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Human
Devolution
Joan d'Arc Interviews Michael
Cremo
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In
their 1993, 900-page tome, Forbidden Archeology
and its condensed version, Hidden History of the
Human Race, co-authors Michael Cremo and Richard
Thompson brought forth largely unknown evidence illustrating
that modern humans worked and walked the earth millions
of years ago, even as far back as 2 billion years
ago. The reverberations of this work on the scientific
materialist hegemony warranted an extensive response,
entitled Forbidden Archeology's Impact, wherein
Michael Cremo provided a blow-by-blow of his dealings
with the fashion elite of the Darwinist persuasion.
This is as important a book as the first two, but
for different reasons.
Forbidden
Archeology's Impact reprints a multitude of negative
reviews of the first book, followed by a reprint of
a personal letter from Michael Cremo to each reviewer
addressing the deceptive disclaimers therein with
gracious but pointed sophistication. Cremo's unruffled
confidence in response to the openly boorish and arrogant
comments of these defunct fur-covered die-hards is
a wonder to behold. His professional finesse makes
me feel a little ashamed of my joy in watching this
pathetic group go extinct. In truth, the supremacy
and authority of the Darwinists is in trouble. This
slipshod paradigm doesn't hold up to the scrutiny
of those leading the emerging paradigm of mankind's
genesis. Cremo is one of those leaders.
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In
his sequel, Human Devolution: A Vedic Alternative to
Darwin's Theory, Cremo suggests that human beings "did
not evolve up from matter; instead we devolved, or came
down, from the realm of pure consciousness, spirit." Cremo
sees "a new consciousness emerging that integrates science
and religion into a cohesive paradigm of reality." Yes,
the emerging paradigm is a spiritual one, but it's Universalist
in scope. The Intelligent Design movement is not just comprised
of Christians: atheists, new agers, conspiracy theorists,
and yes, Hare Krishnas, have joined the ranks. After 150
years, Darwin's theory is a flop and a diverse body of transcendent
philosophies promises to undermine its authority.
When
NBC featured Forbidden Archeology in its 1996 program
The Mysterious Origins of Man, hosted by Charlton
Heston, establishment scientists lobbied the FCC to fine
NBC for airing this opposing view! In this exclusive interview,
Cremo discusses what he calls a "knowledge filter" upon
which materialist science has based its dominant paradigm
of human origins. A research associate for the Bhaktivedanta
Institute, Mr. Cremo's anti-Darwinian thesis is embraced
by both Christians and alternative epistemology advocates.
His conclusions demand a paradigm change. Will it happen
in our lifetime? Stranger things have happened. Stay tuned
to BIPED for the latest.
Michael,
your books, Forbidden Archeology and Hidden History
of the Human Race, co-written with Richard L. Thompson,
presented the thesis that mankind is an exceedingly ancient
race which was contemporaneous with the apelike creatures
from which humans supposedly evolved. About how far back was
your research able to document the human race? What is the
oldest "anomaly" you reported in your book?
The
oldest artifacts go back about 2 billion years. These are
round metallic objects that have been over the past couple
of decades by miners in South Africa. The objects come from
a mine near a place called Ottosdalin, in the West Transvaal
region. The objects are one or two inches in diameter. The
ones we had analyzed by metallurgists turned out to be made
of an iron ore called hematite. The most interesting feature
of the objects is the parallel grooves that go around the
center of each one. Some have four grooves, some three,
some two, some only one. The metallurgists who examined
them said they were not produced naturally. Therefore, the
objects must have been manufactured by someone with humanlike
intelligence. Yet they are found solidly embedded in mineral
deposits over 2 billion years old.
You
characterize Forbidden Archeology as an "archeology
of archeology." How so?
