Rebirth and The Western Buddhist
Rebirth and The Western Buddhist
Rebirth and The Western Buddhist
Martin Willson
Wisdom Publications
23 Dering Street
London W1, England
Preface 7
1 Why it is Important to Understand that Rebirth
Exists 9
2 Buddha Taught Rebirth 13
3 Observational Evidence for the Fact of
Rebirth 17
Recollecting Rebirth Oneself 18
Being Told About One's Past Lives by
Another 28
4 Logical"Proofs": the Theory of Rebirth 33
5 Buddhism, Science and Scientism 47
6 Details of Rebirth 59
7 Conclusions 77
References and Notes 81
Preface to the Second Printing
9
10 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
the chain of deaths and births, from transmi-
gration. As ninety nine per cent of Europeans
do not "believe in reincarnation," considered
as an Asiatic superstition, the question was
closed: the Hindus and Buddhists consecrate
their efforts to liberating themselves from a
servitude which does not exist. 1
If the idea of liberation even for oneself alone is thus
meaningless for Westerners, how much more so is the
Bodhisattva's goal (3) above - full Enlightenment in
order to be able to liberate others. Thus the very essence
of religious practice is a concern wider than for this life
alone.
Buddhists would generally argue that since, without
rebirth, the law of karma and result cannot operate,
everything becomes meaningless for the disbeliever in
rebirth: our present situation becomes a mere accident,
when other beings hurt us it is their fault and not ours,
and there is no basis for the practice of morality. This
argument should not be pressed too far - it is obvious, in
view of the existence of many Christians and others of
exemplary conduct despite their disbelief in rebirth, that
there are other possible bases for moral behaviour; never-
theless, such examples are rare compared with the con-
fused and misguided behaviour evident all around us,
which results from ignorance of the facts of rebirth and
karma. Because of this ignorance, the blame for the
world's misery is laid on scapegoats and the methods that
could actually improve matters are neglected.
Therefore a proper understanding of the fundamental
fact of rebirth is necessary as a prerequisite to all Bud-
dhist practice and to overcoming the misery of the world.
This is not to deny that there are also bad reasons for
fascination with rebirth. Conze writes of certain "rich old
women" whom the doctrine of reincarnation attracts
Why it is Important to U11derstand that Rebirth Exists 11
13
14 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
of incurring karma with right view, when their
bodies are destroyed, they are reborn in a good
destiny, in the heavenly worlds." 3
Then,
33
34 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
Reasoning does not take place in a vacuum, but in the
context of a theory that provides something to reason
about and something to reason from. In Mathematics or
Science, a theory starts with basic assumptions-axioms
and postulates-supplemented by definitions, which en-
able deductions to be made. It is considered important to
identify the assumptions clearly. In Buddhist philosophy,
postulates are not identified as such: anything a propo-
nent of a system would accept is an "assertion," but the
assertions are not independent. Challenged to prove as-
sertion A, he may derive it from assertion B. Challenged
to prove B, he could well derive it from A. He is not
required to present his whole system at once as a se-
quence of deductions but only to answer questions on
one point at a time. Losang Gyatso, however, begins with
a series of assertions that we may regard as postulates, P1
to P4. We shall have occasion to recall George Spencer-
Brown's definition:
We may take a postulate to be a statement
which is accepted without evidence, because it
belongs to a set of such statements from which
it is possible to derive other statements which
it happens to be convenient to believe. The
chief characteristic which has always marked
such statements has been an almost total lack of
any spontaneous appearance of truth. 70
P1: Effective things are not mere conceptual
imputations but exist in their own nature, re-
versed from, or lacking the nature of, other
things. (LG 11-12, quoting Pramii7J.aviirttika I.40,
which I have interpreted with the standard
commentary and Geshe Rabten's explanation.)
Anyone versed in Prasali.gika-madhyamika philosophy
or modem physics can see that this is not strictly true. But
since it is embarrassing to perform logical analysis on
Logical 'Proofs': the Theory of Rebirth 35
things that are in fact not findable on logical analysis, it is
postulated that we are dealing with findable things. In
many ways these hypothetical findable things behave
much like things in the observed world, so the theory can
still be useful. But just as the Newtonian theory of dy-
namics, which assumes absolute time and space, breaks
down when very high velocities are involved, so this
theory too may cease to apply in certain circumstances.
While this postulate may appear to be about individual
things, in practice it is taken to mean that each type of
thing has numberless defining characteristics, which
mark it off from every thing not of that type. This gives
rise to the important concept of a homogene (rigs 'dra): a
homogene of A is something that is of the same type as
A.
Indestructible mind
{
Primary mind {Mental consciousness
_[ (cilta) Gross mind
Sensory consciousnesses
Mind
Mental factors
(caitta)
47
48 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
firmly entrenched within science itself. For over a cen-
tury, especially since the publication of Darwin's The
Origin of Species in 1859, biologists have been telling us
that we are no more than very complicated machines,
who have come into existence by a series of chance
processes. We are here only because our ancestors were
more successful than others in the ruthless struggle for
existence. There is no purpose to life except to compete
and survive-any inclination to help other human beings
is merely part of a hereditary behaviour pattern which
happened to favour the survival of our species. Mechan-
ism, the belief "that all living things are completely ex-
plicable in terms of the laws of physics and chemistry," 84
has scored success after success, while the opposite ap-
proach of vitalism, the belief "that there is something
distinctive about living matter which places it in a class
above the level of the mere machine, no matter how
complex the machine may be" ,84 has been refuted on
point after point and for most of this century has been
virtually obsolete.
In face of this challenge to the Dharma, what can
Buddhists do? Three main approaches are possible:
1. Fundamentalism: maintain all the traditional beliefs
of Tibetan Buddhists and reject Science entirely. This is
Losang Gyatso's approach when he tries to laugh off the
ideas that human beings evolved from lower animals and
that perception of pain in the foot proceeds via trans-
mission of a nervous impulse to the brain. It may be
possible for Tibetans in India, but for us in the West it is
not a live option.
2. Retreat: define separate spheres of interest for
Science and religion, accepting that physical truth must
be mechanistic and leaving it to the scientists, while
religion must be confined to spiritual truth. This ap-
proach has been adopted by many Christians, and per-
haps one could prune the Buddhadharma so as not to
trespass on the scientific domain.
Buddhism, Science and Scientism 49
3 Synthesis: recognising that mechanism and the
Dharma cannot both be right, but that scientific observa-
tional evidence cannot be dismissed although its inter-
pretation is subject to error, analyse Science critically in
the light of the Dharma and arrive at a synthesis. In
the process, certain elements of traditional Buddhist
teachings will have to be eliminated as incompatible with
observation-the teaching that the earth, sun and moon
are flat disks is only the most obvious example. But if
Buddhism is to become really effective in the West, this
critique of Science is indispensable. As the evidence for
rebirth listed in Chapter Three shows, it cannot fail to
establish that the Dharma is far more reasonable than
many people believe.
Science and the Dharma cannot fundamentally be op-
posed. Many in fact have been attracted to Buddhism
through seeing it as in some sense scientific. Despite its
imperfections and temporary aberrations, Science is in
the long run an exceedingly powerful method of tran-
scending the limitations of an individual human being
and arriving at solidly-established truth. Its essence is
honesty and a willingness to submit ideas to the test of
observ.ation and fair criticism. Nevertheless, at any parti-
cular time, some of the ideas current among scientists are
inevitably erroneous and to be rejected in the end. The
materialism whi<:h since Darwin has increasingly domi-
nated biology is one such idea.
Darwin's contribution was twofold. First, he establish-
ed clearly the fact of the evolution of species of animals
and plants. This has been borne out by countless obser-
vations, in particular the beautiful demonstration of its
genetic basis by molecular biology. It is the central uni-
fying idea of biology, bringing order into the amazing
diversity and complexity of the living world. Second, he
presented a theory, explaining evolution in terms of the
mechanical operation of blind chance, and this is another
matter. While there certainly occurs adaptation of organ-
50 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
isms to the environment by a process of natural selection
similar to that which Darwin proposed, 85 it cannot be
claimed that all biological evolution has been satisfac-
torily explained in this way. The facts are quite consistent
with the concept of evolution as an intelligent process.
But it is one thing to assert this and quite another to work
out such a concept as a testable theory. For the present,
Darwinian theory remains at the centre of biology, exer-
ting its influence against religious ideas. (See for example
the diatribe against religious systems of ethics that con-
cludes Monad's important book Chance and Necessity. 86)
A scientist-mystic has described it as "a sinister force-
perhaps the most sinister-that seriously threatens the
ultimate good of the human soul." 87
The non-mechanist critique of mechanistic biology
probes three open wounds in its flesh: (1) the direct
evidence for mind from parapsychology and rebirth
memories; (2) the major unsolved problems and diffi-
culties in evolutionary theory; and (3) modem physics.
Angry reactions result, respectively (1) either a bland
denial that there is any such evidence (totally untrue), or
the claim that it is all faked, (2) pointing to earlier pro-
blems which eventually found mechanistic solutions and
attacking the critic's motivation, accusing him of looking
for a "God of the gaps" to prop up his doomed and
discredited religion for a few last months, and (3) bitter
attacks on physicists for a "loss of scientific confidence,"
"faltering" in respect of certainty, causality and ration-
ality,88 and poking their noses into biology where they do
not belong.
The scientific evidence for parapsychological pheno-
mena-telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, and psy-
chokinesis, in human beings and animals-despite con-
fident assertions to the contrary, is now overwhelming. It
can be countered only by supposing a vast conspiracy
involving hundreds of people all over the world. Ran-
dall's account of the subject89 is warmly recommended.
