Showing posts with label Yoga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yoga. Show all posts

2023/12/24

Vedanta Centre - Adelaide

Vedanta Centre - Adelaide


Vedanta

Spirituality, the Life-centre of Indian Culture

Indian civilization is more than five thousand years old. During this long period it produced a unique type of highly advanced and variegated culture. In spite of the innumerable regional, social and linguistic diversities of the country, there has always been a basic unity in Indian culture. Moreover, this culture maintained unbroken continuity from Vedic times to the present day, in spite of countless wars within the country, invasions from outside and two centuries of subjugation by the British. This indestructible unity and unbroken continuity of Indian culture are derived from its deep spiritual foundations.

Swami Vivekananda has pointed out that every civilization or culture has a particular life-centre, a dominant characteristic or trend. According to him the life-centre of Indian culture is spirituality. By spirituality is meant a way of life oriented to the ultimate purpose or goal of life which is the realization of the Supreme Spirit or God.


Unity of Philosophy and Religion in India

Indian spirituality is deeply rooted in the ancient philosophical and religious traditions of the land. Philosophy arose in India as an enquiry into the mystery of life and existence. A parallel situation arose in ancient Greece also. But, as Swami Vivekananda pointed out, the Greek philosophers confined their enquiries to the external world, and the method they employed was only speculation, whereas in India philosophical enquiries were carried out in the inner world. Indian sages, called Rishis or seers, developed special techniques of transcending the senses and the ordinary mind, collectively called Yoga. With the help of these techniques they delved deep into the depths of consciousness and discovered important truths about the true nature of man and the universe. The sages found that man's true nature is not the body or the mind, which are ever changing and perishable, but the spirit which is unchanging, immortal, pure consciousness. They called it the Atman. The Atman is man's true Self, the true knower, the true source of man's knowledge, happiness and power. The Rishis further found that all individual selves are parts of infinite Consciousness which they called Brahman. Brahman is the ultimate Reality, the ultimate cause of the universe. Ignorance of man's true nature is the main cause of human suffering and bondage. By gaining correct knowledge of Atman and Brahman it is possible to become free from suffering and bondage and attain a state of immortality, everlasting peace and fulfilment known as Mukti.


Religion in Ancient India - A way of life which enables man to realise his true nature and attain Mukti

Thus philosophy provided a correct view of Reality, while religion showed the correct way of life; philosophy provided the vision, while religion brought about the fulfilment; philosophy was the theory, and religion was the practice. Thus in ancient India, philosophy and religion complemented each other. In fact, they together constituted a single endeavour, an integral discipline. This integral religious philosophy or philosophical religion was called Vedanta. The term Vedanta comes from the fact that its basic principles constitute the last part or culmination of the ancient scriptures known as the Vedas.


The Vedas

The Vedas are the oldest and most authoritative scriptures of Hinduism. All other scriptures are subordinate to them. They were not composed by anybody but were revealed to the Rishis; hence they are also called Shruti, that which is heard. The earlier part of the Vedas may have been composed between 2000 B.C. and 1000 B.C. There are four Vedas: Rig-veda, Yajur-veda, Sama-veda and Atharva-veda. Each of these has four divisions: Samhita, Brahmana, Aranyaka and Upanishads.
Samhita: This section is a collection of hymns addressed to various deities. Many of these hymns have deep mystical significance.
Brahmana: This portion deals with various rituals and also with moral principles.
Aranyaka: This portion contains various meditations. Some of these meditations are mental recreations of external rituals.
Upanishads: These are the records of the transcendental experiences gained by Rishis by following different contemplative techniques. These experiences are actually revelations about Atman, Brahman and other eternal, universal truths regarding the ultimate Reality.
These eternal truths and principles of the spiritual world, lying scattered in the Upanishads, were brought together and codified by Badarayana in the form of sutras or aphorisms in the 5th century B.C. These sutras known as Brahma Sutras form the foundation of the system of philosophy known as Vedanta-Darshana.


Vedanta

Thus the term Vedanta stands for three inter-related things:

(a) the Upanishads collectively, which form the last and the most important part of the Vedas;
(b) the eternal truths and principles of the spiritual realm;
(c) the system of philosophy based on Brahma Sutras.

However, it is mostly in the last sense of Vedanta Darshana (Vedanta Philosophy) that the term Vedanta is commonly used.
In this connection it should be pointed out that five more systems of philosophy arose in India in the early centuries of the Christian era. These are:

1) Mimamsa, founded by Jaimini
2) Vaisheshika, founded by Kanada
3) Nyaya, founded by Gautama
4) Sankhya, founded by Kapila
5) Yoga, founded by Patanjali

These five systems of philosophy always remained confined to small groups of intellectuals. They never became identified with the mainstream religion of the land and, in due course, they ceased to be in vogue. Vedanta alone remained the main philosophy of India from the Vedic period, and Vedanta alone got identified with the religion of the land. As already mentioned, Vedanta is both philosophy and religion. This combined religious and philosophical tradition of India came to be called Sanatana Dharma, “Eternal Religion” and, still later, as Hinduism.


Other Scriptures of Vedanta

Although the Upanishads constitute the original and most authoritative source of Vedanta, they are not the only scripture of Vedanta. Several other books also came to be accepted as authoritative. Among these, the most important one is Bhagavad Gita. It introduced several new concepts into Vedanta such as God incarnating Himself as the Avatar age after age, devotion to personal God as means to Mukti, discharging one's duties of life in a spirit of selflessness and self-surrender to God as a spiritual path, and so on. Over the centuries great teachers like Shankara, Ramanuja, and great saints of medieval period enriched Vedanta with philosophical concepts and devotional songs.


Three Phases of Vedanta

Vedanta is not a static philosophy or religion. It is a highly dynamic, ever-growing philosophy and religion capable of meeting challenges and overcoming obstacles. In this process of growth, Vedanta has passed through three phases.

(i) Formative Phase: This phase extended from around 1000 B.C. to 3rd century B.C. During this period the Upanishads, the Gita and the Brahma-sutras (these three scriptures are together called Prasthana-traya) provided the basic concepts of Vedanta such as Atman and Brahman.

(ii) Scholastic Phase: This phase extended from about the 8th century A.D. to the 13th century. During this period great teachers like Shankara expounded and expanded the original intuitive insights of Vedic Rishis and the teachings of the Gita, and established Vedanta as a cogent, comprehensive system of philosophy, the most cogent and comprehensive religious philosophy the world has ever seen.

But during this period Vedanta split into a number of philosophical schools and religious sects. The main philosophical schools were the following:

  • Advaita or Non-dualism propounded by Shankara
  • Vishishta-advaita propounded by Ramanuja
  • Dvaita propounded by Madhva
  • Shuddhadvaita propounded by Vallabha
  • Achintya-bheda-abheda propounded by Jiva Gosvamin
These schools of philosophy carried on acrimonious debates among themselves which kept up the intellectual vigour of the people. India produced during this period many great scholars and thinkers.

The main religious sects were: Vaishnavism, Shaivism and Shaktism. Each of these had several sub-sects. These sects produced many saints. These saints spread Vedantic ideas among the common people through songs and teachings.

Here mention should be made of two other religio-philosophical traditions associated with Indian culture, namely Buddhism and Jainism. They arose as spiritual movements in the 6th century BC. They shared some of the basic concepts of India's ancient belief system such as Karma, rebirth, samsara, Dharma and direct spiritual experience. But their rejection of the authority of the Veda, caste distinction, belief in an Ultimate Reality as the Supreme Deity and ultimate cause of the universe, and other principles alienated them from the main stream of Vedantic culture. As a result, Buddhism and Jainism began to decline in India and, after the 12th century AD, Buddhism ceased to have any direct influence on the development of Indian culture.

