Tantric-Master
On the Prowl
First of all, I want to say that I agree COMPLETELY with your statement that "I do not believe that you have to have had extensive previous religious instruction to ask that question". As a matter of fact, I will go one step further and say that, in many cases, religious beliefs in scriptures being the "unadulterated word of God" can actually hinder significantly an objective investigation directed towards answering the questions that we are now discussing.I think Tantric-Master has raised a good point about the question "how did we get where we are now?" Yes, science has answered a lot of the what, with the Big Bang, and biological evolution once the earth had been established. I think in simple terms, the question can be illustrated by being a passenger on a train going through a large railroad yard in which there are multiple tracks. The passenger may look out and ask the question "Why am I on this track, and not any of the others?" Contrary to what TX-Beau has said, I do not believe that you have to have had extensive previous religious instruction to ask that question. Applying that analogy to the larger question of "how did we get to where we are now?" we can look at the Big Bang and its setting up the physical laws of the universe, and the formation of galaxies and stars, the formation of the earth, the emergence of single-celled organisms from the primordial soup, the evolution into multicellular organisms, from fish to amphibians to reptiles to mammals, and finally the emergence of humans, we can say "science has explained all this-- that's all we need to know." Or we can ask, "OK, the What has been explained to us, but not the how and why? How did we end up with this particular set of physical laws? How did this particular solar system and earth form? How did this particular earth just happen to fall within the "Goldilocks zone?" How did humans evolve the way we did, and not as something completely different? The question becomes especially pertinent when we realize that at every step there were an infinite number of possibilities, which if ANY ONE were different, we simply could not exist. We're in effect asking how did we end up on this particular track, the only one which would allow up to be here, and be aware that we are here. How did we end up "winning the lottery" in which there were infinite upon infinite possibilities, in which there are infinite ways that would eliminate the possibility of being here?
My suggestion is to proceed slowly now in this public forum regarding the question "how did we get where we are now?" I will submit a personal life experience which I consider relevant to this discussion and then, using the Hermetic "as above, so below" Principle, proceed even further as this is obviously a very deep subject where a step-by-step investigative approach seems advisable in this forum.
As previously mentioned in this thread, I had a mind-boggling, life-transforming near death experience (NDE) many years ago. I emerged COMPLETELY SYMPTOM-FREE from a 3-day "irreversible coma" with a clear recollection of all that had transpired. The doctors had said that, in the unlikely event of survival, there would be severe brain/organ damage. In that state, there was an indescribable peace ... the proverbial "peace that surpasseth all understanding" that lies beyond time and space. I was perfectly content to stay there. However, my attention was somehow directed "downward" where I saw a vast panorama of activity both within the hospital and beyond the hospital. Thoughts started to arise. (That is my body. That is my mother. That is my brother and sister in the hallway, and so on.) Emotions started to arise. (That is my mother crying, "Don't die". ) My life force was drawn to the unfolding scene and I was consciously aware of my life force descending towards the body after which I say up completely alert and said, "I'm hungry and I want to go home". The doctors were shocked as I was completely symptom-free. What had happened was so alien to my Roman Catholic upbringing that I started a life-long quest to understand what had happened. I was, however, very aware that there is a vantage point from which one realizes with complete certainty that everything is interconnected.
My investigation led me to meditation to discover the way back to that "peace that surpasseth all understanding". I gravitated towards certain meditation techniques that started with the body, proceeded to the emotions, then to the underlying thoughts of various subtleties, and then to that "peace that surpasseth all understanding" that lies beyond thoughts. It was the process of returning step-by-step to that indescribable state. During that ongoing meditative process, answers to questions being raised here were addressed and continue to be addressed regarding "how" and "why" I was back here in the body ... as per this very limited example which can serve well as a starting point for further discussion.
The psychologist Carl Jung empirically discovered that vantage point and called it the "collective unconscious" since many are unaware of that perspective (which can be reached in meditation). The biologist Rupert Sheldrake has some interesting theories on morphogenetic fields. There's a lot of interesting stuff pointing to subtler levels of consciousness.
Lastly, while I don't want this to become a discussion on Einstein, TX-Beau had mentioned something about Einstein's beliefs regarding the afterlife. Actually, Einstein's comments were quite intriguing. Although he definitely didn't believe in a "personal God" (the proverbial "man in the sky"), his comments on the afterlife were actually quite profound and that can become part of this discussion. "But there is only one true immortality, on a cosmic scale, and that is the immortality of the cosmos itself. There is no other." This corresponds to the "Echad" (there is ultimately no plurality) in Kabbalistic Judaism, Brahman in Hinduism, and various other understandings in the various wisdom traditions of the world. As I mentioned, Buddha maintained the Noble Silence when asked metaphysical questions about the afterlife and so on.
What Did Einstein Believe About Immortality and Life After Death?
Einstein on life after death? He wrote: 'Immortality? There are two kinds. The first lives in the imagination of the people, and is thus an illusion.



