Buddhism, Science and Scientism 51
There is much discussion of the difficulties with neo-
Darwinian theory by biologists themselves, of which any
Buddhist who wishes to criticise Darwinism without
making a fool of himself should take the trouble to
become informed. A brief introduction is given in Ran-
dall's book, where further references may be found.
The foundation of biology is necessarily physics. But
while biologists in general have yet to move into the
post-mechanist age, the discovery of Relativity and
Quantum Mechanics freed physicists from the crudely
mechanical ways of thinking prevalent in the nine-
teenth century. As Merrell-Wolff 90 points out, "since 1896
physics has laid the foundation for mysticism with a
vengeance," and it provides no support for the material-
istic interpretation of Darwinism. Convincing evidence
of the similarity of the physicist's and the mystic's world-
views is given by LeShan,91 who presents many quota-
tions from the writings of physicists and mystics and
invites the reader to judge which is which. Physics has
abandoned the concept of things existing absolutely,
from their own side, and recognises that phenomena
depend very much on the observer and what observa-
tions he makes. All the information a physicist has comes
through his sensory consciousnesses, thus he cannot
avoid being concerned with mind in the end. So weird
are the ideas of the physics of elementary particles that it
is not too surprising to find a theoretical physicist elabo-
rating a theory that electrons carry mind. 92 (However, this
approach will obviously not be able to account for mem-
ories of past lives in a single chain, unmixed with other
individuals, as observed, so like most of the ideas of
theoretical physicists it will presumably be a dead end.)
Now, "There is but one indefectibly certain truth, and
that is the truth that pyrrhonistic scepticism itself leaves
standing-the truth that the present phenomenon of
consciousness exists." 93 How then is it possible that the
concept of mind as something more than the physical
52 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
and chemical behaviour of the nervous system could
have been eliminated from biology, to the extent that a
neurobiologist can accuse those who are trying to reassert
it of mounting "an attack, not merely against neurobio-
logy but against the whole rational structure of science
itself"?94
Hatred and fear of religion and mystery has played its
part, but probably more important is our habit of ren-
dering the world objective by stepping back into the role
of an onlooker who does not belong to it. The physicist
Schr6dinger,95 one of the builders of Quantum Mech-
anics, has explained clearly the errors that result. My
mind constructs the objective, "real world" out of my
sensations, perceptions and memories. Now this objec-
tive world includes both my own body and those of other
people, which there is every reason to believe are linked
with consciousness just as mine is. Thus I regard other
people's minds as forming part of the real world around
me, and because of the symmetry between others and
myself I conclude that my own mind too forms part of the
real world it constructed. I feel sure my conscious person-
ality is inside my head, looking out from behind my eyes.
Therefore I expect to find in the real world sensations of
colours and sounds etc., and places where mind and
matter interact. But since in fact my mind was never part
of that world, and nor were others' minds, to which I
have absolutely no direct subjective access, it follows that
however hard I look I cannot find these sensations or
interactions, but only matter behaving in exact accor-
dance with the laws of physics and chemistry-pulses
shooting along nerve fibres, transmitter substances diffu-
sing across synapses to trigger other neurons and being
mopped up by enzymes, and all the other intricate pro-
cesses of the nervous system. Nowhere is there any
objective evidence of the existence of mind or its inter-
Buddhism, Science and Scientism 53
actions with matter. As Spinoza said, "Neither can the
body determine the mind to think, nor the mind deter-
mine the body to motion or rest or anything else (if such
there be)."96 And yet, we seem to be responsible for our
own deeds! Schrodinger considers this a paradox which
can probably be overcome only by recognising that sub-
ject and object are one, but for practical purposes, in
everyday life and scientific research, we have to discrimi-
nate subject and object. His system is thus comparable to
the Buddhist Mind-Only system (Citta-matra), with a
similar presentation of the two levels of truth; however,
he avoids speculating on the causes of sensory per-
ceptions.
Thus it is quite in order that scientists should make the
conscious decision to confine their studies to the objec-
tive world, to avoid extreme conceptual difficulties; in
which case, in relation to that science, mind does not
exist. It is also to be expected that some, not fully under-
standing the above reasoning, will draw exaggerated
conclusions from the lack of objective evidence of mind-
matter interactions. Monod, for example, claims: "Objec-
tive analysis obliges us to see that this seeming duality
[of brain & spirit] within us is an illusion," 97 evidently
not realising that the question is beyond the scope of
objective analysis.
It is interesting to note that another scientist, Franklin
Merrell-Wolff, was led by meditative realisations to adopt
a thoroughly Cittamatrin view-point. Making the im-
portant point,
There seems to be but one fact of experience
that affords the explanation of this attribution
of reality-value to the material of physical
science and that is that this material is relative-
ly common and constant with respect to the
vast majority of observers, and that so far as is
54 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
commonly known, no individual can success-
fully act as though this material were not,
1. Non-human rebirths
While there are limitless possible states of rebirth corres-
ponding to the limitless variety of karmas of sentient
beings, they are classified into five or six major realms,
according to which emotion predominates, as Milarepa
explains:
59
6o Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
Great hatred is the fetter of hell,
Great avarice the preta's chain,
Great delusion the animal's.
Great desire is the human fetter,
Great jealousy is the asura's,
And great pride the deva's chain.
These are six fetters binding one from Free-
dom.l03
3 Beginningless mind
Losang Gyatso (p. 109) argues:
Just establishing that a previous homogeneous
continuum must precede establishes that re-
births are beginningless. For what is not a
sentient being cannot be made into a sentient
being, and non-mind cannot be made into
mind. As, for example, before that hen came an
egg; and before that egg came another hen; so
there is no initial limit one can reach.
The example illustrates perfectly both the strength and
the limitations of the argument. We know116 that if one
66 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
goes back enough generations, the ancestors of that hen
were less and less hen-like, passing through various
kinds of birds to Archaeopteryx (part reptile, part bird)
some 150 million years ago, and before that, reptilian
ancestors. These descended from amphibians, who de-
scended from fish, who probably descended from worm-
like creatures, whose ancestors as one goes still farther
back must have been more and more primitive. This
description of the descent of the hen from fish is deduced
from the verj assumption that any animal is born from
parents which are similar to it, together with careful
examination of living and fossil animals.
Few would deny that the ancient fish and the modern
hen were different "types," yet they are linked by a direct
line of descent in which each animal is no more unlike its
parents than we are unlike ours. Over 300 or 400 million
years, trivial differences between parents and children
add up to the difference between a fish and a hen.
Applying Postulate P1 in the strict form assumed by
Losang Gyatso, the ancestors of the hen 400 million years
ago would still have ,had to be hens. Thus the theory
based on repeated application of the postulate breaks
down in practice, since types are not absolute but merge
gradually into each other.
When one extrapolates from the known to the un-
known, the farther one extrapolates, the more likely one
is to be wrong; and if one extrapolates to infinity, as in
the prediction that my personal continuum as an indivi-
dual sentient being is infinitely old, one is almost certain
to be wrong. Within the theory, it is a logical deduction;
but to assert that it is actually true is the wildest specu-
lation.
Not only is there continuity between fish and hens:
there is continuity between plants and animals, since
there exist single-celled organisms such as Chlamydomo-
nas, Euglena, Polytoma and Volvox which have charac-
Details of Rebirth 67
teristics of both, and have been classified by zoologists as
Protozoa (in the animal kingdom) and by botanists with
the algae (in the plant kingdom). 117 Multicelled plants
and animals too are seen to be intimately related when
one examines the structure and chemistry of their indi-
vidual cells. These facts are hard to explain unless both
plants and animals evolved from common ancestors. Thus
since plant-s, by Buddhist doctrine, are non-sentient, while
at least the higher animals are sentient, biology reveals
continuity between sentient and non-sentient organisms.
This at least suggests that the distinction between sentient
and non-sentient may not be absolute. Thus just as hens
are beginningless in that one cannot point to a first hen,
but still there have not always been hens, so my mind
doubtless lacks a beginning one can point to, but still this
does not necessarily mean it has existed infinitely long.
The view that my mind is infinitely old is an extreme
which leads to difficulties, like any view of self-existence.
Indeed, it is among the fourteen theories to which the
Buddha many times refused to assent, "that the world is
eternal, or not, or both, or neither; or finite, or infinite, or
both, or neither ... ," condemning them as "the jungle
of theorising, the wilderness of theorising, the tangle of
theorising, the bondage and shackles of theorising, at-
tended by ill, distress, perturbation and fever, conducing
not to detachment, passionlessness, tranquillity, peace, to
knowledge and wisdom of Nirvii1Ja." 118 We can easily
show how it leads to distress.
The Lam rim proponents assert that I have been circling
in saftlsiira infinitely long, passing through every samsaric
state infinite times, and undergoing every possible rela-
tionship with every other sentient being infinite times. If
it is possible to attain liberation from Saftlsiira by follow-
ing the Path, there must be a point P on the Path which is
the first point at which it is certain one will attain
Liberation within a finite time. Likewise there must be a
68 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
point Q on the Path which is the first point at which it is
certain one will not fall again into the lower realms. If Q
precedes P, there will be a class of beings who have
attained Q but not P and are thus circling forever in the
upper samsaric realms without possibility of falling into
lower realms. This is contrary to doctrine, therefore Q
either coincides with, or is later than, P.
Consider now the point R on the Path, preceding P by
one thought-moment. Since it precedes P, it follows a
person at R must still expect to take infinitely long to
reach Liberation. By the same objection as to Q preceding
P, he can hardly spend this infinite waiting time poised
at R but must fall again to circle in sarrsiira as before. R is
thus an ordinary samsaric state through which I have
already passed infinite times. Infinite times have I set out
on the Path and traversed the first section to arrive at R;
infinite times have I reached the impenetrable barrier
which divides R from P, and infinite times been turned
back to cycle for further endless ages in the six realms. If
Buddhas have taught the means by which this frightful
wall can be crossed, I have heard it from their lips times
beyond number, and it availed me naught. Already I
have tried everything-how can I hope for Liberation this
. time? If I enter the Path yet again, my chance of following
it beyond R is exactly zero.
We note also that since each moment there are beings
attaining Perfect Enlightenment, infinite beings must al-
ready have done so, therefore if each sentient being has
always existed, the number of sentient beings must also
be infinite. In this case it does not necessarily follow that
every one of them has been my mother even if I have
been born from a womb or an egg infinite times-
mathematically it is perfectly possible that only an infini-
tesimal fraction have. It is not without reason that Vene-
rable Geshe Rabten frequently mentions 119 it is extremely
difficult to persuade oneself that all sentient beings have
Details of Rebirth 69
been one's mother, and recommends Santideva's method
of developing Bodhicitta, which avoids the fearsome diffi-
culties of these infinities.
One does not have to read many Buddhist texts to
become aware of the arbitrariness of the insanely large
numbers frequently quoted and the lack of mathematical
sophistication of the Buddhist pandits. It seems unlikely
they really understood how unbridgeable is the gulf
between the finite and the infinite. We can take their
"infinities" non-literally when necessary. They are meant
to impress on us that we have endured far more exis-
tences than we care to think, but surely not to take away
all hope of Liberation.
77
78 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
present, any educated person in the West automatically
rejects many traditional Buddhist teachings as supersti-
tion. All reject such doctrines as the flat Earth and spon-
taneous generation of insects, but many extend the rejec-
tion not only to all forms of ritual, monasticism, and deity
practices, but also to the teachings on rebirth, and thus
can accept most of Buddhist doctrine only in terms of
weak, symbolic interpretations. It is therefore necessary
that scientific method be absorbed into the Dharma, and
Buddhist doctrines be submitted to scientific test where
possible. While many picturesque theories will certainly
have to be discarded or modified as a result, the Dharma
can only gain in strength and universality by open-
minded, impartial research -research which is neither
credulous nor dogmatically sceptical.
We have seen that rebirth is a fact of experience, now
open to scientific investigation. The beginnings of such
investigation are sketched in Chapter Six, showing that
we should not reject out of hand the possibility that we
can be reborn in non-human states, even if it is less likely
than traditionally taught, and that using hypnotic regres-
sion, we should be able to build up a more realistic
picture of what we experience in the intermediate exis-
tence between human lives. Buddhists surely cannot
neglect this technique, which promises to be so valuable
not merely as a means of research into areas formerly
accessible only to accomplished yogins, but as a direct aid
to individual practice.
Whether Buddhists participate or not, scientific re-
search into rebirth and such related areas as parapsy-
chology, religious experience, out-of-the-body experi-
ences and near-death experiences is bound to continue
and grow into a body of religious science acceptable to
people the world over, as Physics and Chemistry are
Conclusions 79
today. It will certainly contribute to the great blossoming
of spiritual awareness which is gradually gathering
momentum. May this article too play its part in this
awakening.
References and Notes
81
82 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
Conze, Bolinas, Calif., Four Seasons Foundation,
1973 pp.139-141).
12 e.g. Siimaiiiiaphala-sutta, Ref.7.
13 Conze, E. (transl): The Large Sutra on Perfect Wisdom.
Berkeley, Univ. Calif. Press, 1975. pp.66-74.
14 The Middle Way, most issues. For a particularly crass
example, 48, pp.66-7o, 1973
15 Dayal, Har: The Bodhisattva Doctrine in Buddhist
Sanskrit Literature. Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1970.
P73
16 Shorter Oxford English Dictionary.
17 See Murti, T.R.V.: The Central Philosophy of Bud-
dhism. London, Unwin Paperbacks, 1980, p.32; who,
however, has not realised that "soul" does not
necessarily imply a permanent substance.
18 Kiisyapa-parivarta, 64. Tog Palace Kgr, dKon brtsegs,
Cha, 443.3, corrected after Prasanna-padii 248 (see
Murti, Ref.17, p.164).
19 Head, Joseph, & S.L. Cranston (ed.): Reincarnation:
An East-West Anthology. Wheaton, Illinois, Quest
Book, 1968.
