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Ian Stevenson

    October 31, 1918 – February 8, 2007

    Ian Stevenson was a psychiatrist who became internationally renowned for his research into reincarnation. He believed certain human peculiarities and innate traits could not be fully explained by heredity or environment. Stevenson proposed that reincarnation offered a third type of explanation for these phenomena. Over a forty-year career, he meticulously investigated thousands of cases of children worldwide who claimed to remember past lives.

    Ian Stevenson
    Reinkarnation
    Reinkarnation in Europa
    Life Before Life
    Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect
    A World in a Grain of Sand
    Best Wishes Get Well Soon
    • 2008

      Life Before Life

      Children's Memories of Previous Lives

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      This popular examination of research into children's reports of past-life memories describes a collection of 2,500 cases at the University of Virginia that investigators have carefully studied since Dr. Ian Stevenson began the work more than forty years ago. The children usually begin talking about a past life at the age of two or three and may talk about a previous family or the way they died in a previous life. Their statements have often been found to be accurate for one particular deceased individual, and some children have recognized members of the previous family. A number have also had birthmarks or defects that matched wounds on the body of the deceased person. Life Before Life presents the cases in a straightforward way and explores the possibility that consciousness may continue after the brain dies. It is a provocative and fascinating book that can challenge and ultimately change readers' understandings about life and death.

      Life Before Life
    • 2005

      A World in a Grain of Sand

      • 200 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      For the first time, this book brings to English-speaking researchers and the public detailed accounts of the crucial experiments carried out with Ossowiecki, which produced evidence of paranormal cognition.

      A World in a Grain of Sand
    • 1997
      4.0(83)Add rating

      Exploring the phenomenon of children recalling past lives, this book presents over 2,600 cases from various cultures, particularly in South Asia and West Africa. The author, a psychiatrist and leading investigator, highlights 65 detailed reports where children's memories align with specific details of their claimed former identities, including family and manner of death. Notably, connections between these memories and physical traits like birthmarks are examined, inviting readers to reconsider the validity of reincarnation beyond Western skepticism.

      Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect