Da_Vid Posted July 12 Hi and warm hello from David. Could someone tell me where I can find the book about afterlife or if could someone tell me a wider description about afterlife in Daoism? 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Chang dao ling Posted July 23 Check Jerry alan Johnson books. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
exorcist_1699 Posted August 12 (edited) On 7/12/2024 at 11:04 PM, Da_Vid said: Hi and warm hello from David. Could someone tell me where I can find the book about afterlife or if could someone tell me a wider description about afterlife in Daoism? Despite reincarnation originally not a Taoist concept , in fact it comes from Buddhism , Taoism does make use of it yet in the terms of jing ,qi and shen . A person dies because he uses up all jing and qi in his body , or in some cases, his physical body seriously damaged , that his spirit ( a yin-typed of shen ) is forced to leave . In most cases, this reluctantly forced to leave, yin-type of spirit cannot take its fate along in its own hands ; without a physical body , it may roam a long time in some places , say in an old fortress , a deserted tunnel or under a desolate bridge near seashore for some reasons .. not necessarily going into an afterlife soon after death ; even if it can incarnate, in what life form : a woman , a pig or a worm ..is no guarantee . So ,Taoism emphasizes on the everlasting life , an achievement better be accomplished in THIS lifetime as long as some yang-qi still lurking inside the physical body , not the afterlife. Edited August 13 by exorcist_1699 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Cobie Posted August 12 (edited) Reincarnation as a belief was indigenous to China (not a Buddhist import). Jade was already found in Neolithic burial sites. Jade was symbolic for the cicades which were symbolic for reincarnation. Edited August 12 by Cobie 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Daniel Posted August 12 (edited) . Edited August 12 by Daniel Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
stirling Posted August 12 Complete realization of the Dao obviates and makes impossible the idea of some separate afterlife. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
exorcist_1699 Posted August 13 17 hours ago, Cobie said: Reincarnation as a belief was indigenous to China (not a Buddhist import). Jade was already found in Neolithic burial sites. Jade was symbolic for the cicades which were symbolic for reincarnation. Here I refer to reincarnation , as mentioned , a series of repeated afterlives , not just some simple idea of afterlife . Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Master Logray Posted August 14 The belief of reincarnation/coming back again is very common everywhere over the history, worldwide. China Taoism and folk religions believe in it. But it is the Buddhist that explains reincarnation as 1. a system 2. a mandatory process 3. a continuous process, previous lives affect future lives 4. its working based on Karma, or "tendencies" in modern explanation. While the Taoist/Folk religion believe that reincarnation is optional. It timing and way is sometimes and somehow self-controlled. There is hell court to enforce punishments before jumping into another life. So sometimes the reincarnated soul is given a clean slate instead of perpetually affected by karma in many previous cycles. In fact the Path to Immortalship i.e. internal alchemy is contrary to a rigid reincarnation system. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites