TobyLue: This is my response to your questions you asked in an earlier post. I separated and put your questions into numbered format. It should still be true to your actual words.
- But when he is born again, is that man conscience of what he has done in his previous life?
answer: not unless he reaches enlightenment in the human realm. There is no soul that survives “death”. There’s no transmigration of a soul into another body. There’s only consciousness.
- So would it be correct to say that all those people who are destitute, homeless, sick, are suffering because they did something wrong in their previous lives?
answer: not necessarily. It could be due to what they have done in their present life. karma explains that all actions are either wholesome or unwholesome. When negative karma is extinguished then rebirth into a higher realm is possible. If in the present life one has led a horrible life of murder, lying, etc. then they would be creating negative karma which would affect their rebirth in a negative way. The teaching of karma and rebirth (as I have explained in other posts) is a difficult one. Some adhere to this teaching as a physical reality as real as you are reading this post. Others, such as myself, see this only as a mental construction or reality.
- If so how do they know what it was they did so they can correct it and next time be born into a better life?
answer: good question. I’ve asked this myself. The view is that one’s present actions are all that is possible to determine. Let the past lie. Look to the present and make a conscious choice now to change your future. Create positive karma. You can’t change the past. You can only change right now - in the present. So, it’s kind of a moot point.
- And who decides what type of life they are going to be reborn into?
answer: karma decides. Karma is an impersonal force or law that simply exists.
- There would have to be some judge to decide, don’t you think? Who is to judge a person worthy of Nirvana? If Buddhism declines to take a stand on guilt and sin and a divine being, who then is to judge what is wholesome and what is unwholesome?
answer: this is hard for Westerners like ourselves to fathom. We think this way because of our pre-conceived Western theistic ideas. It makes sense to have a personal judge. That’s just simply not the teaching of Buddhism. Again, karma is the law of cause and effect. It’s the moral impersonal force that decides. You push the chair - it moves. You steal from someone, you will be stolen from.
- What if the man who leads a very, very unwholesome life thinks it is wholesome from his perspective?
answer: he has to see beyond illusion to see the reality of his actions. Here is a statement from Buddha himself in relation to what you are seeking:
When you know for yourselves that, ‘These qualities are unskillful; these qualities are blameworthy; these qualities are criticized by the wise; these qualities, when adopted and carried out, lead to harm and to suffering’ – then you should abandon them… When you know for yourselves that, ‘These qualities are skillful; these qualities are blameless; these qualities are praised by the wise; these qualities, when adopted and carried out, lead to welfare and to happiness’ – then you should enter and remain in them."
- *Now, I’m not going to judge these two persons, only God knows, but per Buddhism, where would Hitler, and Stalin, currently be. And if they are now in a lower state of life, do they know what wrong they did? *
answer: Hitler would be in the lowest hell which is excruciatingly worse than the Christian belief in hell. For example, for murderers - say by stabbing - that person would be stabbed repeatedly in the lowest hell till their negative karma would be extinguished. I don’t know much about Stalin, but I assume the same would be true for him. There is no recollection of the past life unless one achieves enlightenment in the human realm. When Buddha became enlightened he saw all his previous lives and knew all his previous names. The same can be said to be true of all his disciples who achieved arhantship which is one step away from Buddhahood (If I understand it correctly).
Hopefully this helped answer your questions. If not, I’ll try again.
Peace…