“Flipside: A Journeyinto the Afterlife” film is based on my book “Flipside: A Tourist’s Guide on How to Navigate the
Afterlife.” I began the documentary
initially in 2007, then set it aside to focus on the book, and after it was
published in 2011, went back to finish the documentary. But just to include a scientist’s point of
view about the field or research, I’m including Professor Gary Schwartz Ph.D’s
foreword to the book, which he asked me if he could write for the book after
reading it.
I may not be a scientist but I know one who is.
Foreword from the
book “FLIPSIDE: A TOURIST’S GUIDE ON HOW TO NAVIGATE THE AFTERLIFE” written by
scientist and author Gary Schwartz Ph.D.;
"Is life designed
in advance? Are we all part of some elaborately plotted mini-series that runs
every waking moment? Does it really matter one way or the other? We're on the
planet for a reason, we have roles to play, we might as well play them as well
as we can. However, that doesn't prevent me from perennially rooting for the
Cubs." Richard Martini, author of “Flipside.”
Is there a greater spiritual reality? Does consciousness
survive physical death? Are past lives real? Is there a creative grand plan -
some sort of a Divine Plot - of which we are all a part, and can we
individually and collectively contribute to It's design and unfolding? And
assuming for the moment some sort of a grand planning process exists, the
question arises; does It - whom I have come to think of as being an
"Infinite Teacher" - have a sense of humor?
I am scientist by training and profession. My laboratory research
has led me to address these kinds of questions in various books including The
Afterlife Experiments, The G.O.D. Experiments, and The Sacred Promise. Like
Richard Martini, the author of “Flipside,” I am a skeptic in the core sense of
this word - meaning a wonderer, a questioner, and a genuine seeker of truth.
Of all these great questions, the hypothesis of past lives -
the continued re-living of individual souls for the sake of our learning and
evolving - is among the least researched and most controversial. The truth is,
science knows virtually nothing about the concept of incarnation or
consciousness. Contemporary science simply assumes the idea of incarnation is a
myth (and a fallacious one at that), and according to mainstream neuroscience,
consciousness is an emergent property of neural networks, an evolutionary side
effect so to speak of the invention of the brain and nervous system.
According to the prevailing views of mainstream science,
there can be no such thing as the incarnation of consciousness because the
brain is the sole creator of consciousness. Most neuroscientists don't
entertain the hypothesis the brain might be a brilliantly designed antenna and
receiver for consciousness which somehow returns - incarnates and/or connects
(for example, resonates) with the brain.
An emerging body of consciousness research (typically
classified under the umbrella of parapsychology), when combined with
contemporary quantum physics, seriously challenges the belief the brain is the
creator of consciousness. This new evidence requires we reconsider the idea of
the incarnation of consciousness, and by extension, the plausibility (if not
probability) of reincarnation. Three types of scientific inquiry together can
provide us with important evidence which addresses these great questions:
Type I Self-Science: Evidence obtained in the laboratories
of our individual lives, where personal observations are recorded and examined
from a skeptical (questioning), science-oriented frame of mind.
Type II Exploratory Investigations: Where scientists use
themselves as preliminary prototype subjects, testing new laboratory methods
and procedures on themselves, and
Type III Conventional Research: When controlled experiments
are conducted on human or animal subjects following federal and university
rules and guidelines.
Although Type III Conventional Research is the most
respected and sometimes the most definitive, Type I Self-Science is often where
the most innovative and core discoveries are made. The history of science reminds
us that great scientists like Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein took Type I
observations made in their personal lives and successfully translated them into
revolutionary Type III theories and discoveries. When these three types of
evidence collectively come to the same conclusion, their combined impact is
significantly greater than either one alone.
Richard Martini's “Flipside” is an
inspiring and well written - as well as entertaining - journey of Type I
Self-Science which is focused on the interrelated questions of (1)
reincarnation and past lives, (2) past life regression and healing, and (3) the
existence of a universal grand designer and plan. As you read Richard's journey
of personal discovery in the context of these great questions, you will awaken
to a vision of mind and the universe which is filled with opportunity and awe.
This is the kind of the book where once you have read it, you will no longer be
able to see the world in the same way again. I must confess that after reading “Flipside,”
it appears that I may no longer be able to resist bringing past life hypothesis
research into the laboratory. Though this book has not resulted in my deciding
to root for the Cubs (smile), it has encouraged me to root for the possibility
that Richard's observations and insights will prove to be valid and meaningful
for all of us.
Gary E. Schwartz, PhD is a professor of psychology, medicine, neurology, psychiatry, and surgery, and
Director of the Laboratory for Advances in Health at the University of Arizona.
He received his PhD from Harvard University, was a professor of psychiatry and
psychology at Yale University as well as Director of the Yale Psychophysiology
Center and co-director of the Yale Behavioral Medicine Clinic from 1976-1988.
His books include "The Afterlife Experiments," "The G.O.D.
Experiments," "The Energy Healing Experiments," and "The
Sacred Promise."
Gary E Schwartz Ph.D. |
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