reincarnation Pictures, Images and Photos

(info below garnered from: http://www.reincarnationexperiment.org/)

The website noted above is dedicated to a “natural science approach” regarding the concept of reincarnation. It includes (and expands on) material from Paul Von Ward’s book, “The Soul Genome: Science and Reincarnation”.

Quotes from reincarnationexperiment.org:

Early human (and later aboriginal societies) based their beliefs in reincarnation on observations of their contemporaries that revealed similarities with known people who had lived and died before those being observed were born. Over several generations, people collected many persuasive correspondences between the present personalities and various ancestors that they posited carry forward legacies from the past. As an example, an African tribe used the terms “babatunde” and “yetunde” to indicate the possible reincarnations of boys and girls, respectively, from earlier individuals — two generations removed.

. . . . . Much of the physical and behavioral evidence that led to such ancient beliefs can be found in the lives of people living today and those who have died after leaving documented information about themselves and their behaviors. “The Reincarnation Experiment” is the first-ever effort to treat the reincarnation phenomenon as a natural process that can (and should) be subjected to scientific analysis. For that reason alone, it provides a credible data base for interdisciplinary discussions and evaluations of the psychoplasm (or soul-genome) hypothesis.

. . . . . The objective evidence that led nature-oriented societies to postulate a process like reincarnation includes physical features and psychological factors. Facial architecture, body types, hair patterns, ear forms, hand-finger proportions, voice, and odor have been noted to correspond in two separate lifetimes. Some physical similarities also include special markings, birthmarks and deformities. Matching psychological traits include levels of mental development, emotional patterns, styles of interacting with others, and areas of creative interest

Considerable empirical research now suggests that what a person accomplishes in terms of self-development and learning becomes the legacy his or her soul genome/psychoplasm transmits to the next generation.


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