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Oy vey, we don't now. There's no information on what happens in Heaven...none. Not any. 0% info. We don't have to worry about it because it's not something we have to worry about till we die, and if it does happen, we won't know any different so meh.
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We don't know anything definitively, but there sure are plenty of opinions. See the video below.
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Because without it we wouldn't be us. What's the point of being a person who earns paradise if you're no longer that person when you get there? They may as well have just cut out the living bit.
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Well, that's the nub of the issue; if you accept the concept of heaven, that implies the existence of the soul. If you accept the existence of the soul, that implies that the soul existed before you were born and will exist after you die.
Some might say that the soul is the manifestation of the mind and that everything we think and feel is what our soul is thinking and feeling. Others (and this is what many Jewish scholars suggest) say that the soul resides in the physical body, but that our existence and personality is made up of many drives and pressures, of which the soul is only one. If that sounds wierd to you, consider this: the soul, as an entity of pure, righteous spirit, knows definitively what is right and what is wrong. Meanwhile, we as people aren't always sure what is the right path to choose and we sometimes even consciously choose to follow the wrong path. So the idea is that what we percieve as our mind and our personality is actually a base, worldy construct that lies on top of - and distracts from - our spiritual self.
So, ultimately, the concept I've been arguing is that death strips away the earthly personality and the soul that has been riding within us all this time gets its just rewards. But, as a soul and nothing more, its desires are those of ethereal beings, not of our human drives.
Here is an interesting interview with an author of a book about Heaven. Her description of Dante's Paradiso is actually quite close to what I've heard from Jewish speakers about heaven.
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-col...10/lisa-miller