(iii) Modern Phase: The third phase of Vedanta was inaugurated by Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda in the 19th century. During this period Vedanta was transformed from an ethnic religious philosophy into a universal philosophy of life. The main transformations brought about by Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda are given below:

1. Rejuvenation: Sri Ramakrishna is the real link between ancient India and modern India. Through stupendous spiritual efforts Sri Ramakrishna relived the entire range of spiritual experiences of the sages and saints of the past from Vedic times to his times. He thereby revalidated the truths of Vedanta. He traversed the paths of Vedic, Shaiva, Shakta and Vaishnava traditions, including obscure and forgotten paths. He brought about the purification of spiritual life by emphasizing its moral foundation, and rejecting occultism, esoterism and miracle-mongering. He made God realization possible for all even in the midst of the distractions of the modern world. He imparted tremendous fervour to the efforts to realize God. All this has resulted in a thorough rejuvenation of Vedanta in modern times.

2. Modernization: Swami Vivekananda”s great work was to make ancient Vedantic concepts acceptable to modern minds by interpreting the eternal truths in the light of modern rational thought and science. This modernized version is what most of the present-day educated Hindus understand by Vedanta.

3. Integration of Philosophical Schools: Vedanta had split into different schools in the Middle Ages. Swami Vivekananda brought about the reintegration of these schools. He did this by stressing the common ground of different schools, especially the principle of Atman, and by showing that the different schools represent different stages of realization of the ultimate Reality.

4. Unification of Religious Sects: Sri Ramakrishna taught, from his realization, that all spiritual paths lead to the same ultimate goal, Yato mat tato path. As many views, so many paths to God. This principle, which forms the basis of his doctrine of dharma-samanvaya or Harmony of Religions, came to be applied within Hinduism itself in due course. This has given rise to a sense of unity among Hindu sects in modern times, in spite of many differences in customs and traditions.

5. Meeting of Challenges: Till the eleventh century A.D. the only challenges Vedanta had to face were internal; these came mainly from Buddhism and Jainism and from dissensions of different schools of Vedanta and sects of Hinduism each of which claimed superiority over the others. From the thirteenth century Islam began to exert its influence on Indian society in a big way. Many great saints then arose in different parts of India and responded to the Islamic challenge by spreading the ideas of oneness of God, brotherhood of man and social equality among the common people.

However, the greatest challenge Indian society ever faced came from Western culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Western culture posed three major challenges to Indian society: (a) modern rational thought and science, (b) an open society which values freedom and social justice, (c) the idea of a saviour God who identifies himself with the poor, the sick and the fallen.

Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda met these Western challenges: (a) by revitalizing Vedantic spirituality, (b) by interpreting the eternal truths of Vedanta, discovered by the ancient sages, in the light of modern rational thought, and (c) by introducing a new gospel of social service based on the practical application of Vedantic principles in day-to-day life.

6. Practical Vedanta: By “Practical Vedanta” is meant the practical application of the basic principles of Vedanta in solving the problems of day-to-day life. For centuries Vedantic principles were intended only to help people to attain Mukti or liberation. Swami Vivekananda, however, showed that the highest principles of Vedanta can be applied even in ordinary life to solve the day-to-day problems of life. Vedantic principles can be applied not only in individual life but also in social life. In fact, Swamiji held that India”s downfall took place mainly because the eternal spiritual principles were not applied in collective life.

7. Universalization of Vedanta: For many centuries the essential, basic truths of Vedanta remained bound up with innumerable beliefs, myths, customs, castes, etc. Moreover, the higher truths of Vedanta were available only to a small group of privileged people, and it was believed that to follow the principles of Vedanta one had to be born in a certain Hindu caste. Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda separated the essential truths of Vedanta from the non-essentials. Swamiji showed that the essential truths of Vedanta constitute the eternal, universal truths of the spiritual world which form the rationale and basis of all the religions of the world. As a matter of fact, the eternal principles of Vedanta themselves constitute the Universal Religion of all mankind, and the different religions of the world are only manifestations of this Universal Religion in different places and times. Furthermore, through his lectures and books and through the Vedanta Centres which he founded, Swamiji made the life-giving principles of Vedanta available to all people without any distinction of caste, creed or race.

