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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
transmigration
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ For the Hindu mind, unshakeable in its belief in the transmigration of souls, the ailing body is beside the point.
▪ They must have a fantastic traffic in the transmigration of souls.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Transmigration

Transmigration \Trans`mi*gra"tion\, n. [F. transmigration, L. transmigratio.]

  1. The act of passing from one country to another; migration.

  2. The passing of the soul at death into another mortal body; metempsychosis.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
transmigration

c.1300, from Old French transmigracion "exile, diaspora" (13c.) and directly from Late Latin transmigrationem (nominative transmigratio) "change of country," noun of action from past participle stem of Latin transmigrare "to wander, move, to migrate," from trans- "over" (see trans-) + migrare "to migrate" (see migration). Originally literal, in reference to the removal of the Jews into the Babylonian captivity; general sense of "passage from one place to another" is attested from late 14c.; sense of "passage of the soul after death into another body" first recorded 1590s.

Wiktionary
transmigration

n. 1 departure from one's homeland to live in another country; migration. 2 The movement of a soul from one body to another after death; metempsychosis.

WordNet
transmigration

n. the passing of a soul into another body after death

Wikipedia
Transmigration

Transmigration may refer to:

  • Transmigration of the soul or reincarnation, a spiritual belief
  • Transmigration program, the programme to move landless people from densely populated areas of Indonesia to less populous areas of the country.
  • Transmigration (album), a 1993 album by Crematory
  • Transmigration, a 2009 album by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Choruses, winner of a Grammy Award for Best Surround Sound Album
  • Transmigration, a 2006 album by Bakithi Kumalo
  • Transmigration (novel), a 1970 novel by J. T. McIntosh
Transmigration (novel)

Transmigration is a science fiction book written in 1970 by J. T. McIntosh.

The hero discovers he is both cursed with bad luck and blessed with a miraculous power - the power to occupy other people's minds - provided he dies first. A series of freak accidents bring him closer and closer to death, until at last he does die - but miraculously transmigrates into the nearest body around. His power to occupy minds is involuntary, and when it happens, he overwhelms those he invades, though he is able to communicate with them. Unwilling to depart from the bodies he occupies, he learns that the only way out of the body he is possessing is by dying, presenting him with an unusual ethical conflict.

Usage examples of "transmigration".

We are led by the following considerations to think that Plato really meant to accredit the transmigration of souls literally.

It being taught in the Mysteries, either by way of allegory, the meaning of which was not made known except to a select few, or, perhaps only at a later day, as an actual reality, that the souls of the vicious dead passed into the bodies of those animals to whose nature their vices had most affinity, it was also taught that the soul could avoid these transmigrations, often successive and numerous, by the practice of virtue, which would acquit it of them, free it from the circle of successive generations, and restore it at once to its source.

Transmigration of souls taught by Pythagoras as an allegory was accepted literally, 398-m.

Furthermore, the Brahminic thinkers and sages were a distinct class of men whose whole lives were absorbed in introspective reveries and metaphysical broodings calculated to stimulate the imagination and arouse to the keenest consciousness all the latent marvels and possibilities of human experience, thus furnishing the most favorable conditions for exactly such a belief as that of transmigration, an endless series of ever varying adventures for the imperishable soul.

Although they are partly followers of Bramah and Pythagoras, they do not believe in the transmigration of souls, except in some cases, by a distinct decree of God.

Greek dragoman linked to one of the Phanariot merchant houses, an imam looking exactly as he had looked fifteen years before, when Palewski had had a discussion with him on the history of the idea of the transmigration of souls.

An irresistible belief in preexistence, immortality and transmigration, results.

Transmigration of souls according to Pythagoras and disciples, 622-623.

Transmigration of souls taught by Pythagoras as an allegory was accepted literally, 398-m.

Breeches Pythagorical, by reason of their transmigration into several shapes.

No, my son, transmigration of souls from men to animals is not possible, as man is the vehicle for the divine purpose of God.

The Bodhisattwa or Sangha continues to be such until he has surmounted the very last grade of that vast and laborious ascent by which he is instructed that he can 'scale the heavens,' and pluck immortal wisdom from its resplendent source: which achievement performed, he becomes a Buddha, that is, an Omniscient Being, and a _Tathagata_--a title implying the accomplishment of that gradual increase in wisdom by which man becomes immortal or ceases to be subject to transmigration.

A great part of Antiquity contented their hopes of subsistency with a transmigration of their souls.

It was no doubt moulded up with the tenet of the transmigration of the soul, perhaps with notions analogous to the emanation system of India in which the human soul was an efflux from or indeed a part of, the Deity.

This law of transmigration of souls which brought even orthodox eschatology into confusion, seemed an endless servitude and pain to Indian consciences, which felt crushed by it.