Does achieving "oneness" after death mean loss of individuality?
Michael Tymn recently did a little essay on whether "oneness" in the afterlife means loss of human individuality, loss of the sense that "I am I, the individual unique personality". If this is so then there is ultimately no afterlife at least in human terms. The essay is in his blog at http://whitecrowbooks.com/michaeltymn/en...viduality/.
Tymn doesn't think so, and for an answer on this he mainly cites as sources various channeled messages on this received by different accomplished mediums over the last century or so. Included are messages from Emanuel Swedenborg through a late 19th century medium, from Silver Birch communicated through Maurice Barbanell, from Frederic W. H. Myers through Geraldine Cummins, and from the group soul known as Imperator through William Stainton Moses. The general message seems to be that the person never loses his "I am I" sense of individuality.
Do NDE accounts figure into this question? I don't think so, since these experiences are of just of the initial stages of the afterlife. In any case the experiencers seem to generally not lose themselves, their sense of "I am I".
Michael Tymn recently did a little essay on whether "oneness" in the afterlife means loss of human individuality, loss of the sense that "I am I, the individual unique personality". If this is so then there is ultimately no afterlife at least in human terms. The essay is in his blog at http://whitecrowbooks.com/michaeltymn/en...viduality/.
Tymn doesn't think so, and for an answer on this he mainly cites as sources various channeled messages on this received by different accomplished mediums over the last century or so. Included are messages from Emanuel Swedenborg through a late 19th century medium, from Silver Birch communicated through Maurice Barbanell, from Frederic W. H. Myers through Geraldine Cummins, and from the group soul known as Imperator through William Stainton Moses. The general message seems to be that the person never loses his "I am I" sense of individuality.
Quote:"Silver Birch, the name taken by the apparent group soul communicating through the mediumship of British journalist Maurice Barbanell, put it this way: “The ultimate is not attainment of Nirvana. All spiritual progress is toward increasing individuality. You do not become less of an individual, you become more of an individual. You develop latent gifts, you acquire greater knowledge, your character becomes stronger, more of the divine is exhibited through you. The Great Spirit is infinite and so there is an infinite development to be achieved. Perfection is never attained, there is a constant striving towards it. You do not ever lose yourself. What you succeed in doing is finding yourself.”
Silver Birch went on to say that such conditions are beyond human language and that we cannot understand it until we attain it. “You do not lose your individuality in a sea of greater consciousness, but that depth of the ocean becomes included in your individuality,” Silver Birch added."
Do NDE accounts figure into this question? I don't think so, since these experiences are of just of the initial stages of the afterlife. In any case the experiencers seem to generally not lose themselves, their sense of "I am I".