In this way, through the pioneering efforts of Swami Vivekananda, Vedanta has crossed the boundaries of India and has now become the common property of all mankind. The work started by Swamiji is now being carried on by many teachers and organizations around the world.

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2023/12/16

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan - Indian Philosophy - Volume 1-2 : Internet Archive

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan - Indian Philosophy - Volume 1-2 : Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive


Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan - Indian Philosophy - Volume 1-2
by Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

Usage Public Domain Mark 1.0Creative Commons Licensepublicdomain
Topics Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, darshana, Nyaya, Vaisesika, Yoga, Samkhya, vedanta, Upanishad, Advaita, Shankara, dvaita, Vaisnava, Ramanuja, Indian_Philosophy_Collection
Collection opensource
Contributor Sabyasachi Mishra
Language English

Review 

"This work gives a clear and rational account of the highest conceptions of Hinduism. The happy blend of Eastern conceptions with Western terminology makes the book intelligible even to the inexpert and it need hardly be added, instructive. Professor Radhakrishnan has shown that in their perception of the goal, in the acuteness of their reasoning, and in the boldness of their conceptions, the Indian thinkers are second to none."--Times Literary Supplement

 "Comprehensive and authoritative. No such adequate account of Hindu thought has appeared in English. The spirit, motive, and method of this great book are admirable." --Church Times Contents


Indian Philosophy - Volume I
Preface
Contents

1. Introduction

    The Natural Situation of India
    General Characterstics Indian Thought
    Some Charges Against Indian Philosophy
    Value of the Study of Indian Thought
    Periods of Indian Thought

Part I - The Vedic Period

    2. The Hymns of the Rig-Veda
        The Vedas
        Impotance of the Study of the Vedic Hymn
        The Teachings of the Vedas
        Philosophical Tendencies
        Theology
        Monotheistic Tendecies
        Monotheism verses Monism
        Cosmology
        Religion
        Ethics
        Eschatology
        Conclusion
    3. Transition to the Upanishads
        The Atharva-Veda
        Theology
        The Yajur-Veda and the Brahmanas
        Theology
        Theories of Creation
        Ethics
        Eschatology
    4. The Philosophy of the Upanishads
        The Upanishads
        The Teaching of the Upanishads
        Number and Date of the Upanishads
        The Thinkers of the Upanishads
        The Hymns of the Rig-Veda and the Upanishads
        The Problems Discussed in the Upanishads
        The Nature of Reality
        Brahman
        Brahman and Atman
        Intellect and Intuitions
        Creation
        Degrees of Reality
        The Individual Self
        The Ethics of the Upanishads
        The Teligious Consciousness
        Moksa or Release
        Evil and Suffering
        Karma
        Future Life
        The Pschology of the Upanishads
        Elements pf Samkhya and Yoga in the Upanishads
        Philosophical Anticipations

Part II - The Epic Period

    5. Materialism
        The Epic Period
        Common Ideas of the Age
        Materialism
        Doctrines
        General Reflections
    6. The Pluralistic Realism of the Jainas
        Jainism
        Vardhaman
        Literature
        Relation to Other System
        Theory of Knowledge
        Value of Jaina Logic
        Psychology
        Metaphysics
        Ethics
        Attitude to Theism
        Nirvana
        Conclusion
    7. The Ethical Idealism of Early Buddhism
        Early Buddhism
        Evolution of the Buddhist Thought
        Literature
        Buddha's Life and Personality
        The Conditions of the Time
        Buddha and the Upanishads
        Suffering
        Causes of Suffering
        The World of Change
        The Individual Self
        Nagasena's Theory of Self
        Psychology
        Pratityasamutpada, or the Doctrine of Dependent Origination
        Ethics
        Karma and Rebirth
        Nirvana
        Attitude to God
        The Implications of Karma
        Practical Religion
        Theory of Knowledge
        Buddhism and Upanishads
        Buddhism and Samkhya System
        Success of Buddhism
    8. Epic Philosophy
        The Readjustment of Brahmanism
        The Mahabharata
        Date and Authorship
        The Ramayana
        Common Ideas of the Age
        Durga Worship
        The Pasupata System
        Vasudeva Krishna
        Epic Cosmology
        Ethics
        The Svetasvetara Upanishad
        The Code of Manu
    9. The Theism of the Bhagavadgita
        The Bhagavadgita
        Date
        Relation to Other Systems
        The Teaching of the Gita
        Ultimate Reality
        The World of Change
        The Individual Self
        Ethics
        Jnana Marga
        Bhakti Marga
        Karma Marga
        Moksa
    10. Buddhism as a Religion
        Sects of Buddhism
        Hinayana Buddhism
        The Mahayana
        The Mahayana Metaphysics
        The Mahayana Religion
        Ethics
        The Fall of Buddhism in India
        Influence of Buddhism on Indian Thought
    11. The Schools of Buddhism
        The Four Schools of Buddhism
        The Vaibhasikas
        The Sutrantikas
        The Yogacaras
        The Madhyamikas
        Theory of Knowledge
        Degrees of Truth and Reality
        Sunyavada and its Implications
        Conclusion
Appendix - Some Problems
Notes Indian Philosophy - Volume II
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Contents
List of Abbreviations

Part III - The Six Brahmanical Systems

    1. Introduction
        The Spirit of the Age
        Relations to the Vedas
        The Sutras
        Common Ideas
    2. The Logical Realism of the Nyaya
        The Nyaya and the Vaisesika
        The Beiginnings of the Nyaya
        Literature and History
        The Scope of the Nyaya
        The Nature od Defintions
        Pratyaksa or Intuition
        Anuman or Inference
        The Syllogism
        Induction
        Cause
        Upamana or Comparison
        Sabda or Verbal Knowledge
        Other Forms of Knowledge
        Tarka and Vada
        Memeory
        Doubt
        Fallacies
        Truth
        Error
        General Estimation of Nyaya Epistemology
        The World of Nature
        The Individual Self and Its Destiny
        Some Critical Considertions - Soul and its Relation to Consciousness
        Ethics
        Theology
        Conclusion
    3. The Atomistic Pluralism of the Vaisesika
        The Vaisesika
        Date and Literature
        Theory of Knowledge
        The Categories
        Substance
        The Atomic Theory
        Quality
        Karma or Activity
        Samanya or Generality
        Visesa or Particularity
        Samavaya or Inherence
        Abhava or Non-Existence
        Ethics
        God
        General Estimate of the Vaisesika Philosophy
    4. The Samkhya System
        Introduction
        Antecedents
        Literature
        Casuality
        Prakriti
        The Gunas
        Evolution
        Space and Time
        Purusa
        The Empirical Individual
        Purusa and Prakriti
        Purusa and Buddhi
        The Mechanism of Knowledge
        The Source of Knowledge
        Some Critical Considerations
        Ethics
        Release
        Future Life
        Is Samkhya Atheistic?
        General Estimate
    5. The Yoga System of Patanjali
        Introduction
        Antecedents
        Date and Literature
        The Samkhya and the Yoga
        Psychology
        The Pramanas
        The Art of Yoga
        The Ethical Preparation
        The Discipline of the Body
        Breath-Control
        Sense-Control
        Contemplation
        Samadhi or Concentration
        Freedom
        Karma
        Supernormal Powers
        God
        Conclusion
    6. The Purva Mimansa
        Introduction
        Date and Literature
        Pramanas
        Perception
        Inference
        Vedic Testimony
        Comparison
        Implication
        Non-Apprehension
        Prabhakara's Theory of Knowledge
        Kumarila's Theory of Knowledge
        The Self
        The Nature of Reality
        Ethics
        Apurva
        Moksa
        God
    7. The Vedanta Sutra
        Introduction
        Authorship and Date
        Relation to Other Schools
        Metaphysical Views
        Conclusion
    8. The Advaita Vedanta of Samkara
        Introduction
        Date and Life of Samkara
        Literature
        Gaudapada
        Analysis of Experience
        Creation
        Ethics and Religion
        Gaudapada and Buddhism
        Bhartihari
        Bhartrprapanca
        Samkara's Relation to the Upanishads and the Braha Sutra
        Samkara and Other Schools
        The Atman
        The Mechanism of Knowledge
        Perception
        Inference
        Scriptural Testimony
        Refutation of Subjectivism
        The Criterion of Truth
        The Inadequacy of Empirical Knowledge
        Anubhava or Integral Experience
        Intuition (Anubhava), Intellect (Tarka) and Scripture (Sruti)
        Higher Wisdom and Lower Knowledge
        Samkara's Theory and Some Western Views Compared
        The Objective Approach: Space, Time and Cause
        Brahman
        Isvara or Personal God
        The Phenomenal Character of Isvara
        The Phenomenality of The World
        The Doctrine of Maya
        Avidya
        Is The World an Illusion?
        Maya and Avidya
        The World of Nature
        The Individual Self
        Sakhin and Jiva
        Atman and Jiva
        Isvara and Jiva
        Ekajivavada (Single Soul Theory) and Anekajivavada (Theory of Many Souls)
        Ethics
        Some Objections to Samkara's Ethics Considered
        Karma
        Moksa
        Future Life
        Religion
        Conclusion
    9. The Theism of Ramanuja
        Introduction
        The Agamas
        The Puranas
        Life of Ramanuja
        History and Literature
        Bhaskara
        Yadavaprakasa
        The Source of Knowledge
        Cause and Substance
        Self and Consciousness
        God
        The Individual Soul
        Matter
        Creation
        Ethical and Religious Life
        Moksa
        General Estimate
    10. The Saiva, the Sakta and the Later Vaisnava Theism
        Saiva Siddhanta
        Literature
        Doctrines
        The Pratyabhijna System
        Shaktisim
        Madhva
        Life and Literature
        Theory of Knowledge
        God
        Individual Soul
        The World of Nature
        God and the World
        Ethics and Religion
        Critical Reflections
        Nimbarka
        Vallava
        The Caitanya Movement
    11. Conclusion
        Philosophical Developement
        The Unity of all Systems
        Philosophy and Life
        The Decline of Philosophy in the Recent Past
        The Present Situation
Notes
Addeddate 2011-06-03 09:59:58
Identifier Sarvepalli.Radhakrishnan.Indian.Philosophy.Volume.1-2
Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t3vt2j565

