Primitive man in southern Asia had a peculiar and fellow feeling for the higher animals, believing in man's return as animals, a survival of worshiping animals. [1] Throughout all these regions, older Jews, Plato, Philo, and Essenes tolerated belief in reincarnation. [2] Only spornagia experience reincarnation in the universe of Nebadon, reacting solely to the first five adjutant mind-spirits. [3] The primitive idea of reincarnation stemmed from the observance of hereditary resemblance and the custom of naming children after ancestors. [4]
Upon death, the human subject temporarily loses identity but not personality; on the mansion worlds, both reunite in eternal manifestation, as spirits do not return to their planet of birth. [5]
The stultifying belief in weary and monotonous lives perpetuated a fear of endless round of successive incarnations, robbing struggling mortals of hope for deliverance and spiritual advancement. [6]