20 Conze, Ref.2, p.21.
21 Kant, Immanuel: Prolegomena to Any Future Meta-
physics. Appendix. Transln in R.P. Wolff (ed.): Ten
Great Works of Philosophy, New York, Mentor
Books, 1969. p.392.
22 Wambach, Ref. 57, p.97, for example.
23 Story, Ref.29, p.213.
24 lb., p.275 n.5. The data given by Wambach (Ref.57)
also support this assertion.
25 Story, ib., p.185.
26 lb., pp.201-2.
27 Figures from Alaux, Janine: Et vous, au etiez-vous en
1673? In Marie Claire, no.311, July 1978.
28 Stevenson, Ian: Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincar-
nation. Univ. Press of Virginia, 2nd edition, 1974
Also numerous other publications.
References and Notes 83
29 Story, Francis: Rebirth as Doctrine and Experience:
Essays and Case Studies. Kandy, Sri Lanka, Bud-
dhist Publ. Soc., 1975.
29a Much valuable information on Rinpoches is to be
found in Daniel Barlocher's enthralling collection of
interviews, Testimonies of Tibetan Tulkus, Rikon,
Tibet-Institut, 1982.
30 Mahayana-sutralart~kiira, XV, 11-14 (Tib. chapter
numbering).
31 cf. Vinaya-vastu, Ref.5, P573 Mara in the present
context may be taken as an acronym for Machines,
Aircraft, Radios & related devices, and Auto-
mobiles.
32 Ref.7, para.133.
33 Lilly, John C.: The Centre of the Cyclone. London,
Paladin.
34 Lilly, John & Antonietta: The Dyadic Cyclone.
London, Paladin, 1978.
35 Grant, Joan, & Denys Kelsey: Many Lifetimes.
London, Victor Gollancz, 1968.
36 Grant, Joan: Winged Pharaoh. London, Arthur
Barker, 1937; Sphere Books, 1973.
37 Grant, Joan: Eyes of Horus. London, Eyre Methuen,
1942; Corgi Books, 1975.
38 Grant, Joan: Lord of the Horizon. Eyre Methuen,
1944; Corgi, 1975
39 Grant, Joan: So Moses Was Born. Eyre Methuen,
1952; Corgi, 1975.
40 Weatherhead, Leslie D.: The Case for Reincarnation.
Tadworth (Surrey), M.C. Peto, 1958.
41 See Pisani, Ref.52.
42 Haich, Elisabeth: Initiation. Trans. from the German
by John P.Robertson. London, George Allen &
Unwin, 1965; Palo Alto (Calif.), Seed Center, 1974.
43 Guirdham, Arthur: The Island. Jersey, Neville Spear-
man, 1980.
44 Desjardins, Denise: De Naissance en Naissance.
84 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
Temoignage sur une vie anterieure. Paris, La Table
Ronde, 1977.
45 Desjardins, Arnaud: A la Recherche du Soi II: Le
Vedanta et l'Inconscient. Paris, La Table Ronde, 1978.
See especially Chapter 4
46 Desjardins, Denise: La Memoire des Vies Anterieures.
Ascese et Vies successives. Paris, La Table Ronde,
1980.
47 lb., p.134
48 lb., pp.148-160.
49 lb., P354-
50 Bernstein, Morey: The Search for Bridey Murphy.
New York, Doubleday 1956.
51 Cerminara, Ref.65, Chap.2.
52 Pisani, Isola: Mourir n'est pas Mourir. Memoires de
vies anterieures. Paris, Robert Laffont, 1978.
53 Pisani, Isola: in Alaux's article, Ref.27.
54 Fiore, Edith: You Have Been Here Before. A Psychol-
ogist Looks at Past Lives. London, Sphere Books,
1980.
55 Wambach, Ref. 57,pp.62-66.
56 Iverson, Jeffrey: More Lives than One. London, Pan
Books, 1977.
However, most of the recalls that Iverson presents,
unusual in their wealth of detail and inclusion of
persons known to historians, are from a single
subject, Jane Evans. It has now been shown convin-
cingly (see Ian Wilson: Reincarnation? Penguin
Books, 1982. Special Postscript) that three of Jane
Evans' recalls are based on certain historical novels,
and the one about the massacre of Jews may well be
similarly derived. Such material can quite uncon-
sciously be built up into a fantasy life. Hypnotic
regression experiments must be designed with
great care and awareness of pitfalls to be of any
value.
References and Notes 85
57 Wambach, Helen: Reliving Past Lives: The Evidence
Under Hypnosis. London, Arrow Books, 1980.
58 Re. 59, p.8.
59 Wambach, Helen: Life Before Life. New York,
Bantam Books, 1979
59a It is only fair to point out that certain dangers have
been reported in amateur experiments in hypnotic
regression and one should not plunge into it reck-
lessly without knowing how to guard against them.
6o Guirdham, Arthur: The Cathars and Reincarnation.
