The science of reincarnation

j d worthington

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Okay... here's one to go along with the article on Darwin's God....

Belief in Reincarnation Tied to Memory Errors - Yahoo! News

From LiveScience, titled "Belief in Reincarnation Tied to Memory Errors", by Melinda Wenner, datelined Fri., Apr. 6, 2007:

People who believe they have lived past lives as, say, Indian princesses or battlefield commanders are more likely to make certain types of memory errors, according to a new study.

The propensity to make these mistakes could, in part, explain why people cling to implausible reincarnation claims in the first place.


Researchers recruited people who, after undergoing hypnotic therapy, had come to believe that they had past lives.

Subjects were asked to read aloud a list of 40 non-famous names, and then, after a two-hour wait, told that they were going to see a list consisting of three types of names: non-famous names they had already seen (from the earlier list), famous names, and names of non-famous people that they had not previously seen. Their task was to identify which names were famous.


The researchers found that, compared to control subjects who dismissed the idea of reincarnation, past-life believers were almost twice as likely to misidentify names. In particular, their tendency was to wrongly identify as famous the non-famous names they had seen in the first task. This kind of error, called a source-monitoring error, indicates that a person has difficulty recognizing where a memory came from.

People who are likely to make these kinds of errors might end up convincing themselves of things that aren’t true, said lead researcher Maarten Peters of Maastricht University in The Netherlands. When people who are prone to making these mistakes undergo hypnosis and are repeatedly asked to talk about a potential idea—like a past life—they might, as they grow more familiar with it, eventually convert the idea into a full-blown false memory.


This is because they can’t distinguish between things that have really happened and things that have been suggested to them, Peters told LiveScience.


Past life memories are not the only type of implausible memories that have been studied in this manner. Richard McNally, a clinical psychologist at Harvard University, has found that self-proclaimed alien abductees are also twice as likely to commit source monitoring errors.

As for what might make people more prone to committing such errors to begin with, McNally says that it could be the byproduct of especially vivid imagery skills. He has found that people who commonly make source-monitoring errors respond to and imagine experiences more strongly than the average person, and they also tend to be more creative.


“It might be harder to discriminate between a vivid image that you’d generated yourself and the memory of a perception of something you actually saw,” he said in a telephone interview.


Peters also found in his study, detailed in the March issue of Consciousness and Cognition, that people with implausible memories are also more likely to be depressed and to experience sleep problems, and this could also make them more prone to memory mistakes.


And once people make this kind of mistake, they might be inclined to stick to their guns for spiritual reasons, McNally said. “It may be a variant expression of certain religious impulses,” he said. “We suspect that this might be kind of a psychological buffering mechanism against the fear of death.”

You know, with that line about alien abductees... I'm wondering if you'd get the same results with those who claimed to be visited by incubi and succubi? While most of that is long gone, it has seen a slight resurgence in the last 25 years or so, and certainly there are strong parallels between the two types....
 
Okay... here's one to go along with the article on Darwin's God....

Belief in Reincarnation Tied to Memory Errors - Yahoo! News

From LiveScience, titled "Belief in Reincarnation Tied to Memory Errors", by Melinda Wenner, datelined Fri., Apr. 6, 2007:

You know, with that line about alien abductees... I'm wondering if you'd get the same results with those who claimed to be visited by incubi and succubi? While most of that is long gone, it has seen a slight resurgence in the last 25 years or so, and certainly there are strong parallels between the two types....
Thank you for quoting a Dutch Scientist,who are all mad by the way.
Most of them have been abducted by that most alien of organisations.the Department of Education...:)
 
Incubi and succubi are just the older version of aliens. Now that satellite monitoring is standard and most reasonable people believe they would see a UFO about to go into landing preparations, it's not inconceivable to believe that the older visitations are being reported more frequently. Nobody has ever claimed to have built a reliable devil-detector after all. :p
 
One thing I have learnt from reincarntaion is that there were many Cleopatra's and hardly any slaves and beggars. Funny, I had always thought that it was the other way around.
 
I wonder if these same people have especially vivd childhood memories? For example, I clearly remember flying as a child numerous times, but I have to assume they were dreams as I'm not a complete whacko. Never thought I lived a past though. Maybe this life is just my first.;)
 
One thing I have learnt from reincarntaion is that there were many Cleopatra's

And Ann Boleyn's !

Yes I have always wondered this too. Very few people seem to have been ordinary in a past life.
 
I wonder if these same people have especially vivd childhood memories? For example, I clearly remember flying as a child numerous times, but I have to assume they were dreams as I'm not a complete whacko. Never thought I lived a past though. Maybe this life is just my first.;)

Yep. That was a very vivid memory for me. I have others back there, too; but those I am not willing to discuss, as they would have the guys in the white coats coming for me like gangbusters!:rolleyes:

I know I've a vivid imagination, for one thing. And I know enough about how my mind works to be able to track down the origins of such fugitive images, impulses, and memories... sometimes it's quite a winding road....
 

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