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| Further Exposure of Transmigration, Its Inextricable Embarrassment. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXXI.—Further Exposure of Transmigration, Its Inextricable
Embarrassment.
Again, if this recovery of life from the dead take
place at all, individuals must of course resume their own
individuality. Therefore the souls which animated each several body
must needs have returned separately to their several bodies. Now,
whenever two, or three, or five souls are re-enclosed (as they
constantly are) in one womb, it will not amount in such cases to life
from the dead, because there is not the separate restitution which
individuals ought to have; although at this rate, (no doubt,) the law
of the primeval creation is signally kept,1715
1715 Signatur. Rigaltius
reads “singulatur,” after the Codex Agobard.,
as meaning, “The single origin of the human race is in
principle maintained,” etc. | by
the production still of several souls out of only one! Then, again, if
souls depart at different ages of human life, how is it that they come
back again at one uniform age? For all men are imbued with an
infant soul at their birth. But how happens it that a man who
dies in old age returns to life as an infant? If the soul, whilst
disembodied, decreases thus by retrogression of its age, how much more
reasonable would it be, that it should resume its life with a richer
progress in all attainments of life after the lapse of a thousand
years! At all events, it should return with the age it had attained at
its death, that it might resume the precise life which it had
relinquished. But even if, at this rate, they should reappear the same
evermore in their revolving cycles, it would be proper for them to
bring back with them, if not the selfsame forms of body, at least their
original peculiarities of character, taste, and disposition, because it
would be hardly possible1716 for them to be
regarded as the same, if they were deficient in those characteristics
by means of which their identity should be proved. (You, however, meet
me with this question): How can you possibly know, you ask, whether all
is not a secret process? may not the work of a thousand years take from
you the power of recognition, since they return unknown to you? But I
am quite certain that such is not the case, for you yourself present
Pythagoras to me as (the restored) Euphorbus. Now look at Euphorbus: he
was evidently possessed of a military and warlike soul, as is proved by
the very renown of the sacred shields. As for Pythagoras, however, he
was such a recluse, and so unwarlike, that he shrank from the military
exploits of which Greece was then so full, and preferred to devote
himself, in the quiet retreat of Italy, to the study of geometry, and
astrology, and music—the very opposite to Euphorbus in taste and
disposition. Then, again, the Pyrrhus (whom he represented) spent
his time in catching fish; but Pythagoras, on the contrary, would never
touch fish, abstaining from even the taste of them as from animal food.
Moreover, Æthalides and Hermotimus had included the bean amongst
the common esculents at meals, while Pythagoras taught his disciples
not even to pass through a plot which was cultivated with beans. I ask,
then, how the same souls are resumed, which can offer no proof of their
identity, either by their disposition, or habits, or living? And now,
after all, (we find that) only four souls are mentioned as recovering
life1717 out of all the multitudes of Greece. But
limiting ourselves merely to Greece, as if no transmigrations of souls
and resumptions of bodies occurred, and that every day, in every
nation, and amongst all ages, ranks, and sexes, how is it that
Pythagoras alone experiences these changes into one personality and
another? Why should not I too undergo them? Or if it be a privilege
monopolized by philosophers—and Greek philosophers only, as if
Scythians and Indians had no philosophers—how is it that Epicurus
had no recollection that he had been once another man, nor Chrysippus,
nor Zeno, nor indeed Plato himself, whom we might perhaps have supposed
to have been Nestor, from his honeyed eloquence?E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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