline in a probability cloud of all that could have been. Another aspect of the reincarnational concept is choosing to explore these alternatives. Reality may be much stranger than we can imagine. </span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rosco..Jones, post: 95091, member: 2729"] Reply to ElementalDissonance, post: 94592, member: 6064 This basically seems to be a Buddhist view filtered through the perspective of quantum physics. As for your questions, I believe that Buddhists say that your current life is the sum of all previous lives, and therefore carries all the baggage and spiritual realizations of those lives. So the life you are living "now" is the most important, as this is the one in which you may find liberation through transcendence. [COLOR=#00b300]The similarity to Buddhism has been commented on. The key difference is the Buddhist view looks at time as being linear with lives occurring sequentially. Lives take place one after another with one having to be ended before the next can begin at a later time. Each new life falls under the effects of Karma and must make up for errors committed in previous lives. The life you are living "now" would be the only one that is "real". Past lives are over and done with, those identities lost, existing only as memories of an earlier time. The goal is to reach Nirvana, which is a transcendent state free from suffering and our worldly cycle of birth and rebirth, where spiritual enlightenment has been reached and attaining a state of perfect peace and freedom. Does it end there and become stagnant or do we continue to learn and grow? The big difference I am pointing out is that between a linear/sequential time and a simultaneous/present time. After death you may [U]choose[/U] to live additional physical lives. You are not obligated to do so to make up for errors in the life you have just lived. Experiences and lessons learned in each are shared with other simultaneous lives, whether they be located in the future or past. Also, EACH life is on its own path of growth and development and not just a small part of the history of the next life that takes place in a relative future.[/COLOR] So is your question, "Why aren't all lives equal in value if they are all occurring simultaneously." I must admit, I didn't really get the whole intention behind your post. [COLOR=#00b300]My intention was to introduce another perspective on the concept of reincarnation. This incorporates the changing view of reality from a single line sequential time 3D reality to a simultaneous time multidimensional reality. Essentially this is a paradigm shift similar to that of the geocentric flat Earth perspective changing to a heliocentric round Earth perspective. While the multidimensional/simultaneous time viewpoint is becoming more widely accepted, the vast majority of people do not even consider it as a possibility.[/COLOR] An interesting by-product of your perspective is that you could have memories of future lives, and you could have past lives that you haven't lived yet. Fascinating ideas. [COLOR=#00b300]You hit the nail right on the head with this comment. If you expand this line of thought a bit further and allow for the idea of timelines branching as different choices are made, you can have memories of your present life in which alternate choices were made. This involves sideways in time and alternate parallel realities. Consider the possibility that your life experience is but one timeline in a probability cloud of all that could have been. Another aspect of the reincarnational concept is choosing to explore these alternatives. Reality may be much stranger than we can imagine. [/COLOR] [/QUOTE]
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