London, Neville Spearman, 1970.
61 Oldenbourg, Zoe: Le Bucher de Montsegur. Paris,
Gallimard, 1959, PP340-344
61a Guirdham, Arthur: We Are One Another. Jersey,
Neville Spearman, 1974. pp.222-223.
61b Guirdham, Arthur: The Lake and the Castle. Jersey,
Neville Spearman, 1976. pp-415-419.
62 Guirdham, Ref-43, pp.92 and 102.
63 The Middle Way, 48, 75-78, 1973.
64 Cerminara, Gina: Many Mansions. London, Neville
Spearman, 1967.
65 Cerminara, Gina: The World Within. London, C.W.
Daniel, 1973
66 See Bernstein, Ref.5o, III.3.
67 His Holiness Tenzin Gyatso: The Opening of the
Wisdom-Eye and the History of the Advancement
of Buddhadharma in Tibet. Madras, Theosophical
Publishing House, 1971. pp.22-30.
67a Since this essay was written, a new translation of
the book by the Dalai Lama (see note 67) has
appeared: Opening the Eye of New Awareness, trans-
lated by Donald S. Lopez with Jeffrey Hopkins,
London, Wisdom Publications, 1985. Though this
version is much closer to the original Tibetan, my
criticisms are essentially unaffected.
68 Thubten Zopa: The Wish-fulfilling Golden Sun of the
86 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
Mahayana Thought Training, Directing in the Short-
cut Path to Enlightenment. Kathmandu, Interna-
tional Mahayana Institute; Eudlo (Qld.), Chenrezig
Inst., 1975. pp. 1-2.
69 (LG): Losang Gyatso (bLo bzang rgya mtsho): Srid
zhi'i 'khrul'khor 'byed pa'i legs bshad 'phrul gyi Ide mig
ces bya ba las stod cha, sngon dang phyi ma'i mtha'
brtag pa'i rigs pa'i mdzod ces bya ba. (The Magic Key
of Elegant Sayings Opening the Mechanism of
San:zsara and Nirva7Ja, Part 1: A Treasury of Reason-
ing Analyzing the Past and Future.) Dharamsala,
1977
70 Spencer-Brown, George: Laws of Form. New York,
E.P. Dutton, 1979 pp.xix-xx.
71 Phur bu lcog Byams pa rgya mtsho: Tshad ma'i
gzhung don 'byed pa'i bsdus grva'i rnam bzhag Rigs lam
'phrul gyi lde mig ces bya ba las, Rigs lam chung ngu'i
rnam par bshad pa. Chap. 5, section 2.
72 The Maha-prajfii;iparamita-sastra quotes and refutes
the personalist theory of a subtle body as atman.
Transln: Etienne Lamotte: Le Traite de la Grande
Vertu de Sagesse de Nagarjima, Tome II. Louvain,
Institut Orientaliste, 1949. P744
73 One reason for postulating an indestructible wind
as well as an indestructible mind is so that they can
act as each other's dominant condition.
74 Phur bu lcog Byams pa rgya mtsho: Ref.71, Rigs lam
'bring gi skor, Chap.4, section 2, part 2.
75 Dharmakirti: Prama~Ja-varttika-karika, ll.38a-c.
76 Duddington, C.L.: The Living World. London,
Arthur Barker, 1968. p.14-
77 Unless they extend the idea to mammals such as
mice.
78 rGyal tshab rJe: rNam 'grel thar lam gsa[ byed,
Chap.II. Samath, Pleasure of Elegant Sayings Print-
ing Press, 1974 p.254.12.
References and Notes 87
79 St. Anselm: The Ontological Proof of St. Anselm. In
Wolff, op.cit.Ref.21, p.1oo.
8o Ref.67, p.26.
81 Ref.78, p.252.
82 Candrakirti: Madhyamakiivatiira. Ed. L.de la Vallee
Poussin, p.2o8.
83 Lenin, V.I.: Socialism and Religion (1905). Transln in:
K.Marx, F.Engels & V.Lenin: On Historical Material-
ism. New York, International Publishers, 1974.
pp.411-414.
84 Randall, Ref.8g, p.21.
85 e.g. Smith, John Maynard: The Theory of Evolution.
Penguin Books.
86 Monod, Jacques: Chance and Necessity. Transl.
Austryn Wainhouse. London, Fontana Books, 1974.
87 Merrell-Wolff, Franklin: The Philosophy of Con-
sciousness Without an Object. Reflections on the
Nature of Transcendental Consciousness. New
York, Julian Press, 1973. p.12.
88 Rose, Steven: The Conscious Brain. Penguin Books,
1976. p.365.
89 Randall, John L.: Parapsychology and the Nature of
Life. London, Abacus, 1977.
go Ref.87, p.11. 1896 is when Becquerel discovered the
radioactive disintegration of uranium.