I
went digging into the history of archeology. From my studies
in the ancient Sanskrit writings of India, I learned of
a human presence that goes back about 2 billion years on
earth. When I looked at the current textbooks on archeology,
I did not see any such evidence. But I decided I would dig
deeper, and when I did that digging I found that over the
past 150 years archeologists have discovered huge amounts
of evidence, in the form of human skeletal remains, human
footprints, and human artifacts tens of millions, even hundreds
of millions of years old, going all the way back to about
2 billion years. My digging took eight years, and it meant
searching out original archeological reports in archives
and libraries from around the world, in many different languages.
Among
the oldest anomalies you report are the Laetoli footprints,
discovered by Mary Leakey. These footprints were found in
Tanzania in 1979. How old are these footprints and what
is so anomalous about them? Is there any other evidence
for anatomically modern humans at this same time?
The
Laetoli footprints were found in layers of solidified volcanic
ash, dated by the potassium-argon method as being about
3.7 million years old, so I would not call them one of the
oldest. There are footprints and even shoe prints that go
much further back in time than that. For example, the shoe
print found by William Meister near Antelope Springs, Utah,
goes back about 500 million years. The Laetoli footprints
are still quite interesting. According to Mary Leakey, and
other scientists, the footprints are exactly like those
of modern human beings. This is unusual, because according
to most scientists today, human beings capable of making
these footprints did not come into existence until about
100,000 years ago. Mary Leakey did not believe, of course,
that humans of our type existed 3.7 million years ago in
Africa.
So
how did she explain the footprints?
She
and others proposed that there must have existed at that
time some kind of hominid, some kind of ape-man, who had
feet exactly like ours. That is possible. Unfortunately,
there is no physical evidence to support that idea. We have
many hominid skeletons from that period, and none of them
have feet exactly like modern human feet. Their feet are
all more or less apelike, with toes longer than modern human
toes, and a first toe that can extend out to the side, like
a human thumb. At present the only creature known to science
with a foot exactly like that of a modern human being is
a modern human being. So I would say that Mary Leakey discovered
evidence that anatomically modern humans existed about 3.7
million years ago in Africa. Of course, someone might say
that it would be better if we had anatomically modern human
skeletons of that age. And such things do exist. For example,
the Italian geologist Giuseppe Ragazzoni discovered anatomically
modern human skeletal remains in Pliocene formations at
a place called Castenedolo in northern Italy. The Pliocene
goes from about 2 million years ago to 5 million years ago.
And there are other such discoveries from other parts of
the world.
I'm
particularly intrigued by the bola stones of Olduvai Gorge
and Argentina. What do these stones tell us, that is, what
were they used for and how are they incompatible with the
current Darwinian paradigm of human evolution?
Bola
stones are stones that have been artificially rounded, and
which many times also have a groove carved around the middle.
The rounded, grooved stones are tied together with a thong,
usually of leather. The result is the bola, a weapon that
can be used to capture birds and animals. When thrown, the
stone balls cause the thong to wrap tightly around the legs
of the bird or animal, thus bringing it down. According
to archeologists, bolas are a weapon made and used only
by anatomically modern humans, humans of our kind. So Louis
Leakey found bola stones in the lower levels of Olduvai
Gorge, which go back to the Pliocene periods (2-5 million
years). Leakey also found there a bone needle, which he
believed was used for sewing leather. At Miramar, in Argentina,
the Argentine archeologist Carlos Ameghino reported finding
bola stones in undisturbed Pliocene formations, about 3
million years old. In the same layer, he also discovered
the bone of an extinct South American mammal with a flint
arrowhead embedded in it. Still later, another researcher
found a partial human jaw in the same formation. According
to the current Darwinian theory of human evolution, humans
capable of making bola stones and arrowheads and bone needles
did not exist until between 100,000 and 150,000 years ago.
Homo
habilis (the "handy man") and Australopithecus afarensis
("Lucy") are two "species" that turned out to be made up
of the bones of two of more species. Yet there are still
"mock ups" of these made-up species in museums. Is it widely
accepted now that these species never existed, or are there
some who insist these were viable intermediaries in the
human lineage?
There
are some scientists who have reported that Homo habilis
and Australopithecus afarensis were constructed from
bones of two or more species, yet these hominids also do
have their supporters. Despite the controversy, models of
these hominids are in fact still displayed in many museums.
These exhibits give no hint of the controversy that exists
about these creatures in the scientific world. In this way,
people are being misled. Of course, the museums also give
no hint of the archeological evidence for extreme human
antiquity, the evidence that shows that humans like us existed
alongside our supposed ape-man ancestors, like Homo habilis
and Australopithecus afarensis.
The
reaction you received from the scientific community when
Forbidden Archeology was published was incredible
enough to warrant the publication of your book, Forbidden
Archeology's Impact. How would you characterize the
response?
The
response was varied, because the scientific community is
not monolithic. There is one group within the scientific
community that I call the fundamentalist Darwinists. These
are scientists who take Darwinism as an ideology to be defended
at all costs. They are attached to Darwinism for reasons
that are not really scientific. Their reaction was to reject
my work without really addressing any of the evidence. For
example, Richard Leakey said Forbidden Archeology
was "pure humbug." But he did not discuss any of the facts.
However, there are others within the scientific community
who accept the Darwinist theory of human evolution for reasons
that are more or less scientific. They are at least willing
to hear alternative ideas and discuss evidence. From members
of this group I have gotten invitations to speak at scientific
institutions like the Royal Institution of London and the
Russian Academy of Sciences, and at professional conferences
organized by groups such as the World Archeological Congress
and the European Association of Archeologists.
Some of the papers I have presented at these conferences
have been published in the official proceedings of these
conferences. Scientists from this more open-minded group
have also reviewed my books in the professional journals
of archeology, anthropology and the history of science.
For example, noted historian of science David Oldroyd and
his coauthor Jo Wodak said about Forbidden Archeology
in Social Studies of Science that the book makes
a valuable contribution to the literature on paleoanthropology
for two reasons. First, the book goes into the evidence
in greater depth than any other book they were familiar
with, and second, the book raised important questions about
the nature of scientific truth claims, particularly in regard
to human evolution. Among this more open-minded group, there
are some scientists who have actually come to agree with
my conclusions.
Were
you surprised by the reaction from the Darwinist camp?
As
I said, there are two kinds of Darwinists. The first is
the fundamentalist type. I was not surprised by their sneering
kind of negative reaction. I anticipated that, and indeed,
I used some of their more strident statements to get more
attention for my work, both within the scientific world
and among the general public. I was rather pleasantly surprised
by the willingness of the more open-minded Darwinists to
give me platforms to present my views at scientific societies,
scientific conferences, and science departments at universities
around the world. I was also pleasantly surprised by the
amount of attention they gave to my work in book reviews
in their professional literature.
What
was the general reaction of Christian fundamentalists?
I
anticipated that I would be able to find some common ground
with them, and that did turn out to be the case. I believe
that scientists and other intellectuals are, at this point
in history, at a major juncture. We are in the midst of
what I call a renegotiation of our whole picture of life
and the universe, something that happens once every few
centuries. And there are many parties to this renegotiation,
among them mainstream scientists, but also alternative science
people, New agers, religionists of various kinds, and others.
So I try to stay in touch with all of these different parties
and not get boxed into just one particular audience.
Your
books are overall well accepted by young-earth Christian
fundamentalists. Yet, your message is the opposite, that
the origin of the human race is exceedingly ancient. What
is the common ground between your ideas and those of others
in the Intelligent Design movement?
As
far as the young earth creationists are concerned, I tell
them that whether we believe the earth is a few thousand
years old (as they assert) or a few billion years old (as
I assert), humans like us have been around since the beginning
of the history of life and we did not come from more primitive
apelike ancestors. On that basis we are able to find some
common ground.
The
intelligent design theorists are a newer phenomenon. They
include such people as Phillip Johnson, biochemist Michael
Behe, and philosopher of science William Dembski. Although
they do embrace Christianity, they keep the Bible and any
direct mention of God in the background of their scientific
work, stressing evidence for the more general concept of
intelligent design. They are not necessarily supporters
of a young earth. In fact, it seems that most of them are
not. My work offers some support for their views. We agree
that human beings and other things display a level of biological
complexity on the molecular level that has not been explained
by Darwinists. So we do have something in common, although
I'm more up front with my Vedic commitments.
You
state that the purpose of Forbidden Archeology was
to confront evolutionists with an "accumulation of crucial
anomalies" and to provoke a paradigm crisis in science.
Do you think you've accomplished your goal?
I'm
not the only person challenging the now dominant Darwinian
theory of evolution. That doctrine is now under sustained
attack from many directions. We should also keep in mind
that most people in the world, including most Americans,
don't really accept the theory. I don't think that this
is a situation that can long continue. So I would say yes,
supporters of the Darwinist paradigm now are in the beginning
stages of a major crisis, as can be judged from the volume
of the howls of protest coming from them. I think I'm doing
my part to keep the heat on them.
One
reviewer wrote, "Today the creationists deliver the provoking
news. Previously this was the function of the evolutionists."
Do you see the Intelligent Design movement as this provocation?
That
was written by Danish scholar of religion Mikael Rothstein,
in a review of Forbidden Archeology for the Copenhagen
newspaper Politiken in 1994. Of course, I agree with
him. I believe that the intelligent design movement is part
of the coalition of forces that are provoking a reaction
to the current consensus in mainstream science. But that
coalition also includes various kinds of creationists, New
Age authors, researchers in parapsychology, UFOs, and paranormal
healing, and a variety of others. I have met some of the
leading intelligent design theorists. For example, Phillip
E. Johnson, author of Darwin on Trial, wrote a foreword
for The Hidden History of the Human Race. Michael
Behe, author of Darwin's Black Box, and I have met
a few times, and we do have a common cause. However, my
Forbidden Archeology coauthor, Richard Thompson,
and I were speaking about the irreducibility of complex
biological form and the need for intelligent design to account
for it way back in 1984, before any of the current crop
of intelligent design theorists were doing so.
Has
the movement accepted you in its ranks?
Sort of, but I differ from the intelligent design theorists
in some respects. For example, most of them appear, along
with the Darwinists, to accept that humans and other living
things are simply complex forms of matter. The only difference
between the Darwinists and the intelligent design theorists
is how the complexity came to be. The Darwinists attribute
the complexity to evolution by natural selection, whereas
the intelligent design theorists attribute it to intelligent
design. I disagree with the assumption, shared by Darwinists
and intelligent design theorists, that humans and other
things are simply complex arrangements of ordinary matter.
I believe that there are good reasons to suppose that humans
and other living things are combinations of three things:
ordinary matter, a subtle mind element, and an element of
pure consciousness or spirit.
I
think a better clarification is that Darwinists (naturalists)
say that intelligence cannot have been there in the first
place and had to evolve, whereas ID theorists say intelligence
was always there in the system and it came first and gave
rise to everything else.
That
is a good clarification.
The
intelligence itself is the assumed designer, and whatever
word you want to use to describe that is up to you. God
or Goddess is OK with some. The concept of Mind-at-Large
might be more acceptable to others. So in a way this is
not that different from what you are saying, or is it?
As
far as it goes, it's not different. But I do go further
than that.
We're
getting caught up in terminology that is difficult to grasp.
When ID theorists talk about "intelligence" they are talking
about a designer, pure and simple. Design means the same
thing as create, doesn't it?
In
this context, I think most people will take them as closely
related, if not the same.
I
think the real difference is that you are more specific
about what humans are made of: matter, mind and spirit (pure
consciousness) and you are more "up front" about being a
"Krishna creationist," as you have been called.
Yes.
The
others perhaps want to distance themselves a bit from their
religious views so they can attempt to get a more fair hearing.
I can't say I blame them.
