The Buddha stated that it’s a safer wager to assume that actions bear results that can affect not only this lifetime but also lifetimes after this than it is to assume the opposite.
"Simply stating, “I don’t know,” is not an adequate response to
the questions of rebirth and the efficacy of karma. The attitude behind
it may be honest on one level, but it’s dishonest in thinking that this
is all that needs to be said, for it ignores the fact that you have to
make assumptions about the possible results of your actions every time
you act.
It’s like having money: Regardless of what you do with
it — spending it, investing it, or just stashing it away — you’re making
an implicit wager on how to get the best use of it now and into the
future. Your investment strategy can’t stop with, “I don’t know.”
If you have any wisdom at all, you have to consider future
possibilities and take your chances with what seems to be the safest and
most productive use of the resources you’ve got.
So it is with
all of our actions. Given that we have to wager one way or another all
the time on how to find happiness, the Buddha stated that it’s a safer
wager to assume that actions bear results that can affect not only this
lifetime but also lifetimes after this than it is to assume the
opposite."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Rebirth & Action"
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