God Arises
Argument for the Life Hereafter
~ 197 ~
registration goes on independently, and irrespective
of human likes or dislikes.
Freud, however, failed to take stock of Nature’s
purpose in taking such great pains to preserve a
record of our intentions and their outcome within
the subconscious. He thus felt the necessity of
inviting philosophers to ponder the matter. But
when we look at this phenomenon in relation to the
concept of the life hereafter, we immediately grasp
its meaningfulness. It clearly shows the advent of
the life hereafter as a distinct probability—as the
time when every single human being will be
confronted with a complete and accurate record of
his deeds on earth. His own entity will be evidence
of what the thoughts and intentions were which
guided him in the course of his worldly existence.
“We verily created man and we know the
promptings of his soul, and are closer to him
than his jugular vein.”
6
Let us now consider what happens to man’s
words.