91 LeShan, L.: The Medium, the Mystic, and the Phy-
sicist. London, Turnstone, 1974.
92 Charon, Jean E.: L'Esprit, cet inconnu. Verviers
(Belgium), Marabout, 1977. According to his theory
(p.151), each electron in the body would remember
its own set of past existences.
93 James, William: The Will to Believe. In Wolff, op.cit.
Ref.21, P-470.
94 Rose, Ref.88, p.364.
95 Schrodinger, Erwin: What is Life? and, Mind and
Matter. Cambridge, Univ. Press, 1967. pp.126-137.
88 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
96 Spinoza, B.: Ethics, Pt.III, prop.2. Quoted by Schro-
dinger.
97 Monod, Ref.86, p.148.
98 Merrell-Wolff, Ref.87, p.151.
99 Or, as happened last week, a bus is driving through
Lausanne when a crane collapses on it, killing seven
people. Who would seriously claim that since the
victims must have created the karma for such a
death, it is pointless to seek the physical cause of
this accident, or that no responsibility attaches to
whoever may have been negligent in maintaining
the crane?
100 e.g. Story's essay "Rebirth and the Western Think-
er" (Ref.29, pp.30-45) contains several blunders.
101 See also Koestler, Arthur: The Roots of Coincidence.
London, Picador, 1974. Chap.3, "Seriality and Syn-
chronicity".
102 Monod, Ref.86, pp.111-112.
103 Mi la'i mgur 'bum (The Hundred Thousand Songs of
Milarepa), Chap.3, p.18a.
104 Story, Ref.29, pp.21o-i12.
105 lb., pp.2o8-9.
106 Nelli, Rene: La Philosophie du Catharisme. Paris,
Payot, 1978. pp.183-4.
107 Pisani, Ref.52, pp.194-7 & 202-6.
108 lb., p.179
109 Story, Ref.29, pp.252 -9.
110 Haich, Ref.42, p.336.
111 Grant, Ref.36, Pt.IV, Chap.2-6.
112 lb., Pt.VI, Chap.7.
113 Cerminara, Ref. 64, p.29.
114 lb., p.148.
115 We assume that Wambach's subjects are more or
less typical of the human race as a whole. While
people of different countries must differ somewhat
in their past-life histories, and conceivably people
References and Notes 89
with more previous human existences might be
more likely to take part in such experiments, one
cannot reasonably suppose either that the subjects
are a race apart among Americans or that Americans
are the only people on Earth who have mostly
avoided being animals or worse throughout the last
four millennia.
116 e.g. Rhodes, F.H.T.: The Evolution of Life. Penguin
Books, 2nd ed., 1976.
117 Vickerman, Keith, & Francis E.G. Cox: The Pro-
tozoa. John Murray, 1967.
118 Quoted by Murti, Ref.17, P47
119 e.g. Geshe Rabten: The Preliminary Practices. Dha-
ramsala, Lib. Tib. Works and Archives, 1974. P37
120 Bareau, Andre: Les Sectes Bouddhiques du Petit Vihi-
cule. Paris, Ecole Fran<;aise d'Extreme-Orient, 1955.
p.291, etc.
121 La Vallee Poussin, L.de: L'Abhidharmakosa de Vasu-
bandhu. Melanges Chinois et Bouddhiques, Vol.-
XVI, Tome II, p.32 n.1.
122 Bhadantacariya Buddhaghosa: The Path of Purifica-
tion. Transl. Bhikkhu Nyat.:tamoli. Boulder, Sham-
bhala, 1976. XIX.22-23.
123 Pratftyasamutpiida-ht;idaya, 5
124 Prasannapadii, 5445
125 Lamotte, Ref.72, P745
126 Ref.121, pp.31-57.
127 Le Compendium de Ia Superdoctrine (Philosophie)
(Abhidharma-samuccaya) d' Asanga. Transl. Walpola
Rahula. Paris, Ecole Fran<;aise d'Extreme-Orient,
1971. p.68.
128 rJe Tsong kha pa: Byang chub lam rim che ba.
Dharamsala ed., pp.159a-162a.
129 La Vallee Poussin, Ref.121, P37 n.1.
130 Abhidharmakosa, ill.13-15.
131 All this paragraph after Re.126.
90 Rebirth and the Western Buddhist
132 Wambach, Ref.57 & p.26 of Ref.59.
133 Ref.59, pp.173 & 176.
134 Story, Ref.29, pp.275-6.
135 lb., p.192.
136 Ref.121, p.48 and n.2.
137 Ref.128, p.16oa5.
138 Wambach, Ref.59, Chap. V. Here one can expect
some bias in that people seeking spiritual growth
would be more likely to participate.
139 Cerrninara, Ref.64, pp.201, 202.
140 Wambach, Ref.59, Chap.VI.
141 Story, Ref.29, pp.183-190.