Conscientiology

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Conscientiology is a dissident movement from Spiritism, of a pseudoscientific nature,[1][2] founded by Brazilian physician and medium Waldo Vieira. It proposes the integral study of consciousness,[3] advocating for belief in parapsychic phenomena – such as out-of-body experiences – and in the seriality of life through reincarnation.[1] According to this perspective, consciousness (also called ego, soul, or spirit) is said to have an independent existence that transcends biological life.[4]

Self-described as an "unconventional science," Conscientiology adopts the so-called "consciential paradigm,"[5] which values subjective approaches and personal experimentation over traditional scientific methodology.[1] The movement emerged from Projectiology,[6] a more applied subfield, and both share the same paradigm, often being treated as parts of a single system in their literature.

Conscientiology employs a series of scientistic neologisms,[1][7] such as "ressoma" (reactivation of the soma/physical body) as a replacement for the term "reincarnation". Although some of the scarce scientific literature classifies it as a religious phenomenon – situated within the context of the New Age or post-traditional religiosities[8] – and identifies its scientistic discourse as a continuation of Allan Kardec's theodicy, its adherents reject any religious connotation, presenting it strictly as a study and research proposal.[9]

Tenepes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI