Transmigration of the soul typically refers to the moving on of the soul after a person dies. It is often used in the context of reincarnation of the soul after death, as it moves from the deceased body into its new form. Not every culture or religious group believes in reincarnation, but most religious groups have a belief in the afterlife more generally.
astral travel
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Yigal Arica has written: 'Gilgul neshamot' -- subject(s): Judaism, Transmigration, Cabala, Soul
The doctrine of transmigration of souls, also known as reincarnation, is the belief that the soul passes from one body to another after death. It is a concept found in various religious and philosophical traditions, including Hinduism, Buddhism, and some Greek philosophies. The idea is that the soul undergoes a cycle of births and rebirths until it achieves spiritual enlightenment or liberation.
Transmigration - novel - was created in 1970.
There are two applications, firstly, the act of moving from one place to another. Secondly, the passage of the soul after death into another body
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer was created in 1982.
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer has 255 pages.
The ISBN of The Transmigration of Timothy Archer is 0-671-44066-7.
Transmigration - 2001 was released on: USA: 2 November 2001 (MicroCineFest)
Belief in reincarnation is basic to the eschatology of all religions of Indian origin including Sikhism and Hinduism. Some Western philosophers of yore also believed in the transmigration of soul, but for them it was associated with the concept of the immortality of soul. In Indian tradition, on the other hand, transmigration is an essential concomitant of the doctrine of karma, according to which every action, physical or mental, has its own consequence which must be faced immediately or in future, either in this life or in the hereafter, good actions leading to a favourable reward and bad actions entailing punishment. The individual soul (jvatma), so it is believed, does not perish with the physical body but dons a new corporeal vesture in a new birth which is determined by its karma in the preceding births. Every new birth in its turn necessarily involves new karma or action leading to further consequences. Jivatma is thus tied to a karmik chakra or an endless cycle of birth-action-death-rebirth, until the chain is broken and karmik accumulation is dissipated and the jiva attains mukti or moksa, i.e. liberation or release from transmigration. For those who have not been released from transmigration by the day of decision will be decided. SOME Sikhs do not believe in the end of the world. Only the cycle continuing and more people leaving Transmigration.
John Helen Manas has written: 'Metempsychosis, reincarnation; pilgrimage of the soul through matter; \\' -- subject(s): Pythagorean society, Transmigration 'The Delphic oracle' -- subject(s): Greek Oracles 'The truth about religion' -- subject(s): Religions 'Life's riddle solved through the law of metempsychosis' -- subject(s): Reincarnation, Soul