That is the funny part, isn't it? I don't believe in reincarnation, but I do have an active imagination and feel a strange kinship towards certain images. I have a feeling like I was a harpist in the early part of the 20th century, a little person in a traveling carnival before that, a dog with a close canine friend, a few other various critters, and then for most of the time a tree. Oh, and also an ant for quite a while.I'll believe in whatever there is an accumulation of evidence.
So far, we only have rare anecdotal stories that suggest any sort of truth to the notion of Westernized (not buddhist) reincarnation... so I'd have to say not.
Besides, how come no one's former self was ever a nobody?
Do you have an opinion, yenom? For this being in the Philosophy section, there wasn't much meat on it. Have you studied any of the prominent cases?
EDIT: I want to come back as Fluffywolf.
I do not believe it in the more traditional sense.
But, I do think it could be possible for matter to hold a sort of "memory" within it, in which case, segments of previous energy states and patterns might be re-used at some points. The universe is a cyclical system as it is anyway.
Although extremely (extremely) improbable, if this was true, then the complex pattern that made up a consciousness, with integrated traits and thought processes could be stored temporarily, in a sort of universal binary code. It could then be picked up by another being. In fact, this process could be a way to implant the mind of a human inside a cats brain (or vice-versa), or some other animal. That was a random tangent, but whatever.
From a purely physical standpoint, the atoms in ones body might well have been used in a previous one, although that is not nearly as exciting a prospect as the traditional idea of reincarnation.
But to sum up, no I do not believe in it really.
I believe all matter is perpetuated indefinitely.
Perhaps we all share essences of past lives with each other.
I truly, totally believe this too.
In a manner, yes, though it is through reintegration via a paradox created with the unattainable state of non-existence (excepting in a first-person, existing, frame of reference, i.e. conceptual non-existence) rather than any spiritual connection or ideology.
Essentially, assuming that an Atheistic worldview is true, we arose out of the not-existing non-existence into a corporeal, existing form as consciousness, meaning that if we return to this state of non-existence, we would inevitably reintegrate back into existence due to the fact that it is impossible to maintain a state of non-existence for it contradicts its very nature.
"We" would lose our form, though, no? We build neuronal empires, and the memories of those may impact others and resurface in that way, but do you think the precise pattern of our circuitry would reappear? If so, genetics are the only reasonable way of preservation I can imagine, unless you consider our essence something immaterial (souls) that trickles from our physical containers on an unobservable plane. I see no reason to believe that though.