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How can rebirth exist when it goes against scientific laws?
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Religion: Insight into reality relates to truth which we practice via symbolism, ritual and meditation, and using something we might broadly call intuitive thought. One might use the word "meaning" to express this rather than "insight."
Science: Information about objects relates to facts which we establish provisionally through theories and using discursive thought.
They do not necessarily contradict one another, but neither do they hinge on one another, and they may even to some degree overlap. And even where religion and science coincide, without practice, without integration into one's own life, religion doesn't amount to more than intellectual chatter.
Scientism (not science, mind you) also gets fact and truth mixed up. The only truth lies in facts.
Fundamentalism arises when religion becomes insecure thinking that science poses a threat. Truth and fact get mixed up. As as result they chase after truth in what they think as fact (even if it means self-deception). As if truth only requires assent.
But Augustine didn't even think the creation story in Genesis as factual. The significance lay in its expression of God as the source of all existence, and Genesis provides a poetic rather than empirical account. Even Augustine knew better than some Christians in the 21st century!
Scientism and fundamentalism both confuse fact with truth, information with insight. The insight ends up the loser in BOTH.
A simple example by way of literature: In Aesop's Fables, we know with a high degree of (factual) certainty that foxes, rabbits, crows, lions, and turtles do not talk. And yet the stories contain truth. The beauty of many of those stories lies not in this blatant non-factual depiction of animals who behave like humans, but in truths about human nature.
Similar to Daozen's definition of persecution.
Indeed, the "insight into reality" for many is ātman, for others it's anātman. Both can't be true, and it doesn't make the least bit of difference. ātman believers are no more wise, moral, or happy than anātman believers. It would be wrong to think that science, or rather scientists, don't use intuitive thought, if that's what you're suggesting.
Science could address the subject of confabulation. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confabulation
At least the subject of study is there; and so funds can be raised.
If someone would find a way of disproving the idea of rebirth, as a contribution to scientific theory, that could earn him some credit; but actually disproving the idea is not going to shock the scientific community; no-one believes it anyway.
Yes, but a strong argument can be made.
But ultimately, the two necessary criteria for funding can't be made in any event - can money be made and can it be used as a weapon - so the chances of legitimate scientific study of rebirth are nill. That said it doesn't change the fact that science has absolutely nothing to say on the subject. It can't say that rebirth exists or doesn't exist. Really now? Can you list, by name, scientists (all of them) that don't believe in rebirth? To say that "No one believes" is a fairly broad and sweeping generalization - something science tends to eschew - so it requires some support to be credible.
I'll wait.
On their first job-interview they could brag about their many years of experience. Nobody would be making all those costly beginners mistakes ever again.
The costs of education would be much smaller or the moneu spend would pay off a lot better.
THAT my friend has nothing to do with rebirth. We don't keep information from previous lives. At death, the skandhas dissolve so all that could be included in a perception of "we" is, according to Buddhist teachings, impossible.
Why bring it up?
Did you really mean to say 'If a religious truth is proved false it doesn't matter, because religion only needs to be meaningful'. It would represent a very odd idea of religion. How could any kind of truth be false? There never has been a case of a religious truth being falsified.
Developing a clear mind means among other things, understanding that you are no different from anyone else in many, many ways including how your mind works. One person's divine revelation is another person's ignorant superstition.
We do have sciences that deal with a given culture's set of religious beliefs. It's called sociology and archaeology. Even psychology, for the study of why an individual develops such deeply held beliefs.
A Christian or Muslim is as deeply convinced we all go to a Heaven or Hell after a final judgement as you are that you're going to be reborn as a baby something out there. The Vikings believed good warriors were going to a giant kegger where they'd feast and slap the waitress' butt for eternity, and had the same justification for that belief. Mostly that their sacred literature (oral stories in this instance) said that was what happens and I'll bet a few of their people had some interesting near death experiences on the battlefield where they saw old Uncle Thor waving a horn full of mead around.
What I mean to say is, rebirth or reincarnation is not an imponderable and obviously fascinates us (mostly for the wrong reasons) but it is a distraction if you get caught up in wanting to prove it, as people have pointed out already.
People who believe in ātman, for example, are no more wise, moral, or happy than people who believe in an anātman. What else really matters?
Buddhism is a practice for a reason. You can practice without holding a belief in rebirth. What happens after we die is really of little consequence compared to how we live right now. I realize the ultimate goal is to be reborn favorably and eventually to not be reborn at all. But that hardly has to be the focus of your practice. If you practice regularly you will no doubt witness your own beliefs about many things evolving.
I would say you can be wise and believe in either, but one or the other must be the superior method and truth.
A truth, by definition, can only be a truth if it applies equally to every being in every situation. When people say things like "your truth is not my truth" that makes some sense in our minds, but it really cannot be true, in my opinion anyhow. Whatever happens when we die, is truth. We don't know what the truth is, but I think it is the same process for every human being. This comes up a lot in the abortion debate, too. People of some religions consider the embryo to be a living being at a certain point, when others do not. What is the truth? What makes something a living being? We all have our ideas about what the truth is, but that doesn't mean we know because science cannot definitively prove it one way or another. Religious beliefs do not equal Truth.
Why does truth matter? Do you really mean to ask this? What would be the point of Buddhist doctrine, or any doctrine, if it is not true?
Rebirth may not be scientific but it in no way goes against scientific findings.
As soon as there is a viable theory, there is a multitude of scientists out to disprove it. To be viable, a theory has to be testable or it isn't scientific.
Personally, I think most look at it wrong and miss the obvious but until we can point to something and say "yes, that's us exactly", rebirth will not be testable.
What is it that evolves the continuance of instinct?
And I'm not talking about romantic love, between two or more people. I'm talking about LOVE-- Real, true, LOVE; cultivated within until it actually permeates one's entire consciousness.
LOVE - in all it's manifestations, but especially as COMPASSION - conquers: Ego; Selfishness; Hopelessness; Prejudice; Beliefs and Disbelief; Mistrust; Personal Doubts; and every other negative aspect of Life.
Every single religion teaches LOVE/COMPASSION on some level - and yet humans always seem to overlook that one, simple, profound TRUTH ..... and instead focus on rules, dogma and differences.