No, but I find it a fascinating study in Eastern vs. Western spirituality.
Western, as has been demonstrated on this thread already, is very linear.
We're born, we live, we die, we go on to some eternity.
It reflects a culture in which the individual is the primary source of identity.
I can be anything I want to be, I have to pay my bills, I have to follow my heart, etc.
It carries the implication that nothing of value was here before me.
Therefore:
I am born, I live, I die, my choices determine my eternal destination.
Eastern spirituality is far more cyclical, based on the understanding that every process in nature is cyclical, even birth and death.
Eastern cultures find identity in the collective, whether the nuclear family, the village, the province, or the nation.
Each of those sources of identity was around long before any individual, and lingers after them.
As a result, Eastern spirituality focuses more on the eternal existence of everything, even as we learn just how far back that existence goes.
Even the birth and death of stars is just one more cyclical process in a universe of cyclical processes.
Thus, even though Eastern religions like Shinto do have creation myths, they emphasize that there was always something before the world we know.
The philosophy behind reincarnation is the universal idea of our actions having consequences, but instead of a final, eternal consequence, we must constantly strive to live this life better than the last one.
Of course, the final release from the cycle varies from faith to faith.