2023/12/15

Past life regression - Wikipedia

Past life regression - Wikipedia

Past life regression

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Past life regression is a method that uses hypnosis to recover what practitioners believe are memories of past lives or incarnations. The practice is widely considered discredited and unscientific by medical practitioners, and experts generally regard claims of recovered memories of past lives as fantasies or delusions or a type of confabulation.[1] Past-life regression is typically undertaken either in pursuit of a spiritual experience, or in a psychotherapeutic setting. Most advocates loosely adhere to beliefs about reincarnation,[2] though religious traditions that incorporate reincarnation generally do not include the idea of repressed memories of past lives.[3]

The technique used during past-life regression involves the subject answering a series of questions while hypnotized to reveal identity and events of alleged past lives, a method similar to that used in recovered memory therapy and one that, similarly, often misrepresents memory as a faithful recording of previous events rather than a constructed set of recollections. The use of hypnosis and suggestive questions can tend to leave the subject particularly likely to hold distorted or false memories.[4] The source of the memories is more likely cryptomnesia and confabulations that combine experiences, knowledge, imagination and suggestion or guidance from the hypnotist than recall of a previous existence. Once created, those memories are indistinguishable from memories based on events that occurred during the subject's life.[2][3] Investigations of memories reported during past-life regression have revealed that they contain historical inaccuracies which originate from common beliefs about history, modern popular culture, or books that discuss historical events. Experiments with subjects undergoing past-life regression indicate that a belief in reincarnation and suggestions by the hypnotist are the two most important factors regarding the contents of memories reported.[2][5][6]

History[edit]

Religion[edit]

