It is true that a Soul must be in a newborn after death. But we must realize that we don't have a Soul, we are the Soul. When does the Soul go into a newborn after death? We don't ask questions. We think it is on our birthday when we are born. But we know that the power of the Soul is alive when the baby is kicking in the mother's womb. In fact the power of the Soul comes alive, nine months before when two cells become one, the zygote. But that Soul power makes that one cell become an embryo, our organs grow and the Soul gives power to us. We think of a Soul being a product that moves from body to body. The reality is we are that Soul, and we are covered by different layers. We have to overcome this ignorance to discover the Soul within.
the christian belief for what occurs after death is that your soul goes to Heaven and your body remains on Earth. When Jesus comes back rapture the bodies of his true believers will be extracted from the Earth and taken back to his Kingdom
When you die well in my religion we believe that your soul does not go to heaven as soon as you die but it is taking up into translation with our theorphany when God comes to take His waiting Bride(true believers) away every living and dead will be taken to heaven to be with God....
No. Christians believe in life after death because that is what the Bible says not because they are scared. The Bible says man is more than just a body, man also has a soul. The Bible also says that a soul lives on after death and after physical death there is eternal life or eternal death for the soul. Christian beliefs give a purpose for life and a hope of life after death.
In Buddhism and the soul is not shown as cleary in Buddhism, inorder to stop confusion with the Aberhamic soul. In both Hinduism and Buddhism when someone attains nirvania there soul escapes the cycle of life and death and goes back to its true magical home free of suffering which in Buddhism is called Nirvania Buddhists do not think this. The concept of Brahman is a Hindu belief.
Wouldn't surprise me one bit. I know that Karakul sheepskin garments are made from newborn or aborted sheep fetuses' skins. They club newborn seals to death to get their skins for clothing too!
Socrates believed in the immortality of the soul and that death was a transition to a higher state of existence or reunion with the divine. He saw death as a natural part of life and not something to be feared, as he believed that true wisdom comes from recognizing the limitations of the physical world.
because i watched the movie is it true edit from an experienced : the movie isn't based on a true story, but the massage your getting from the movie is "sell your soul and you ill have the life you dreamed of" which means that you can give your soul or sell your soul to get a desired thing which is real, but in return your soul will serve "the devil" or "the entity" you sold your soul for after death, which makes you a slave after death, so the movie is kind of advertising this thing to be good and i personally asked many people about it, and i was surprised because after they watched the movie selling their soul wasn't considered a bad thing, and that's all they want to tell you from the movie, but it isn't based on a real story.
Hinduism believes that death is just the end of one chapter in the book. For a soul, there are numerous lives (chapters) which would continue and carry on to the next incarnation. Until the soul realizes its true nature (self), the birth and death cycle continues.
they group together in colonies for protection
True
Plato connects knowledge and death primarily through the idea that true knowledge is linked to the realm of the Forms, which exists beyond the physical world. In dialogues like the "Phaedo," he suggests that the soul's immortality allows it to access higher knowledge after death, as it is liberated from the distractions of the body. Therefore, death is not an end but a transition to a greater understanding, where the soul can grasp the eternal truths of existence. This perspective promotes the notion that the pursuit of knowledge prepares the soul for its eventual release from the corporeal world.
Nothing, It's all true.