Rebirth
After death a new life arises shaped by your past actions, yet no unchanging soul travels across to it.
Rebirth (Pali punabbhava, Sanskrit punarbhava, "renewed becoming") is the idea that death is not the end: another life arises, conditioned by the moral momentum of how one has lived. This belief is shared across the older Indian traditions, including Hinduism and Jainism, so it was already in the cultural air the Buddha breathed. What makes the Buddhist account distinctive is one striking move.
Most rebirth doctrines imagine a soul or self that transmigrates, an inner essence that hops from body to body. Buddhism denies that there is any such permanent, unchanging self (a teaching called anattā, "non-self"). So it has to explain rebirth without a soul. Its answer is causal continuity rather than a traveling passenger: the present mind-and-body is a flowing process, and as it ends it conditions the arising of a new process, the way one flame lights another. The second flame is neither exactly the first nor wholly unconnected; it is caused by it. Craving (the deep thirst for more experience) and ignorance keep this process rolling.
This is easy to misread. Buddhism is not saying "the same you" lives again, nor that "nobody" is reborn. It is threading a middle path: there is real continuity and real moral consequence carried forward, but no fixed entity that owns it. And the aim of the whole path is not merely a better rebirth but eventually to end this conditioned re-becoming entirely, which is liberation (nirvāṇa).
Key passages(20)
Steps on the Path to Enlightenment: A Commentary on Tsongkhapa's Lamrim Chenmo, Volume 1: The Foundation Practices · Geshe Lhundub Sopa
The Sūtra on Transmigration Through Existences · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Homage to all buddhas and bodhisattvas! Thus did I hear at one time. The Blessed One was dwelling in the Kalandakanivāpa, at the Veṇuvana near Rājagṛha, together with a great monastic saṅgha of 1,2
Tap to expand
Questions Regarding Death and Transmigration · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Homage to all buddhas and bodhisattvas. Thus did I hear at one time. The Blessed One, seeing that the time had come to train all the various householders of the great city of Kapilavastu, went the
Tap to expand
The Uṣṇīṣavijayā Dhāraṇī · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Homage to all buddhas and bodhisattvas. There was a god called Supratiṣṭhita, seated in the divine assembly hall, Sudharmā, among the gods of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three; he lived in a great
Tap to expand
Modern teachers who discuss this idea
Modern and living teachers whose books take up Rebirth. These works are still in copyright, so we can’t show the text here — each links out to the book.
- Geshe Lhundub SopaSteps on the Path to Enlightenment: A Commentary on Tsongkhapa's Lamrim Chenmo, Volume 1: The Foundation Practices(2004)View on Amazon→