What If Reincarnation Is Real… and Science Just Hasn’t Caught Up Yet
New evidence from near-death studies, psychedelics, and memory research is forcing scientists to rethink what happens to consciousness after death.
** Note: this is an original piece edited with the help of chatGPT… Enjoy & thanks for being here— Jade
I’ve always thought reincarnation was ridiculous.
Cute story. Cosmic recycling. Karma points for the spiritually insecure.
But then there’s this one case… a two-year-old boy who started having night terrors about being shot down in a plane. He said his name was James. He could name his ship, his squadron, and even the carrier… details later verified against World War II military records. In Jim Tucker’s book Return to Life (2016), Bruce and Andrea Leininger are described as devout Christians who initially did not believe in reincarnation and were deeply unsettled by their son’s statements.
Yet when researchers at the University of Virginia’s Division of Perceptual Studies investigated, they confirmed over fifty accurate details the child couldn’t have known.
That story has haunted me for years… not because I believe it proves reincarnation, but because I can’t easily explain it away.
If even one case like that holds up under scrutiny, something about our current model of mind and matter is wrong.
The Big Idea
Modern science still tells a materialist story: the brain generates consciousness, and when the brain dies, awareness ends. Simple. Clean. Closed loop.
But evidence keeps leaking through the cracks… near-death experiences during flat EEGs, verifiable out-of-body observations, psychedelic states where self dissolves yet awareness expands.
If consciousness precedes the brain, not the other way around, then reincarnation becomes less mystical and more mathematically feasible… a kind of data migration between biological hardware?
That possibility points toward a deeper paradigm shift already unfolding in neuroscience and philosophy: from materialism to idealism… from “matter creates mind” to “mind gives rise to matter.”
The Children Who Remember
For six decades, psychiatrist Ian Stevenson and his successor Jim B. Tucker at UVA have documented more than 2,500 children who claim past-life memories (Stevenson, 1997; Tucker, 2005, 2016).
Most of the stories emerge between ages two and five, fade by adolescence, and include verifiable names, locations, and deaths. Many of the children also carry birthmarks or phobias that match the alleged manner of death.
James Leininger… the WWII pilot… remains the most famous. His statements were checked against military archives; every verifiable detail aligned.
Skeptics argue coincidence, parental suggestion, or unconscious recall of information picked up somewhere else. But when thousands of similar cases appear across cultures, coincidence starts to feel like its own kind of faith.
Stevenson never claimed to prove reincarnation. He simply called it a working hypothesis… one that “fits the facts better than any other presently available.”
When the Brain Goes Dark but Awareness Continues
In 2001, cardiologist Pim van Lommel published a Lancet study of cardiac-arrest patients who reported clear, structured awareness during EEG-flat states (van Lommel et al., 2001).
Later replications, like Sam Parnia’s AWARE studies (2014), documented similar verifiable perceptions… patients describing conversations and surgical details observable only while clinically dead.
Traditional neuroscience can’t explain complex cognition without cortical activity. Yet these cases suggest consciousness may persist independently of the brain’s electrical function… exactly what an idealist framework would predict.
Even rodent studies add intrigue: at the moment of death, the brain produces a brief surge of synchronized gamma activity… patterns associated with high-order awareness (Borjigin et al., 2023). A final burst before transfer? No one knows. But the data won’t disappear.
When the Self Dissolves but Awareness Expands
Psychedelic research maps a similar terrain from another angle.
Under psilocybin or LSD, the Default Mode Network… the region linked to ego and narrative identity… goes quiet (Carhart-Harris et al., 2014). As that network powers down, distant regions of the brain begin to communicate freely.
Subjectively, people describe the same thing mystics and near-death experiencers report: boundary loss, timelessness, union.
If silencing parts of the brain expands awareness rather than extinguishing it, the brain starts to look less like a generator and more like a receiver… a tuner compressing the infinite into something we can live inside.
And if that’s true, then continuity of consciousness beyond bodily death… what we once called the soul… becomes a reasonable area of scientific inquiry, not heresy.
The Cloud, the Collective, and the Question of “Who’s Remembering Whom?”
If consciousness really works like a cloud network, then universal consciousness is the cloud itself… a vast field of data and awareness. The collective consciousness could be like the local network… the shared human archive of memory and meaning. And individual consciousness? Perhaps that is like a user profile, temporarily logged in through a body and brain?
Seen through that lens, reincarnation might be less about souls hopping bodies and more about data re-downloads… information from the cloud streaming into a new receiver?
That idea became tangible for me during a guided LSD session a few years ago. My facilitator called it a “past-life regression.”
What I saw was shockingly detailed: white tents, cavalry flags, an army encampment, the crack of rifles, the chaos of battle, the visceral sense of being struck down by Native warriors. One image… the flags… wouldn’t leave me. Later, when I searched online, I found them: U.S. Cavalry regiment flags from the post-Civil-War Indian Wars.
A name surfaced too… John Artemis. I couldn’t verify it belonged to a real person, though part of me wondered.
Was that an authentic memory or a vivid construction of my mind? I don’t know. It felt more coherent, more alive, than imagination usually does. Maybe I was accessing a true fragment of consciousness stored somewhere in the universal field? Or maybe my brain… loosened by the psychedelic state… stitched together images from movies like Dances with Wolves, The Revenant, and some forgotten history lessons into a believable story.
Both explanations remain on the table.
What intrigues me is that the experience contained information I didn’t consciously know. That’s what makes the James Leininger case so difficult to dismiss… a child naming aircraft, squadrons, and ships later verified in archives. My own vision doesn’t prove anything, but it certainly correlates with that pattern.
If all consciousness exists in the cloud, perhaps “past-life memories” are less about personal reincarnation and more about collective access… data from the field that occasionally downloads into open minds?
Neuroscience even hints at a mechanism. When psychedelics quiet the Default Mode Network, the brain’s filters loosen. With the ego offline, information… whether internal, ancestral, or nonlocal… can flow more freely (Carhart-Harris et al., 2014).
Maybe what I saw wasn’t my past, but the field itself showing that memory might be far more communal… and far less linear… than we think.
The Paradigm Cracking Open
Philosopher Bernardo Kastrup calls this shift analytic idealism: reality as a mental field within which physical processes occur, not the other way around (Kastrup, 2019).
Physicist Federico Faggin, the inventor of the microprocessor, argues consciousness is the universe’s fundamental substrate, with matter as its local condensation. Cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman describes perception as a user interface tuned for survival, not truth… suggesting the physical world is like a pilots dashboard. It gives useful information about the atmosphere outside but is NOT the atmosphere outside.
These aren’t mystics preaching belief. They’re sophisticated scientific minds following the data to its unsettling edges.
If idealism is even partially correct, then cases of reincarnation, near death experiences (NDEs), and out of body experiences (OBEs) aren’t paranormal… they’re more like data points in a larger field… a different model of mind.
Practical Takeaway
You don’t have to believe in reincarnation to learn from what it points toward.
If consciousness is fundamental, awareness doesn’t stop at the skull or at death… it ripples outward, interacting with others, the environment, maybe even the structure of space-time itself.
Perhaps every thought, emotion, and story you hold is part of a shared signal? The more coherent your frequency… through breathwork, meditation, storywork, compassion… the cleaner the transmission.
Whether or not your user profile uploads into another body or not… you are, right now…. influencing the cloud.
Closing Thought
Maybe reincarnation isn’t a cosmic recycling program. Maybe it’s just consciousness, changing channels.
The materialist story is tidy, but reality rarely is. When the data refuse to fit, humility demands we widen the frame.
We don’t yet know whether awareness migrates after death or merges into the field, but there is curious evidence that hints at something astonishing: maybe the signal continues.
And if it does, maybe the question isn’t will you come back… but what kind of signal are you broadcasting now?
PS: If you’re ready to break free of the static of unconscious conditioning and become the kind of person who naturally lives in alignment with the higher signal of your purpose, explore my Next Level Human Coaching Program today. Spots are limited… don’t wait. 👉 www.nextlevelhuman.com/human-coaching
References
Borjigin, J., et al. (2023). Surge of gamma oscillations in the dying brain. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 120(3), e2216268120. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2216268120
Brewer, J. A., et al. (2011). Meditation experience is associated with differences in default mode network activity and connectivity. PNAS, 108(50), 20254–20259.
Carhart-Harris, R. L., et al. (2014). The entropic brain: A theory of conscious states informed by neuroimaging research with psychedelic drugs. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, 20.
Faggin, F. (2021). Silicon: From the Invention of the Microprocessor to the New Science of Consciousness. Waterside Productions.
Griffiths, R. R., et al. (2019). Psilocybin produces substantial and sustained decreases in depression and anxiety in patients with life-threatening cancer: A randomized double-blind trial. JAMA Psychiatry, 76(4), 351–359.
Kastrup, B. (2019). The Idea of the World: A Multi-Disciplinary Argument for the Mental Nature of Reality. Iff Books.
Parnia, S., et al. (2014). AWAReness during REsuscitation (AWARE) study: A prospective study. Resuscitation, 85(12), 1799–1805.
Stevenson, I. (1997). Reincarnation and Biology: A Contribution to the Etiology of Birthmarks and Birth Defects. Praeger.
Tucker, J. B. (2005). Life Before Life: A Scientific Investigation of Children’s Memories of Previous Lives. St. Martin’s Press.
Tucker, J. B. (2016). Return to Life: Extraordinary Cases of Children Who Remember Past Lives. St. Martin’s Press.
van Lommel, P., van Wees, R., Meyers, V., & Elfferich, I. (2001). Near-death experience in survivors of cardiac arrest: A prospective study in the Netherlands. The Lancet, 358(9298), 2039–2045.



You might want to check out Many Lives, Many Masters by Brian Weiss. He was a psychiatrist whose patient began regressing into past lives during therapy, something that pushed him down a path most of his peers mocked. His book documents what he witnessed.
I also liked, on similar theme, "After" by Bruce Greyson, also a psychiatrist who spent decades studying patients who were clinically dead or near death yet later reported detailed perceptions they should not have had access to, being clinically dead at the moment.
I’m not religious at all, but I do believe we’re all part of some sort of energy field, filtering out most of it through our bodies - which keeps us most likely sane. I’ve had at least seven near-accidents that I know of, where pure coincidence or random strangers/acts saved me, so I’m convinced something watches over us, just not a god in the traditional sense. Thank you for the Tucker references, I'll definitely read them.
The biography of Edgar cayce red pilled me on reincarnation. He was the real deal. Now recommend it die hard science types facing terminal diagnosis.