In the 2nd century BC, the Hindu scholar Patañjali, in his Yoga Sutras, discussed the idea of the soul becoming burdened with an accumulation of impressions as part of the karma from previous lives.[7] Patañjali called the process of past-life regression prati-prasava (literally "reverse birthing"), and saw it as addressing current problems through memories of past lives. Some types of yoga continue to use prati-prasav as a practice.[8][9]

In the religious mythology of China the deity Meng Po, also known as the "Lady of Forgetfullness", prevents souls from remembering their past lives: she gives them a bittersweet drink that erases all memories before they climb the wheel of reincarnation.[10]

Past life regression can be found in Jainism. The seven truths of Jainism deal with the soul and its attachment to karma. The fourth truth, Bandha, tells us that karma can stick to your soul. However, the seventh truth, Moksha, tells us that in order to be freed from the cycle of rebirth and death, one must separate karma from the soul.[11] In order to find out what karma is attached to your soul, you can participate in “Jati-Smaran.” Jati-Smaran is remembering past lives [12]

Modern era[edit]

The nineteenth century saw the rise of Spiritualism, involving séances and other techniques for contacting departed spirits. Allan Kardec (1804–1869) sought to codify the lessons thus obtained in a set of five books, the Spiritist Codification (theSpiritist Pentateuch, 1857–1868), including The Spirits Book (1857) and Heaven and Hell (1865); these books introduce concepts of how spirits evolve through a series of incarnations. Madame Blavatsky (1831–1891), co-founder of the Theosophical Society, introduced the Sanskrit term Akasha, beginning in Isis Unveiled (1877) as a vague life force that was continuously redefined, always vaguely, in subsequent publications; separately, but also in Isis Unveiled, she referred to "indestructible tablets of the astral light" recording both the past and future of human thought and action.[13] These concepts were combined into a single idea: the Akashic records, espoused by Alfred Percy Sinnett in his book Esoteric Buddhism (1883). The idea that the "Akashic records" held past life data set the stage, whereby Western practitioners of the paranormal could sidestep the notion of forgetfulness that, in traditional teachings about reincarnation, had prevented memories of former lives from being accessed.

An early report for a human accessing past life information during a trance state comes from 1923, when Edgar Cayce, while answering questions posed by Arthur Lammers (publisher) in a trance state, spoke of Lammers' past lives and of reincarnation.[14] The use of hypnosis for past life regressions is said to have been developed by A. R. (Asa Roy) Martin of Sharon, Pennsylvania, who published Researches in Reincarnation and Beyond in 1942.[15]

In 1952 the Bridey Murphy case, in which housewife Virginia Tighe of Pueblo, Colorado, under hypnosis, was reported by the hypnotist to have recounted memories of a 19th-century Irish woman ("Bridey Murphy").[2]

Past life regression is widely rejected as a psychiatric treatment by clinical psychiatrists and psychologists. A 2006 survey found that a majority of a sample of doctoral level mental health professionals rated "Past Lives" therapy as "certainly discredited" as a treatment for mental or behavioral disorders.[1]

Technique[edit]

In the West, past-life regression practitioners use hypnosis and suggestion to promote recall in their patients, using a series of questions designed to elicit statements and memories about the past life's history and identity.[4] Some practitioners also use bridging techniques from a client's current-life problem to bring "past-life stories" to conscious awareness.[16] Practitioners believe that unresolved issues from alleged past lives may be the cause of their patients' problems.[17] One technique for accessing memories from a past life is detailed in a study by Nicholas P. Spanos from Carleton University, Ontario, Canada. Subjects of a study were at first told that they would be undergoing a hypnosis, and afterwards told, “You are now in a different life, living in another life that you have lived before in another time. You are now reliving that other life that you lived once before in a different time.” Next, after the administer asks “What name can I call you by? I want you to look down and tell me what you are wearing. Describe everything you are wearing in detail. Where are you?”[18] Afterwards, the subjects were to chronicle the information that they could remember after regression in a past life. Past life regression can be achieved in as little as 15 minutes, but to recall past a point of death, and into "soul memories", it takes upwards of 45 minutes of trance induction.[19] However, with psychotherapy clients who believe in past lives, irrespective of whether or not past lives exist, the use of past lives as a tool has been suggested.[20][21]

Sources of memories[edit]

The "memories" recovered by techniques like past-life regression may be the result of cryptomnesia: narratives created by the subconscious mind using imagination, forgotten information and suggestions from the therapist.[2][3][4][22][23][24][25] Memories created under hypnosis are indistinguishable from actual memories and can be more vivid than factual memories.[3][26] The greatest predictor of individuals reporting memories of past lives appears to be their beliefs—individuals who believe in reincarnation are more likely to report such memories, while skeptics or disbelievers are less so.[2][6]

Examinations of three cases of apparent past life regression (Bridey Murphy, Jane Evans, and an unnamed English woman) revealed memories that were superficially convincing. However, investigation by experts in the languages used and historical periods described revealed flaws in all three patients' recall. The evidence included speech patterns that were "...used by movie makers and writers to convey the flavour of 16th century English speech" rather than actual Renaissance English, a date that was inaccurate but was the same as a recognized printing error in historical pamphlets, and a subject that reported historically accurate information from the Roman era that was identical to information found in a 1947 novel set in the same time as the individual's memories, with the same name reported by the person regressed. Other details cited are common knowledge and not evidence of the factual nature of the memories; subjects asked to provide historical information that would allow checking provided only vague responses that did not allow for verification, and sometimes were unable to provide critical details that would have been common knowledge (e.g. a subject described the life of a Japanese fighter pilot during World War II but was unable to identify Hirohito as the Emperor of Japan during the 1940s).[5]

Studies[edit]

Studies suggest that past lives are likely false memories, implanted through the susceptibility of the hypnotic method. A 1976 study found that 40% of hypnotizable subjects described new identities and used different names when given a suggestion to regress past their birth.[5] In the 1990s, a series of experiments undertaken by Nicholas Spanos examined the nature of past life memories. Descriptions of alleged past lives were found to be extremely elaborate, with vivid, detailed descriptions. This, however, is not indicative of the validity of this therapeutic method. Subjects who reported memories of past lives exhibited high hypnotizability, and patients demonstrated that the expectations conveyed by the experimenter were most important in determining the characteristics of the reported memories. The degree to which the memories were considered credible by the experimental subjects was correlated most significantly to the subjects' beliefs about reincarnation and their expectation to remember a past life rather than hypnotizability. Spanos' research leads him to the conclusion that past lives are not memories, but actually social constructions based on patients acting "as if" they were someone else, but with significant flaws that would not be expected of actual memories. To create these memories, Spanos' subjects drew upon the expectations established by authority figures and information outside of the experiment such as television, novels, life experiences and their own desires.[5] In sum, it is therefore suggested that past lives are likely false memories, implanted through the susceptibility of the hypnotic method.

Ethical questions[edit]

Past life regression has been critiqued for being unethical on the premises that it lacks any evidence to support these claims, and that the act increases one's susceptibility to false memories. Luis Cordón states that this can be problematic as it creates delusions under the guise of therapy. The memories are experienced as vivid as those based on events experienced in one's life, impossible to differentiate from true memories of actual events, and accordingly any damage can be difficult to undo.[3][27] As past life regression is rooted on the premise of reincarnation, many APA accredited organizations have begun to refute this as a therapeutic method on the basis of it being unethical. Additionally, the hypnotic methodology that underpins past life regression places the participant in a vulnerable position, susceptible to implantation of false memories.[27] Because the implantation of false memories may be harmful, Gabriel Andrade points out that past life regression violates the principle of first, do no harm (non-maleficence).[27]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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  2. Jump up to:a b c d e f Carroll RT (2003). The Skeptic's Dictionary: a collection of strange beliefs, amusing deceptions, and dangerous delusions. New York: Wiley. pp. 276–7ISBN 978-0-471-27242-7.
  3. Jump up to:a b c d e Cordón LA (2005). Popular psychology: an encyclopedia. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press. pp. 183–5ISBN 978-0-313-32457-4.
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