Familial Reincarnation Dynamics, NOUSLETTER II

A son is, by no coincidence, impressed with the condition of his father – as though by inertia. More often than not in the world we find ourselves in, this is not in the interest of the son. Especially if that son is given to living in reference to the contents of his mind, suffering inertia more than is necessary. A soul in itself is a metastructure, by itself it has no condition in the sense we assign character, disposition and personality to individuals. The soul is however, by the inherent nature of that default metastructure, involutionary, as in, it involves itself with conditions. The soul is posteriorly defined by these conditions, in a way the unconditioned soul can be thought of as prior to soul, a nous perhaps. As such the advent of involution should be likened to the genesis of soul. The development of condition is the development of definition, and what happens as definition increases? Plurality and particularity increase. Those souls around me and my own participate in a developed stage of this process, and given that a defined thing is always relative to what it is not, what is more like it and what is less like it, there are discernable genera and species of soul – defined precisely by Common Conditional Involution.

And so the souls who share conditions in common tend to develop those conditions together, bound by inertia, the power behind all ease and rest – to defy which is to struggle and labor. This can be regarded as mutual participation in the same conditions, recursively affecting the soul, which can be seen in the living of life together. It is likely these souls reincarnate together, and there are two ways this might be thought to occur. One being a linear cycle in the same world-instance, wherein fathers where father their sons again and likewise be fathered, somewhere down the line of a family’s posterity. However, this cannot stand, for the same reason a singular world-instance simply defies necessity. The soul incarnates exactly according to the condition it has colored itself with, how possible is it that this would sympathize with a far off future? If souls were stepping out of the one world-instance only to step back in at a mandated moment, what would provide its impetus for incarnation at that moment? In fact, if the soul does not reincarnate according precisely to condition, what determines its return at all? This would require an arbiter, neglect for the continuity of the condition of the soul – which in turn arouses materialism, or some otherwise process that is seemingly arbitrary and random. The next plausibility should in truth be considered several compatible notions, all of which afford logical necessity with the entertainment of plural world-instances, that is, many worlds or a Langanian metaverse. The first is a dynamic but highly complex system wherein souls transition between worlds according precisely to condition, but without progressing the understanding – it seems unlikely that all familial souls would preserve the coherency with one another required for this.

Enter the second variable, that a single immediate soul such as you here, or me here, is indeed contained by a higher scale soul that is somewhat particular to you or I – but which itself has multiple smaller scale instantiations. An increase in conditional universality, a universal conditional you. If this were the case, conditional deviation from a particular you by another particular relative soul, might actually be an increase in proximity with another you-instance. This certainly occurs, but ultimately it is probable that a truer divergence between souls does occur as well. If the oversoul we bring to mind now is still conditioned, as is that of the family member, then it stands to reason these oversouls could diverge. Conditions are relative, therefore more, or less similar. As conditions develop, they either increase their proximity or their distance. A man and his wife increase their proximity as they create a home together and fill it with children, proof of the conditional intermingling, convergence, and the evolution of two species which were once one, divergence.


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