The following URL
Jurassic Plant Brought Back To Life After 200 Million Years
seems to have been taken up by a number of sites. However
1) The researchers named in the article do not seem to exist
2) http://worldnewsdailyreport.com/ looks very much like a spoof site.
While there have been cases of revivals of spores and plants of extreme antiquity this is almost certainly not one of them
Dont take my word for it. Do some digging
Wednesday, 7 October 2015
Sunday, 13 October 2013
Pagan Origins of Christmas
Fundamentalist
Christians, especially protestant ones, hate Christmas. Some claim
it, like Halloween, is a pagan festival and nothing to do with
Christianity. And they are right. Realising this Pagans have sought
to reclaim “Their” midwinter festival, ignoring the widespread
celebration of the mid winter solstice around this time that means
Christmas does not belong to any one group, tribe or religion.
In 1652
British Puritans made Christmas Illegal for eight years. They hated
the pagan parts for being pagan, the christian parts for being
catholic and hated any festival because people enjoyed themselves
[1] (around this time they also made smiling an offence). In America
at about the same time puritans passed a law levying a fine on anyone
celebrating Christmas.
In 1989 a Japanese department store made a huge Father Christmas, but made one mistake: Thy put him on the roof and Crucified him. In 1969 an Editorial in L' Oservatore Romano described Father Christmas as a representing a monstrous substition for the Christ Child and offending the faith.
Around 1988 the Truth Tabernacle in Burlington, North Carolina, considered Christmas the work of the devil and talked of Satan Claus, being an impostor. As with most religious nutters they lacked both the education to know that Santa Claus evolved from St Nicholas, and the sense of humour that would have let them call him “old Nick”. They, like the original Calvinists, allowed no Christmas Presents or trees, and an elder of the church noted that 25th December was the birthday of a pagan god, Tammuz, and claimed Jesus was born in September [2]. Had he claimed Jesus was born on September 11th this would have been a powerful synchronicity. His claim would also have surprised early Christians who celebrated the birth in March [1]. In truth if Jesus ever existed there is no indication anywhere of his birthday.
The stalwart religionists held a mock trial accusing Santa of Child Abuse, by urging parents to buy alcohol not clothes, of falsely claiming to be St Nicholas, maing ministers lie about Christ's Birthday, and making churches practice Baal Religion unknowingly. After this kangaroo court had found him, guilty they hung an eight foot dummy in a Santa suit from a tree.
Times of change have also been appropriated by non-christians, as anyone who recalls the hype over the “Dawning of the Age of Aquarius” can testify. There are at least three times of change in the western year, the Spring and Winter Solstice and New Year. The last two have greater cultural impact and for most people the Winter Solstice is more meaningful (Why the new year is not celebrated on the Winter Solstice is another question).
The Winter solstice, in the Norther Hemisphere, is the time when the days stop getting shorter. After that they get longer. It is when Ullr, god of Winter loses his annual battle with Odin and hos power begins to weaken till midsummer. It is a “weird Space” that has become a time of carnival when normal rules are relaxed in order to reinforce them when normality returns on Plough Monday. And is a very good excuse to forget work, perhaps impossible because of the weather and enjoy life for a while.
Pennick [1] notes that in the West December 25th has been celebrated as the birthday of divinities of light, citing the Babylonian Queen of Heaven, Oriris from Egypt, Dionysus and Adonis from Greece and from Scandinavia Baldur, ironically killed by Mistletoe. December 25th is the birthday of Mithra, the Persian solar god[5] originally a servant to Ahura Mazda, the Zoroastrian god of goodness [4].
Mithraism, a mystic cult that developed in Armenia from a local late surviving version of Mazdaysnian, blended Mithra, originally an Indo-Iranian god of contracts and broad pastures with the Babylonian sun god, Shamash and god of seasonal regeneration, Tammuz.
After his introduction to Rome this mixed Mithra, and perhaps his December 25 date of celebration, were again blended with Solis indigeni (a Roman sun god derived from the Pelasgean titan of light - Helios. This resulted in a composite being Solis invicta, the invincible sun. Mithra, the god of the regenerating sun was annually reborn on December 25th.
Aurelian eventually proclaimed Mithraism the official religion of the Roman Empire in A.D. 274 and Natalis Solis Invicti (Birthday of the Invincible Sun) became an official holiday. This coincided with the Roman Saturnalia, which flanked the weird space of the solstice, when normal social rules were relaxed and gifts of candles, symbolising lights, were exchanged. There is evidence that a lighting ceremony commemorating the return of light and heat at the winter solstice was transferred to the festival of Mithras.
Christianity took over the Celebrations around the winter solstice, a tactic later to be used in Britain when the incoming missionaries took over pagan temples and places of worship rededicating them to their own religion.
Of course it is highly unlikely that the people who created the image of Santa Claus for motives ranging from politics to commerce [6] were consciously aware of these correspondences but folk memory lasts a long time and eventually its characters and events border on the archetypal. The Wild Hunt, Odin and the rebirth of the sun in Winter are powerful things, which may have roots going back to the birth of agriculture and beyond. Burned into the collective unconscious these may have surfaced again as Santa Claus.
Notes
Anti
Christmas
![]() |
Father Christmas riding a goat |
In 1989 a Japanese department store made a huge Father Christmas, but made one mistake: Thy put him on the roof and Crucified him. In 1969 an Editorial in L' Oservatore Romano described Father Christmas as a representing a monstrous substition for the Christ Child and offending the faith.
Around 1988 the Truth Tabernacle in Burlington, North Carolina, considered Christmas the work of the devil and talked of Satan Claus, being an impostor. As with most religious nutters they lacked both the education to know that Santa Claus evolved from St Nicholas, and the sense of humour that would have let them call him “old Nick”. They, like the original Calvinists, allowed no Christmas Presents or trees, and an elder of the church noted that 25th December was the birthday of a pagan god, Tammuz, and claimed Jesus was born in September [2]. Had he claimed Jesus was born on September 11th this would have been a powerful synchronicity. His claim would also have surprised early Christians who celebrated the birth in March [1]. In truth if Jesus ever existed there is no indication anywhere of his birthday.
The stalwart religionists held a mock trial accusing Santa of Child Abuse, by urging parents to buy alcohol not clothes, of falsely claiming to be St Nicholas, maing ministers lie about Christ's Birthday, and making churches practice Baal Religion unknowingly. After this kangaroo court had found him, guilty they hung an eight foot dummy in a Santa suit from a tree.
The
Significance of the End of the Year.
Calendar
endpoints are psychologically significant. There was a panic in 2000
about the millennium bug, and in 2012 about the alleged end of the
Mayan calendar. In AD 1000 there was widespread expectation of the
second coming of Christ.
Times of change have also been appropriated by non-christians, as anyone who recalls the hype over the “Dawning of the Age of Aquarius” can testify. There are at least three times of change in the western year, the Spring and Winter Solstice and New Year. The last two have greater cultural impact and for most people the Winter Solstice is more meaningful (Why the new year is not celebrated on the Winter Solstice is another question).
The Winter solstice, in the Norther Hemisphere, is the time when the days stop getting shorter. After that they get longer. It is when Ullr, god of Winter loses his annual battle with Odin and hos power begins to weaken till midsummer. It is a “weird Space” that has become a time of carnival when normal rules are relaxed in order to reinforce them when normality returns on Plough Monday. And is a very good excuse to forget work, perhaps impossible because of the weather and enjoy life for a while.
Festivals
of Light
Pennick [1] notes that in the West December 25th has been celebrated as the birthday of divinities of light, citing the Babylonian Queen of Heaven, Oriris from Egypt, Dionysus and Adonis from Greece and from Scandinavia Baldur, ironically killed by Mistletoe. December 25th is the birthday of Mithra, the Persian solar god[5] originally a servant to Ahura Mazda, the Zoroastrian god of goodness [4].
Mithraism, a mystic cult that developed in Armenia from a local late surviving version of Mazdaysnian, blended Mithra, originally an Indo-Iranian god of contracts and broad pastures with the Babylonian sun god, Shamash and god of seasonal regeneration, Tammuz.
After his introduction to Rome this mixed Mithra, and perhaps his December 25 date of celebration, were again blended with Solis indigeni (a Roman sun god derived from the Pelasgean titan of light - Helios. This resulted in a composite being Solis invicta, the invincible sun. Mithra, the god of the regenerating sun was annually reborn on December 25th.
Aurelian eventually proclaimed Mithraism the official religion of the Roman Empire in A.D. 274 and Natalis Solis Invicti (Birthday of the Invincible Sun) became an official holiday. This coincided with the Roman Saturnalia, which flanked the weird space of the solstice, when normal social rules were relaxed and gifts of candles, symbolising lights, were exchanged. There is evidence that a lighting ceremony commemorating the return of light and heat at the winter solstice was transferred to the festival of Mithras.
Christianity took over the Celebrations around the winter solstice, a tactic later to be used in Britain when the incoming missionaries took over pagan temples and places of worship rededicating them to their own religion.
The
Wild Hunt
Further
north St Nicholas and Odin became confused. Odin is the leader of the
Wild Hunt, who travel the autumn skies taking away anyone who gets in
their way. Odin is a god with shamanic aspects, riding his horse
between worlds. Santa Claus is depicted in a shamanic costume, an
animal's hide blooded skin outside and fur inside. Just as Odin leads
the wild hunt so Santa drives a reindeer sleigh through the sky. Just
as Odin is, in one aspect, the traveller between worlds, Santa is
associated with the “weird space” between the worlds of summer
and winter just after the solstice.
Of course it is highly unlikely that the people who created the image of Santa Claus for motives ranging from politics to commerce [6] were consciously aware of these correspondences but folk memory lasts a long time and eventually its characters and events border on the archetypal. The Wild Hunt, Odin and the rebirth of the sun in Winter are powerful things, which may have roots going back to the birth of agriculture and beyond. Burned into the collective unconscious these may have surfaced again as Santa Claus.
The
Wrap
Christmas
as we know it is based on pre-christian traditions from various parts
of the world, and these traditions themselves may have been birthed
from older traditions and from archetypes of personalities and events
in the collective unconscious and collective memory of at least
western humanity.Notes
- Wierd
Space: Pagan Rites of Christmas, Nigel Pennick, Fortean Times 60
December 1991 p.24
- Ho Ho
Ho A seasonal Portrait: Paul Sieveking, Fortean Times 56, Winter
1990 P.42
- Stations
of the Sun: Ronald Hutton, +
- In
search of Zarathustra: Paul Kriwaczek, Weidenfeld and Nocolson 2002
- http://http://www.arthuriana.co.uk/xmas/swartz/American%20Christmas%20Origins.htm
Anerican Christmas Origins
- http://politicsonerealitynil.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/the-politics-of-christmas-coca-cola.html
The
Politics of Christmas: Coca Cola, Capitalism and Collective Memory
Labels:
Christmas,
Christmas illegal,
Father Christmas,
festivals of light,
Mithraism,
Mithras,
Odin,
Pagan roots of Christmas,
puritan hatred of fun,
Wild Hunt
Saturday, 7 September 2013
Anomalous artefacts
When
archaeologists find something that looks humanly made they naturally
want to know how old it is and usually combine a number of ways to
estimate its age. The methods basically fall into two categories,
absolute and relative. Neither is totally accurate. Absolute methods
include Radio Carbon dating, thermoluminescence and Tree Ring dating.
Relative methods include looking at the depth an object was found
and provisionally assuming it is older than an object found above
it and younger than one found below it. A third category might be
called comparative, comparing an object with similar objects found
elsewhere.
Sometimes an object does not fit. One or more of these methods suggests the object is older than it should be or is somewhere it should not be, if current theories are correct. Such an object is normally called an OOPART standing for Out Of Place Artefact, though the term can also be used for non-manufactured articles, since OOPOBJ is not as easy to say.
A lot of apparent OOPARTs have been found, but most can be explained without assuming they came from Atlantis or an extraterrestrial spacecraft. There are however a small number that pose a problem to conventional theories and are generally ignored because any archaeologist who investigates them is likely to suffer career damage. Even if this is not the case an academic archaeologist will generally have little time to research anomalies. As a result these objects have been appropriated by religious groups and other fringe elements as proof of their pet theories, without real investigation and ignoring the fact that weakening opposing theories does not mean their theory is right.
There are a number of model human skulls carved in quartz alleged to be from pre-columbian South America. On investigation the problems with this interpretation seem to multiply. Not one of these skulls has been proven to be pre-columbian, and the best evidence seems to indicate they were carved in the 19th century in Europe. The most famous skull, the Mitchell-Hedges skull was purchased by Mitchell-Hedges from a London Art dealer in 1944, though his daughter claimed have found it during an excavation. The skull seems most likely to be a copy of a 19th century skull in the British Museum. Whether or not they are ancient they are remarkable sculptures doubtless attractive to those who are attracted to skulls.
Regardless of scientific evidence many paranormal claims have been made for the 13 or so known skulls which can kill at a distance or cure cancer. Claims of skull-lore and mythology seem not to have existed in Ancient South America and any ancient South American myths seem to have been spread initially by Mitchell-Hedges and taken up by New-Age writers who considered them as relics of Atlantis.
The fact that the skulls are 19th century does not preclude the possibility they now have some paranormal attributes for belief can do remarkable things.
William Corliss
gave several criteria for an OOPART, as stated on Bad Archeology [1]
The trail should not go cold
OOPARTS are a
fascinating minefield for the explorer of anomalies. The field is
riddled with self deception and erroneous interpretations but some
mysteries, like the discovery of a stuffed alligator during
investigation of a prehistoric site seem destined to remain
unresolved for ever. At the same time there is some evidence that
the beginnings of human technology stretch further back than
generally accepted.
Unfortunately almost all alleged OOPARTS seem either to vanish or be unable to withstand investigation.
[1] http://www.badarchaeology.com/ Bad Archaeology
[2] http://alexk2009.hubpages.com/_aayawa/hub/Mysteries-of-the-Map-of-the-maker The Dashka Stone
[3]
www.adguk-blog.com/2013/08/300-million-year-old-machinery-found-in.html
Ancient Machinery found in Russia?
[4] http://doubtfulnews.com/2013/01/come-on-russian-media-a-ufo-tooth-wheel-silly/ Skeptical take on the Ancient Machinery found in Russia
[5] Lost Civilisations of the Stone Age: Richard Rudgley.
Sometimes an object does not fit. One or more of these methods suggests the object is older than it should be or is somewhere it should not be, if current theories are correct. Such an object is normally called an OOPART standing for Out Of Place Artefact, though the term can also be used for non-manufactured articles, since OOPOBJ is not as easy to say.
A lot of apparent OOPARTs have been found, but most can be explained without assuming they came from Atlantis or an extraterrestrial spacecraft. There are however a small number that pose a problem to conventional theories and are generally ignored because any archaeologist who investigates them is likely to suffer career damage. Even if this is not the case an academic archaeologist will generally have little time to research anomalies. As a result these objects have been appropriated by religious groups and other fringe elements as proof of their pet theories, without real investigation and ignoring the fact that weakening opposing theories does not mean their theory is right.
Ancient
Machinery found in Russia
Recently there
were claims of an ancient machine part being found in Russia
generally [3] being lumped together with other OOPARTs, some of
which may be fossils. One geologist considers it is either a
natural crystal of Iron Pyrites or, since it was not discovered in
the mine itself, a something that had broken off mining machinery.
The argument they make that the fact it was not published in a peer
reviewed journal is however weak: No journal would publish it until
it was verified, and no mainstream scientist will try to verify it
until it is published. This is a weak case and can safely be
discarded.
The
Crystal Skulls
There are a number of model human skulls carved in quartz alleged to be from pre-columbian South America. On investigation the problems with this interpretation seem to multiply. Not one of these skulls has been proven to be pre-columbian, and the best evidence seems to indicate they were carved in the 19th century in Europe. The most famous skull, the Mitchell-Hedges skull was purchased by Mitchell-Hedges from a London Art dealer in 1944, though his daughter claimed have found it during an excavation. The skull seems most likely to be a copy of a 19th century skull in the British Museum. Whether or not they are ancient they are remarkable sculptures doubtless attractive to those who are attracted to skulls.
Regardless of scientific evidence many paranormal claims have been made for the 13 or so known skulls which can kill at a distance or cure cancer. Claims of skull-lore and mythology seem not to have existed in Ancient South America and any ancient South American myths seem to have been spread initially by Mitchell-Hedges and taken up by New-Age writers who considered them as relics of Atlantis.
The fact that the skulls are 19th century does not preclude the possibility they now have some paranormal attributes for belief can do remarkable things.
Criteria
for real OOPARTs
- have an unexpected age (too old or too young),
- be in the wrong place (Roman artefacts from Mexican sites),
- have an unknown or contested use,
- be of anomalous size or scale,
- have a composition impossible with current understanding of ancient technology (aluminium in ancient China),
- possess a sophistication not commensurate with those models (electric cells in ancient Parthia),
- or have unexpected possible associations (mylodon bones from Argentinean caves suggestive of domestication by humans).
It
must :
When
evaluating a possible OOPART you should ask at least one question
for each criterion, for example
Is
the date reliable?
Could
it have got their through trade or been moved down by earthworms or
earthquakes?
Can
you see a possible use for it consistent with the known level of
technology?
Could
the giant/miniature object have been something else or used for
rituals?
Is
its composition really anomalous?
Was
it really found with the other articles mentioned?
One
final criteria not on Corliss' list is:
The trail should not go cold
The
object should exist and be potentially open to further study. If it
has vanished then the assessment must be made on circumstantial
evidence. The fact an object has vanished does not mean it never
existed: museums tend to put anomalous objects first in storage then
in the rubbish. Even if not deliberately discarded accidents happen.
An example where the trail is almost cold is the Dashka Stone [2]
which is apparently on exhibition in a museum, but where the original
discoverer , who gained points for being a respected physicist,
seems first to have become an uncritical believer in ET intervention,
then vanished from the face of the earth. A cold trail is a warning
sign not an indication the object is not anomalous.
The
Wrap
Unfortunately almost all alleged OOPARTS seem either to vanish or be unable to withstand investigation.
[1] http://www.badarchaeology.com/ Bad Archaeology
[2] http://alexk2009.hubpages.com/_aayawa/hub/Mysteries-of-the-Map-of-the-maker The Dashka Stone
[4] http://doubtfulnews.com/2013/01/come-on-russian-media-a-ufo-tooth-wheel-silly/ Skeptical take on the Ancient Machinery found in Russia
[5] Lost Civilisations of the Stone Age: Richard Rudgley.
Tuesday, 6 August 2013
Who was St Juttemis?
Labels:
Carnival,
fictional saints,
Kroniek van Roermond,
mysteries,
Sophiasm,
St Juttemis
Saturday, 23 February 2013
Reincarnation reconsidered skeptically
![]() |
Source: clcker.com |
Many culture have believed in
reincarnation. In the East India, China: probably under Indian
Influence and Tibet. In the West some Ancient Greeks embraced the
idea, The Celts tended to believe in reincarnation with examples in
some of their myths, as did the Vikings who believed one would be
reincarnated in the same family. I read that early Christianity
included a belief in reincarnation, and a verse in the Gospel of
John can be read as supporting the reincarnation hypothesis. The
value of this evidence can be put into perspective by looking at the
medieval belief the world was flat, and the Satanic Ritual Abuse
Panic of the late 1980s which recycled anti Jewish myths and
atrocity tales originally directed against Christians.
There is some evidence suggestive of
reincarnation, mostly from India (assessed by Stevenson) where belief
is strongest and evidence most likely to be corrupted by wishful
thinking. Evidence from hypnotic regression must be treated with
extreme caution, especially when dealing with a reincarnated
Cleopatra: it seems unlikely any regression will ever turn up Hitler,
Stalin or Pol Pot but such a case would be at first glance merit
investigation
I recall reading that group of
researchers into the spirit world asked a guiding spirit about this
and were told reincarnation happens but is uncommon.
And as always I want to know why? If
even one person is reincarnated even once that is a paradigm shaking
event. The reason why could be a second.
Why Reincarnate?
There are two main schools of thought
about the purpose of reincarnation. One school says it is to let us
learn and the other says it is to repay “Karmic Debts”.
Imagine your child fail their school
exams one year. So you send them back to do the year again. But
first you block their memories of that year. But just before you
block the memories you say
“I want you to do better this time,
if not you will keep going back till you succeed” . Imagine what
any child care official or Director of Education would say if you
proposed that as a way to educate your child. You would be in prison
faster than you can say “care order”. Believers note that
spirits tell them remembering past lives would hinder progress in
this one. Believe that as you will.
Imagine someone commits a crime. You
send them to prison and say “ If you do it again you go back to
jail: then block their memories of the crime. Not an effective way of
giving feedback. In any case most if not all injustices can be
settled with an apology and a drink in the Afterlife
“Sorry I had you castrated and sent
to the mines, let me buy you a double whiskey”
“OK, I can laugh about it now, make
it a treble”
Of course the education hypothesis may
be true, in which case reincarnated souls may be smarter, not
necessarily academically: A successful gangster is never stupid, even
though they cannot tell you the cube root of 79 ( not even to four
and bit), and politicians are very clever, at least at looking after
themselves, in a world devoid even of the ethics a gangster needs to
survive (skimming the take on a protection racket or sleeping with
another gangster's woman tends to result in death: in politics,
skilfully done it can result in promotion). If you doubt this note
that they tend to retire on full salary.
The Education Hypothesis is thus
basically flawed, which means either no one is reincarnated or
everyone is or some people are reincarnated. But the reason why
remains unclear. Perhaps we are just here to amuse a bored god or set
of gods. In which case the least we can do is be amusing no solemn.
Who Reincarnates?
Either nobody is reincarnated, some
people are reincarnated, or everyone is reincarnated. The first ,
given the increase in human population since prehistoric times,
suggests a continuous creation of souls to inhabit bodies or that the
body is an incubator in which souls develop. For most of human
history the time spent in a body was short: up to the 19th
century few lived more than 12 months and if nobody is reincarnated
there would be lot of undeveloped souls in the afterlife.
The last possibility suggests our
consciousness (spirit) needs a body, possibly to be able to
experience more keenly, possibly because it cannot survive long
without a body: how long can a bodiless spirit survive and why does
it need a body. It also indicates that somewhere is a reincarnated
Buddha and a reincarnated Jesus (Now who else can I offend?).
In
The Journal of the
Society for Scientific Exploration Vol.
14, No. 3, pp. 411–420, 2000,
Bishai contrasts the linear model in which no soul reincarnates with
a cyclic model in which each soul spends some time in an afterlife
and then reincarnates and shows that the time in the afterlife
shortens, as the population grows, from 57,000 years in 50,000 BC to
about 106 years in 2000AD assuming a total stock of 10 Billion
souls, and from 571,400 years to 712 years for a stock of 100
Billion souls. This may explain why infant mortality was high for
so long: new bodies were needed for short term tenancies and had to
be vacated because resources like food were scarce, Every infant
that died could spend time in the after life and be sure of a body in
time to survive.
If
as some cultures think, one can be reincarnated as an animal, the
pressure would be reduced further. It is of course unclear in this
model whether the human state was regarded as superior or inferior,
though population growth might suggest the former.
The
middle hypothesis, that some people reincarnate, is the most
intriguing of all. Why would people reincarnate given a choice? One
British academic said he hoped reincarnation was false since having
drawn an eel from a barrel of snakes he was unwilling to put his hand
in the barrel again. Perhaps those who reincarnate have a mission
to fulfil, or are just masochistic.
The
Wrap
No
one knows for sure if Reincarnation occurs. If it does no one knows
why. If it occurs no one knows how it is decided who reincarnates and
as what. That is a whole load of ignorance to investigate. And if it
turns out reincarnation is impossible the question of what produced
the evidence we have becomes important in the study of mass
deception.
Right
now I favour the idea that life on earth is a tourist trip with a lot
of dodgy operators who put you up in a resort with half finished
hotels and salmonella ridden food, with some offering misery trips,
like a survival holiday or the theme camp in Eastern Europe that
recreated the experience of a concentration camp. Add in a few secret
agents on a mission, some independent travellers and a few misfits in
the after life and the world begins to look like fun instead of all
the grimly serious puritanism the religions of the book ( and others)
try to foist on us.
I
remain convinced however that all the theories above may be partly or
wholly wrong. The world is never that simple.
Luckily!!
Labels:
christian belief in reincarnation,
Ian Stevenson,
past life regression,
reincarnation,
Spirits,
survival
Friday, 11 January 2013
Medieval Werewolves, Skeptics, Believers and how they thought
Like
Vampires Werewolves have, thanks to Hollywood movies - starting
with The Wolf Man in 1941 - come to be seen in a romantic
light: something perhaps missed by those torn to pieces and eaten by
humans who considered themselves were-animals or perhaps were even real
were-animals.
Modern
Science and Medieval Scholarship both considered physical
transformation of humans impossible, though for vastly different
reasons. The skeptics in the West in the Middle ages were faced with
a well attested phenomenon that needed explanation and produced
explanations that seem plausible, though hard, if not impossible to
test, especially given their belief in the inerrancy of the Bible.
The
cases here are presented to help make sense of the phenomenon and try
to distinguish between various theories. Since more than one theory
may be correct it is necessary to look at recorded cases involving
transformation into an animal, not necessarily a wolf
Quick Looks at some cases
In
1581 a shepherd called Petronio, tried at Dalheim in Germany, was
said to have changed himself into a wolf by means of various
incantations in order to mutilate sheep owned by neighbours against
whom he had a grudge.
In
1598 a court in Paris ordered records of a werewolf trial to be
burned because the details were so grisly.
In
1589 Peter Stumpf of Bedburg in Germany confessed to killing children
in the form of a wolf “With eyes great and large” . He sounds
like the Peter Stubb who, according to Keel [4] terrorised the
German countryside for 25 years in the 16th Century by
donning a wolfskin belt given him by the Devil. When the monstrous
wolf was tracked down the hunters saw Peter appear miraculously
before them. His head was mounted on a pole outside the village but
the wolfskin belt was never recovered.
Nine
years later a French beggar called Jacques Roulet was executed for
the same crime. He confessed he and his companions: his brother and
a cousin, had a salve that let them take the form of wolves. Again he
had killed and eaten children in various parts of the country.
Although there were no eye witnesses of his transformation hunters
had chased a wolf that was eating the body of a fifteen year old boy
and tracked down a human with fresh blood on his hands and red human
flesh under his nails.
Gilles
Garnier was burned as a werewolf at Lyon ( another source says it was
in Dole, about 100 km away) after freely confessing his crimes. In
1573 he killed a young girl with his “paw like hands and his teeth”
on St Michael's day, eating some of the body and taking some home to
his wife. A month after that he killed another girl but three people
prevented him eating her. Then he killed a child of ten and ate part
of their thighs, legs and abdomen. Later, in human form, he killed a
boy about 12 years old but was prevented from eating him.
Apart
from the sudden appearances of the humans when the wolf was pursued,
there is little evidence of anythinf supernatural in these cases
Wolf
Like Humans
In
1610 Pierre De Lancre, a judge in Bordeaux, visited Jean Grenier, a
21 year old werewolf who had been confined to a monastery cell for
seven years. In his book L'inconstance published in 1610 De
Lancre noted that Grenier had viciously attacked several victims and
eyewitnesses swore he was in the form of a wolf when he carried out
the attack. Grenier claimed he had a magic coat that could turn him
into a wolf.
De
Lancre said Grenier had glittering deep set eyes, long black
fingernails and sharp protruding teeth. He walked on all fours much
more easily than he could walk upright. He told the judge he craved
the flesh of little girls. In this way he was like American serial
killer, child rapist and cannibal Albert Fish [3], though Fish never
claimed to change into an animal. It is possible, but not stated,
that Grenier had been a feral child of the type occasionally reported
today that is raised by animals, though generally they cannot talk
coherently.
In
1584 a werewolf attacked a girl in a small village in the Jura
mountains, and when her brother tried to rescue her it killed him.
Enraged bystanders clubbed the werewolf to death and saw the dead
wolf turn into the nude corpse of a young woman called Perenette
Gandillon. An official enquiry resulted in the arrest of her whole
family. Steiger says they seem to have brought about a werewolf
psychosis by means of self hypnosis. In a book entitled Discourse
Des Sourciers a well known Jurist called Boguet described his
examination of the family: they acted as if possessed, losing all
resemblance to humanity, their eyes turned red and gleamed, their
hair sprouted, their teeth became long and sharp and their
fingernails turned horny and clawlike. A bit like the people in the
January Sales.
Medieval
Werewolf theories
Instead
of being seen as driven by bestial impulses we all have (be honest
with yourself here) the Medieval Werewolf was associated with magic
and the Devil. Those who believed a man could become a wolf and
those who did not both proceeded from a worldview totally alien to
modern man.
Medieval
people were not stupid, though academic learning, and indeed
literacy, was restricted to a small elite, indeed the general
harshness of life may have made them more street smart than most
people today. In Christendom the supreme authority was the Bible and
the Christian worldview dominated theories about the world. The
situation was almost certainly similar in the lands and peoples of
the other Abrahamic religions, but the Christian case is well
documented in English and is the only one considered here, though
one must bear in mind that large groups of people are similar
everywhere, though cultural differences may hide the similarities:
take away the religions and a muslim and christian fundamentalist are
almost identical.
In
the Middle Ages there was a widespread belief that humans could
transform into animals. The arguments for and against believing this
centred on the limits of the power of the Devil. The believers' case
centred on the power of the Devil to transform himself, and they
argued it was no harder for him to transform a human. The skeptics,
as represented by Henri Boguet argued that while animals were not
made to have souls their brains were too small to hold a human
intellect and that the witch would have to lose their soul at the
moment of transformation and get it back later. Since the soul
normally left the body at the moment of death and Satan could not
resurrect people, the transformation was impossible.
Having
rejected the reality of the transformation the skeptics had to
explain the case reports. Some attributed the werewolf confessions to
insanity, though others worried that this explanation would let self
confessed werewolves off the hook. Others considered the
transformation a glamour or illusion produced by Satan, or that Satan
created false bodies from thin air, which the werewolf used. However
they then had to explain why werewolves gained so many of the
abilities of real wolves: fleetness of foot, ferocity and the love
of howling. They also had to explain why the werewolves left tracks
that could not have been left by a human being, and teeth marks on
their victims.
They
concluded that these feats were done by Satan or his demons who made
them possible through their supernatural powers. Of course no one
asked why the demon needed a human being on these expeditions.
This
left the need to explain how wounds inflicted on the werewolf
appeared on the human body when the transformation back to human form
took place ( a feature also reported in some non-European cases).
They supposed that the witch never left their home or base, and that
the attack was a delusion with Satan inflicting wounds on the body
paralleling that inflicted on the air-constructed body used by the
demon carrying out the attack. If so Satan would seem to have been
rather wasteful with his people.
At
this point it seems to me it would have been more parsimonious to
assume the transformations were real. Similar mental convolutions
seem to characterise the way some skeptics dismiss anomalous
phenomena today.
Other
Theories
Brad
Steiger [1] notes that in the middle ages bands of thieves and
beggars would wonder the countryside at night often dressed in
Wolfskins and howling like animals. The nearest modern equivalent
would be Football Hooligans or young City Traders. It is easy to
think such groups explain some werewolf legends. However Steiger does
not mention his sources and in the next sentence mentions Hitler's
werewolf regiment which, apart from the name appears to have had
nothing to do with werewolves. As always in this type of
investigation check what you can and his theory needs to be checked.
Another
explanation is the lycanthrope psychosis, the belief that one changes
into a wolf at full moon (or alternatively that a wolf becomes human
at other times). Given the changes observed in mediums at
Spiritualist seances, it is possible that at this time the person's
appearance changes enough that a victim, unable to spare the time to
examine their attacker closely, would think they were seeing a real
wolf. This is unlikely to cover all cases though.
An
off the wall theory might be that a werewolf is actually the spirit
of a wolf that has somehow ended up in a human body. Given the
nature of the field it seems extremely difficult to test or asses
this idea, and as a theory it does not explain the observed
transformations or unusual footprints.
A
final possibility is that the transformations were real, though the
theoretical background of the Middle Ages may have influenced the
reporting of the events. It is also interesting to note that there
seem to be few modern cases though there is one from about 1820
involving a wolf strap, possibly a strap cut from the back of a
hanged man [5]. Reports of apparent shapeshifters are almost
non-existent today so perhaps if the werewolf exists it should be a
protected species, like the vampire.
The
Wrap
The
cases here are only the tip of a worldwide iceberg of werewolf cases.
We cannot dismiss the eyewitness reports out of hand: there are too
many of them.
It
seems simplest to assume that some at least of these cases are
genuine transformations, though this conclusion can only be tentative
and the author's inner skeptic does not like it. However there are
common features to all these cases and where eyewitnesses see a
transformation taking place in so many cases the idea of
hallucination becomes hard to maintain.
It
is also possible that many are explained by the lycanthropy
psychosis with physical changes similar to those seen in Spiritualist
Seances and the phenomenon of Transfiguration accepted by mainstream
religions. This does not explain the cases where the beast left
prints a human could not make.
Some commentators on an earlier version of this article noted that it might be easier to "possess" an animal than to become one and that demonic possession could also explain some cases
Some commentators on an earlier version of this article noted that it might be easier to "possess" an animal than to become one and that demonic possession could also explain some cases
As
always more research is needed.
[1]
Monsters among us, Brad Steiger, Para Research 1982, ISBN
0-9149-18-38-9
[2]
Strange Histories, Darren Oldridge, Routledge 2005, ISBN
0-415-28860-6
[3] Albert Fish
[4]
Strange Creatures from Time and Space, John Keel, Sphere Books 1975
ISBN 0-7221-5147-0
Labels:
Dalheim werewolf,
Eating Human Flesh,
Feral Humans,
Jean Grenier,
lycanthropy,
medieval thought,
Peirre De Lancre,
Perenett Gandillon,
Peter Stubb,
Peter Stumpf,
Satans Powers,
Werewolves,
Wolf like humans
Tuesday, 8 January 2013
The Phenomenon: Hairy Monsters UFOs and the men in Black
The Phenomenon is a term the late John
Keel used to describe the totality of strange occurrences such as
Yeti Sightings, UFOS, Men in Black and other unexplained phenomena
that suggest contact with an unknown order of beings. He devoted
much of his life to this research and ended up wondering about the
nature of the Phenomenon. His speculations are out of fashion
because they upset believers and skeptics alike.
Vampire: Edward Munch |
Once upon a time our ancestors lived in
a world that teemed with spirits. Every tree, forest, stream and
river had its spirits, some more than one, and not all benevolent or
neutral to humans. In Russia the Leshy led unwary travellers in the
forests round in circles, the Rusalka seduced man and drowned then
in her river, the Bannik lived in the bathhouse and the Domovoi
looked after the house. In Ireland the Sidhe were called the good
neighbours out of fear. And there were the great spirits: Pan and
Dionysus in Greece, Odin, Thor and Loki in the north, and Zeus, Mars
and Hermes in the south. And there were monsters hostile to humans
and keen on eating human flesh who will form a large part of this
hub. Werewolves, vampires and ghouls were known, hated, and feared
and the evidence for them was good as long as eyewitness accounts
could be taken at face value.
The Banishment of
monsters
When Science became the dominant mode
of intellectual thought the monsters were relegated to status of
superstitious nonsense. Where medieval scholars examined the
evidence as carefully as possible the new Scientific Orthodoxy
dismissed all cases without evidence. In many ways the new
generation of scientists were smart arrogant fools, with an
attitude summarised by Lavoisier's statement about meteors “Stones
cannot fall from the sky because there are no stones in the sky”.
Similar attitudes are shown by groups
of “skeptics” who routinely dismiss anomalous phenomena without
examining the evidence and presenting arguments based on common sense
or 19th century science. This attitude seems to be related
to early negative experiences of a faith-based philosophy ,
generally organised religion[1], much of which validates Richard
Dawkins' claim that raising a child in any religion is a form of
child abuse,or a fear of validating religion[2].
In the process of advancing human
knowledge the Scientific Attitude, which was basically Materialism,
enabled advances in human health to a level not seen since before the
dawn of agriculture, replaced much back breaking human labour with
machines and enabled development of destructive weaponry of a power
unimaginable to previous generations. Overall Science has been a
great benefit to the human race. No one stopped to wonder if, in
dismissing anomalies from an armchair rather then investigating in
the field, the baby was being thrown out with the bath water. In the
process the Sidhe, the Monsters and the entire spirit world was
banished to the land of fantasy.
But nobody told the
monsters.
Humans Versus Monsters
In looking at the strange creatures
that wonder through the world at various times attacking, confusing
or less frequently helping humans we encounter UFOS, Aliens,
Bigfoot, the Yeti, Werewolves, ghouls and a host of other creatures.
And when we look at the extremes of human behaviour, from the
harmless example of the man who was sexually aroused by roads and
finally jailed for attempting to seduce a motorway, to the woman who
killed her lovers and kept them in coffins in the basement where she
would sit in solitary state every night talking to the corpses
perhaps the scariest thing about some of these Unbelievables,
a term invented by John Keel, is that they are non human. In sheer
viciousness humans have them beaten hands down. That alone suggests
these creatures are not projections of the dark sides of our
unconscious minds: they are not scary enough.
A few cases.
856 AD: A giant dog invaded a church
in Trier, Prussia [4 citing Annales Francorum Regum and
Chronicon Saxonus ] during an immense storm which darkened the
sky so much that the congregation could hardly see each other. The
floor seemed to open and the beast rose up to run back and forth to
the altar. The Chronicon reported a similar incident in
867AD.
A monstrous pig like thing reportedly
appeared in a church at Andover, Hants, UK on Christmas Eve 1171. It
dashed round the altar just as the priest was killed by lightning
from within the church.
In 1065 a flying black horse crossed
York, England, during a lightning storm, apparently leaving enormous
prints (how it could do this while flying is unclear, unless the
image was an illusion). According to the Chronicles of Abbot Ralph of
Essex [4] after a horrible electric storm on July 29th
1205 Monstrous tracks were seen in several places of a kind never
seen before and in the period 11189-1199 2 in the time of King
Richard I of England there appeared in a certain grassy flat ground
human footprints of extraordinary length and everywhere the
footprints were impressed the grass remained as if scorched by fire.
In 1810 something was killing sheep
near the Scottish-English border killing 8 to ten animals a night and
sucking out their blood. That September a dog was killed in the area
and the killings reportedly stopped. Ignore the implications of a
vampire dog, but if the animal killed had been named as a domestic
dog called Fang I would suspect the Cosmic Joker had been feeling
bored. Apparently there was another series of similar attacks in 1874
in Cavan in Ireland, where the animal's throats were cut and their
blood sucked out. By April the beast had reached Limerick and
attacked and bit several people some of whom allegedly ended up in a
lunatic asylum “labouring under strange symptoms of insanity”.
Another bloodsucking killer near Badminton, England, in 1905 killed
over thirty sheep and a police sergeant said it could not have been
a dog and that dogs do not suck the blood of a sheep and leave the
flesh alone. An interesting feature is abrupt cessation of the
killings. This could mean the killer was an unknown animal that
died, or maybe it just moved on. Perhaps all these cases, involve
a single creature moving on. Here it is impossible to ignore the
medieval notion that demons fashioned bodies from materials like
blood and semen and that the people Kaplan considered true vampires
claimed to need blood to delay ageing. But there is not enough
evidence to make either demons or vampire humans more than a
speculative explanation.
A “monkey man” has been seen on and
off around Bridge 39 of the UK's Grand union canal in Shropshire.
First seen in 1879 it attacked a horse pulling a barge and when the
owner tried to whip the monkey the whip passed through it and the
horse ran off with the thing on its back. The same creature was seen
in 1980 and mentioned more recently in a cartoon in Fortean Times.
These cases just give a flavour of the
kind of things involved in the Phenomenon. There is a vast primary
and secondary literature and recording the cases and grouping them
appropriately would be an important but necessary task.
Theories
The theories here are largely from
Steiger[3] with added speculations. There is also the strong
possibility that no single theory can explain all the strange events
involved and in any case the theories tend to blur into each other,
and, as stated below, they may all be leading us up the wrong path.
Fantasy resulting from superstition
and ignorance. While a number of anomalous phenomena may be
explained in mundane terms there is a residue of unexplainables
where any explanation raises more questions than answers. Even if
this were true the worldwide uniformity in describing (say)
were-animals would require explanation.
Archetypes manufactured by the
collective unconscious. The
simple form of this theory does not explain the physical traces
sometimes left when humans encounter the Phenomenon. Apparently
towards the end of his life Jung began to believe that Archetypal
energies could manifest in the physical world. One author cited in
[3] defined Archetypes ans “Energetic Thought fields” that could
be accessed when a human is in certain altered states of
consciousness, and that there may be unrecognised dimensions of
physical events that contain highly evolved entities that intrude on
human attempts to reality. Steiger notes that the influence may be
malevolent or benevolent. As stated above, the Phenomenon seems to
be much less evil than humans, and Archetypes are still
controversial.
A paraphysical tribe that coexist
with us and occasionally
interacts with us. If so they are not necessarily friendly.
Unfortunately the term “Paraphysical” is not well defined. And
it does not explain the relative rarity of Bigfoot sightings ( for
example) in major cities.
Supernatural beings:
Angels or demons, malevolent, benevolent or simply playful.
Accepting this theory does not validate any particular religion nor
does it validate religion in general. But the kind of events
involved look a little beneath the dignity of powerful supernatural
beings.
Unknown Terrestrial life:
This theory surfaces time and again, in one form as the idea that
Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster are real creatures ( and Keel [4]
notes droppings attributable to Bigfoot have been found) or the
notion, proposed by Karl Shuker that UFOs are a form of life
largely restricted to the middle and upper atmosphere. Again some
events seem to strengthen this theory but others seem more
paranormal.
Creatures from the Hollow Earth:
This theory says the earth is
honeycombed with vast underground caverns in which these creatures
live. Even those found hundreds of miles from any known caverns.
While there are indeed a lot of underground caverns the vast
majority seem inhospitable to life.
Creatures
misplaced in time and space: Trapped by time warps these creatures
are as out of place as they look. Except some seem to have adapted as
well as if they were from here and now. The Yeti might be the best
candidate for such a creature.
Creatures from other dimensions:
Originating in a parallel space time continuum we can only see these
creatures under extraordinary, but, if the number of sightings is a
guide, not especially rare, circumstances.
A planetary poltergeist:
A particularly weak theory since poltergeist phenomena are generally
very different from the events involving these Unbelievables.
Answers to a Psychic need:
We manufacture the creatures in response to a psychic need using
otherwise inaccessible psychic powers. This would require a level of
PSI far in excess of that seen in laboratories, but Alexandra David
Neel's experiments creating a thought form in Tibet mean it cannot
be ruled out.
Extraterrestrial
Experiments: Perhaps these creatures have been put here so
something can monitor our reaction ( Or conversely it seems to me
that Earth may be a dumping ground for failed experiments).
Programmed
Deceit and Delusion: created for an ulterior and perhaps sinister
motive. Given the ease with which humans deceive themselves this is
over elaborate, all the agency creating this needs is some writing
they can call holy scriptures and a script to target the rubes.
Genetic Misfits
from Atlantis: explains the unbelievables in terms of what
seems to be a myth. Edgar Cayce channeled information about this
claiming that Atlanteans created several new species including pigs
(which were holy in some ancient cultures. We know this from data
about the Celts and the fact that in some cultures the pig is
regarded as evil, a sure sign it was once sacred).
Teaching
Mechanisms: Perhaps some higher agency is creating the phenomenon
in order to change our concept of reality. If so we are slow
learners.
These theories
include unknown animals, para-physical beings, mental phenomena,
poltergeists, thought forms and Atlantis. The fact that a case can
be made for each theory suggests that a multiplicity of Phenomena
are involved.
John Keel pointed
out that in some encounters, such as those with UFOs, there is reason
to believe that the experiencers have had artificial memories planted
in order to disguise what really happened. If this is the case then
when dealing with the Phenomenon we need to look for evidence that
what the witness recalls may be a decoy. Keel also noted that
sometimes armies of monster hunters were coming fields for a monster
of some kind while a few miles away UFOs were landing and... doing
something.
The
Wrap
This
has been a first effort at investigating a vast and disorderly field.
Many investigators simply focus on one detail while ignoring the
bigger picture. Here I looked at the reason why the phenomenon has
been less accepted since Science began to dominate, shown a few cases
and listed various theories, the multiplicity of which shows the
complexity of the subject. It is likely that no one theory fits all
the phenomena involved.
Further reading
[1]
The Pathology of Organized Skepticism L. DAVID
LEITER, Journal of Scientific Exploration, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp.
125–128, 2002
[2]
Hume’s Syndrome: Irrational Resistance
to the Paranormal MICHAEL GROSSO Journal
of Scientific Exploration, Vol. 22, No.
4, pp. 549–556, 2008
[3]
Monsters among us, Brad Steiger, Para Research 1982, ISBN
0-9149-18-38-9
[4]
Strange Creatures from Time and Space, John Keel, Sphere Books 1975
ISBN 0-7221-5147-0
you may also be interested in the posts on our sister blog such as the post on Satanic Puritan Thomas Wier
Labels:
animal mutilations,
archetypes,
Bigfoot,
demons,
Ghouls,
Hollow Earth,
Leshy,
Loch Ness Monster,
Men in Black,
monkey man,
Monsters,
paraphysical entities,
Sidhe,
Spirits,
UFOs,
vampire dog,
Vampires,
Werewolves,
Yeti
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)