Four bodies
Quote:In The Supreme Adventure, Robert Crookall summarizes a great deal of evidence pointing to the idea that matter, in some sense, is part of the soul's experience throughout nearly all if its journey. Some kind of "body" is necessary, he argues, even at higher levels of development. Specifically he argues for four bodies, initially intertwined. They are:
- the physical body
- the vehicle of vitality, or the aura, which enshrouds the other bodies and serves as an interface between the physical and the spiritual realms
- the soul body, which shines brightly once the vehicle of vitality has been cast off; and
- the spirit body, the highest and most sensitive vessel.
Quote:According to Crookall, most people will experience two life reviews. The first, occurring at the point of death, is unemotional and without moral significance — one's whole life flashes before one's eyes, but with no judgments being rendered. Crookall interprets this experience as the vehicle of vitality imprinting itself on the soul body. The second life review comes after the vehicle of vitality has been discarded, when the soul (now in touch with the higher self) is able to survey the panorama of its earthly life and form mature judgements about it. To distinguish it from the first life review, Crookall calls this one the Judgment.
Crookall acknowledges that some people have experienced the Judgment at a surprisingly early point in the dying process. Even in his day, before the term "near-death experience" had been coined, there were scattered reports of people who had nearly died but had been revived, a few of whom had reported a life review complete with moral judgment. He says that such reports pertain only to a minority of cases, which still appears to be true; most NDEs do not include the Judgment. In his opinion, NDErs who undergo the Judgment are those whose vehicle of vitality is unusually "loose" to begin with. Mediums, psychics, seers, and people of elevated spiritual awareness are characterized (he thinks) by a looser vehicle of vitality, which accounts for their spiritual or paranormal gifts. Such people may experience the Judgment right away, but others must wait until the soul body has entirely cast off the vehicle of vitality.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell