D I V I S I O N T H E O R Y
EXPLAINS JUDGMENT DAY


"All natural systems tend to self-correct
and re-balance themselves if left alone."

- Systems Theory



The human mind is a natural system.

If DivisionTheory is correct, and reincarnation really is a part of life's picture, then the Bible's whole concept of Judgment Day must be radically reevaluated. Surprisingly, adding reincarnation into the mix actually makes the whole idea of a Universal Resurrection necessary and predictable, but at the same time changes the whole face of such an event. If we have all been reincarnating down through history, then raising the dead takes on a whole new meaning -- reawakening the past-life memories of our own previous selves.

Dividing apart when we die is an error that entered into the natural system, and when the natural system finally re-establishes its health and balance, those divisions will all be reversed. In other words, all our dead will rise again, and all of our parts, now scattered across time, will be reunited.

THIS, then, is the "Great and Terrible Day of the Lord". "Great" because the dead will rise and we will regain everything we thought we'd lost forever, including full knowledge of all our past identities, memories, histories, talents, knowledge, and wisdom. "Terrible" because the dead will rise, and we will finally have to confront the fruit of our own actions. We will see with our own minds, and feel with our own hearts, the karma that played so torturously out from one life to the next over thousands of years, inflicting payment of one life's sins on the next life. "Terrible" too because many of those reawakened dead will be re-awakening from hell, and will not be unaffected by the experience.


This hypothesis has been explored in depth in all three DivisionTheory books.

The first book, The Division of Consciousness, searches Western scripture for indications of such an event.

The second book, The Lost Secret of Death, explores the theological ramifications of such an event, showing it to be a logical consequence of the loss of memories that typically ocurs in-between lives.

The third book, Original Christianity, explores evidence from recently unearthed early Christian scriptures that the Christian religion originally believed that this internal resurrection of our past selves could occur anytime, but also that this development was an obligation with a deadline, and would occur en mass to everyone sooner or later. Either one could, via personal spiritual progress, experience this transformation in advance, or one would experience it during the prophesied Judgment Day scenario along with everyone else.

The fourth book in the DivisionTheory series will explore the hypothesis that this coming "Judgment Day" event will be but the latest of a series of species-wide psychological reorganizations that have cyclically occurred in human history, each time transforming in a very fundamental way how the human mind functions. The most recent one, recently rediscovered by Julian Jaynes to have occurred around 3,000 BC, is responsible for many of our current creation myths, but there were at least six others that occurred previously, one occurring roughly every 6500 years.

Each time one of the Judgment Day events occurs, the species experiences such a radical reorientation in its thought processes that civilizations on opposite sides of such a shift cannot comprehend or appreciate the mindset or world-view of the other.

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