Across Gnostic, Hermetic, Kabbalistic, Platonic, and certain Vedic streams, the dominant idea is:Humans are born with a soul-seed or spark, not a fully realized soul.The soul is something that must be grown, activated, or crystallized.In Nag Hammadi texts (e.g., The Apocryphon of John, Pistis Sophia):Humanity is divided into:Hylic (purely material)Psychic (soul-capable)Pneumatic (spirit-awakened)Key idea:Some humans possess only animal soul (instinct, emotion).The divine spark (pneuma) must be awakened through gnosis.In the Corpus Hermeticum:Humans are born between animal and divine.The Nous (divine mind) descends only if prepared.The soul becomes immortal through knowledge, alignment, and purification.In Jewish mysticism (especially Lurianic Kabbalah):The soul has five levels:Nephesh – animal life-force (everyone has this)Ruach – emotional/moral soul (many develop)Neshamah – higher soul (earned / awakened)ChayahYechidahCrucially:One is not born with all levelsHigher levels are acquired through tikkun (rectification)Reincarnation occurs because the soul is unfinishedThis is explicit: the soul grows.Plato (initiated into Egyptian mysteries) taught:The soul pre-exists but forgets itselfEmbodiment is a testPhilosophy (meaning love of wisdom) restores memoryFailure = reincarnation or dissolution into lower forms of being.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIGr3hOWEDc
>>41710937>certain Vedic streamsReally? Which ones? They contradict the Gita, then.>18.20: That knowledge by which one undivided spiritual nature is seen in all living entities, though they are divided into innumerable forms, you should understand to be in the mode of goodness.>21: That knowledge by which one sees that in every different body there is a different type of living entity you should understand to be in the mode of passion.>22: And that knowledge by which one is attached to one kind of work as the all in all*, without knowledge of the truth, and which is very meager, is said to be in the mode of darkness.* - this alludes to the atheistic, or more specifically those that would say things like "it's all about sex and reproduction" or "you're just a complex chemical reaction" or basically anyone pointing to material endeavor as the reason for awareness.
>>41710937you nailed it, anon. sad part is reincarnation is little more complicated and more pitfall heavy than i initially thought. a lot of people go to "hell", a tortuous parallel dimension on earth. there are many evil spirits actively working hard to break as many souls as possible for their energy and enslavement.
>>41711082>a tortuous parallel dimension on earth.Hermetic and alchemical texts describe:The astral body dissolves after deathUnless it is integrated with higher soulIf not integrated, it becomes a phantasmThese phantasms:Retain personality traitsMimic intelligenceRespond to emotionBut lack true consciousnessThis explains séance phenomena in esoteric terms; echoes, not entities.In Kabbalah:Souls that cannot complete tikkun may lingerA dybbuk is a displaced soul fragmentOften tied to unresolved desire, guilt, or obsessionBuddhism is extremely explicit:Hungry ghosts are beings who:Are driven by cravingCannot satisfy itExist in a liminal realmAre shaped by attachmentThey are not evil.They are stuck.From the texts’ perspective:Some post-mortem states are incompleteAttachment delays reintegrationWhat lingers is not the true soulLiberation comes through release, not struggleOr, stated simply:What cannot let go, cannot move on.
>>41711156NDEs describe the post-mortem world as more lucid than the one we're experiencing currently, but those texts more or less align with NDEs pretty well, although many of the ones I read about were less about purgatory and definitely concerning a realm of perdition. I don't think this is merely delusion, and actually a real realm.regardless, great topic, very informative. be good everyone, dont squander your chance to get off this planet and make it a better place along the way.
>>41710937>Plato (initiated into Egyptian mysteries)Is that true? Is there evidence of that or is that speculation based on what he knew?I mean it's possible and it would be interested to know. But it also lends credibility to a central truth if he came to these conclusions completely on his own through philosophy. And then there's india with buddihsm and Hinduism having similar thoughts.I also thibk it's very possible that Jesus was initiated. Into Kaballah, or even an Egyptian mystery since that's where it said he live a portion of his early life. It's also he was part of some other Jewish mystery sect that we don't know about or he was starting up himself with John The Baptist. Baptism does represent an initiation and a cleansing.
>>41711220>I also thibk it's very possible that Jesus was initiated.Multiple independent traditions reference a disruptive teacher in Roman JudeaEarly Christian writings are not uniform (a red flag for later consolidation)Roman records reference followers, not doctrineThe earliest depictions of Jesus vary wildly (teacher, logos, light-being, cosmic principle)Esoteric traditions are comfortable with this:Mythologization does not negate historicityIt usually means control followed impactIf we strip away later theology and look only at the core sayings attributed to Jesus, we find:Inner kingdom (“The Kingdom of God is within you”)Rebirth through awareness (“born again”)Parables instead of dogmaNon-attachmentDirect access to the divineWarnings against religious authoritiesEmphasis on knowing, not believingThey align strongly with:Buddhism (non-attachment, illusion, compassion)Taoism (non-resistance, inner alignment)Hermeticism (gnosis, logos)Essene mysticismPlatonismThis suggests cross-cultural transmission, not isolated revelation.Let’s be precise.A teacher who says:God is within youNo priest is requiredThe law is internalThe poor are equal to kingsThe temple is obsoleteFear is unnecessaryDeath is not ultimate…is existentially dangerous to:Temple hierarchiesRoman administrationPriestly intermediariesEconomic systems based on sacrifice and guiltThis is not about theology—it’s about power topology.
>>41711244I agree with most of that. And when you bring gnostic christian beliefs into the mix, the parallels with Buddhism get even stronger.What I don't agree with is this>This suggests cross-cultural transmission, not isolated revelation.That is completely possible for sure. But...if there is a central perennial truth, people would come to it independently if they are seekers and filter it through their own cultural beliefs and understanding. Suggesting that there is a perennial divine experience and a way to access it. And if they all come to a similar core conclusion that is cross cultural, that speaks to a higher unified truth. Which ai think is your whole point right?I think were on the same wavelength.
>>41711272>Suggesting that there is a perennial divine experience and a way to access it.NTAI think there are some basic categories of experience that are then translated according to time place and circumstance, but I dont think there is one universal conception everyone arrives at. I think some of the conceptions we have arrived at are incompatible, though still pointing to the same divine.I attribute this to the Supreme being transcendent to what could "make sense."
>>41711290I'm not saying all religions are true, because people can come to false conclusions, construct flase faiths, and religions and belief systems evolve over time. Like those people on that island who built that religion on US supply drops, not everything is real. Basically if somone claims to be a mystic, and they come to similar core ideas as someone else does, cross culturally, that's who you should pay attention to. What's true is selective, but there is a central truth.
>>41711272>And if they all come to a similar core conclusion that is cross cultural, that speaks to a higher unified truth.When you strip religions of:Political authorityTribal identityExclusive truth claimsLater dogmaWhat remains is a remarkably consistent core:Ethical reciprocity (golden-rule variants)Inner transformation over external ritualDetachment from compulsive desireCompassion as a stabilizing principleAlignment with an underlying order (Tao, Logos, Dharma, Rta)Ignorance as the root of sufferingThis appears in:Early Christianity (especially non-canonical)BuddhismTaoismStoicismVedantaHermeticismThat convergence is hard to explain without positing either:A shared human psychological substrate, orA shared ancient framework that diversified over timeBoth can be true simultaneously.If we take Jesus as:A real teacher orA composite of teachingsOr even a symbolic figure representing an initiatory stateWhat matters is what happened next.Very early on, debates shifted from:“How should one live?”to“Who has authority?”“What must one believe?”“Which version is legitimate?”That shift correlates strongly with:InstitutionalizationEmpire adoptionLegal enforcementBoundary drawingOnce belief replaces practice, division becomes inevitable.
>>41711315>I'm not saying all religions are trueNor am I.I am saying there are incompatible conceptions that are both completely true.People like the blind people touching an elephant, or that graphic of the object with lights shining on it.I prefer pic related as the metaphor.Both viewers are looking at the "real image".both have all the info, no misconception.One says it is a young woman, and they are right.One says it is an old woman, and they are right.I know you want to say "but there is only one image", and thjat's fine.My point is down here, there will be conceptions that will NEVER say the same thing.Neither are wrong, even as they say the other is wrong.No matter how long they develop or how much they squint.And that's fine.they are both right, because the real Supreme - not the paltry metaphor image - is not "one thing" or limited in any such way.
>>41711320>Very early on, debates shifted from:>“How should one live?”>to>“Who has authority?”>“What must one believe?”>“Which version is legitimate?”>That shift correlates strongly with:>Institutionalization>Empire adoption>Legal enforcement>Boundary drawing>Once belief replaces practice, division becomes inevitable.This aligns with well-established cognitive dynamics:Humans bond more strongly over shared enemies than shared valuesAbstract principles unite; concrete dogmas divideIdentity hardens around specifics, not universalsSo if a universal framework exists, the most effective way to neutralize it is not to destroy it; but to multiply versions of it.Not chaos as destruction; but chaos as noise.
>>41711320This is what makes the new testament and non canon writings of Christianity so interesting because we can observe that entire process happening in real time and in a relatively short amount of time. All written down within a generation of the teacher. Most religions have an oral tradition, or hundreds of years between the stages of their evolution. Within 400 years Christianity goes from not existing to being the holy roman empire.All you have to do is take off the "this is a holy book" lense and view it through a historical lense, and that's what the new testament is, that exact story you described being told. From the progression of the gospels and mythology evolving, where there's not even a resurrection in the original version, to John where Jesus is declaring himself God. Then Paul turning it into a religion and working out the dogma.
>>41711315All religions are true in the sense that all religions are built on the same magical foundations. But they also pursue different goals, may be incomplete or corrupted.