Perhaps another way to ask the same question, is
who or what was/is Buddha!? Buddhists speak of the
"the Buddha" as having "entered Paranirvana," yet also speak of things like
no-self, and
anatman. Clearly, either there IS a self (such as
`Buddha-nature'), SOMETHING that can experience Nirvana ... or else we have pure
nihilism.
Buddhism is not nihilistic. The self that persists from incarnation to incarnation (
Soul,
jiva, or
jivatman), as taught by Hindusim and other traditions,
does exist - yet it is not the
ultimate essence of our Being. Buddha's emphasis upon the
transitory nature of all worldy phenomena did not end with the self, or soul, that reincarnates. In this sense, and because this is
not our ultimate self (either in terms of the
origin, or
Destiny, of our true being) ... Shakyamuni Buddha could be said to have taught
no-self. But the idea that He taught that there "is no self whatsoever," is of course, absurd.
The irony is that a Buddhist would argue this, or suggest that it could be the case. Obviously, by his own logic, there is NO ONE arguing,
nothing being argued, and thus
no point to be made. Unless, of course, he can see the absurdity of such nihilism, and accept that ego is meant to be
transcended ... not simply
denied.
So YES, clearly there is a reincarnating Soul (
jivatma), and the
skandhas, or bundle of attributes which persist from lifetime to lifetime, DO ADHERE to
"something" (an identity). Hundreds, even thousands of people remember their previous incarnations, including Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Pagans, and atheists. We should be willing to approach this testimony and evidence with an open mind,
not pre-conditioned by some particular religous dogma.
To solve the mystery of the self (Soul/false self), one must unravel the mystery of the amahkara, sometimes spelled
ahankar. Literally, this means, "
I-maker." Individual, or
separate identity ("me" vs. "you"), is what is - ultimately - the illusion. Sure, this
seems real enough in the material world, yet
I cannot exist without you, and you cannot exist without me. Thich Nhat Hanh describes this as
`Interbeing.' And quantum physics, speaking in terms of singularity, refers to it as
`quantum entanglement.' Same truth, versed on the one hand by a Zen Buddhist master, and on the other, by today's cutting-edge scientists.
That's my
2 cents of the moment ...
Namaskar,
taijasa