I
don't blame them either. But I have been to intelligent
design conferences where I have seen them put on the spot,
being pressed to identify the "designer." At this point,
most of the prominent intelligent design theorists are Christian.
Their opponents are not unaware of this and make an issue
of it. "So what is this designer. Are you speaking about
a UFO alien?" So I prefer to just take that issue off the
table by stating up front what my personal bias is.
I
see. In fact, the first words on the BIPED home page are:
"This website has no religious leanings."
If
that is actually true, that's fine.
I
did this so people wouldn't immediately switch channels,
thinking they had fallen onto some (god forbid) "creationist"
website!
On
my forbidden archeology website, I don't put it up in red
lights that I'm a "Krishna creationist." But neither do
I hide it. That way, no one can accuse me of some hidden
agenda. That can be distracting from the scientific issues.
Are
you in a way holding it against them for not being as forthcoming
as you regarding their religious views?
No,
I don't hold it against them. They are doing things the
way they want to do it, and they have their reasons. They
just want to focus on evidence for design, and that is fine.
As I said, I have been speaking about intelligent design
and irreducible complexity since 1984, before most of them
were doing it. It's definitely part of my program, but I
have added some other elements, by being more up front about
my conception of the designer and by introducing new elements
into the discussion: mind and consciousness. Another thing
is I really don't accept the distinction many try to make
between science and religion. I don't see myself as either
scientist or religionist. I see myself as a human being
seeking the truth, and I'm prepared to accept whatever it's
that helps me get at the truth, call it science or religion.
One comment by a skeptic was that your book is "a well-written
example of pseudoscience, it looks like the real thing."
This skeptic said you should have aired your arguments through
professional journals. In your estimation, would you have
been allowed a foot in a "professional journal" with this
material?
Well,
some of my material has been published in peer reviewed
scientific publications. Also, I submitted my book to all
the relevant professional journals for review, and the book
was in fact reviewed in about a dozen professional scientific
journals. Some of the responses were negative, others were
not. For example:
"Michael
Cremo, a research associate in history and philosophy
of science, and Richard Thompson, a mathematician, challenge
the dominant views of human origins and antiquity. This
volume combines a vast amount of both accepted and controversial
evidence from the archeological record with sociological,
philosophical, and historical critiques of the scientific
method to challenge existing views and expose the suppression
of information concerning history and human origins."
Journal of Field Archeology, Vol. 21, 1994, p. 112.
"I
have no doubt that there will be some who will read this
book and profit from it. Certainly it provides the historian
of archeology with a useful compendium of case studies
in the history and sociology of scientific knowledge,
which can be used to foster debate within archaeology
about how to describe the epistemology of one's discipline."
Tim Murray, in British Journal for the History of Science,
Vol. 28, 1995, p. 379.
"It
must be acknowledged that Forbidden Archeology brings
to attention many interesting issues that have not received
much consideration from historians; and the authors' detailed
examination of the early literature is certainly stimulating
and raises questions of considerable interest, both historically
and from the perspective of practitioners of sociology
of scientific knowledge." Jo Wodak and David Oldroyd,
in Social Studies of Science, Vol. 26(1), 1996, p. 196.
This
is not to say that these reviewers agreed with all my conclusions.
But the point is that I did air my arguments through the
professional journals, although not exactly in the way that
the skeptic insisted. Basically, I did the same thing Darwin
did. He did not air all of his arguments in a piecemeal
way through the professional journals. He spent twenty years
working on his book Origin of Species, and then he
just unleashed that book on the general public and the scientific
world.
You
have described neo-Darwinism as "an ongoing social process
of knowledge filtration" that has a cumulative effect. But
when you talk about suppression of evidence for extreme
human antiquity, you are not talking about a grand conspiracy.
How would you then characterize this "knowledge filter"?
For
one thing, it's human nature. If we love someone, we tend
to overlook their faults, which may be obvious to others.
Darwinists love their theory of evolution, and tend to overlook
its obvious faults and evidence that contradicts it. It's
not that the scientists involved in this process of knowledge
filtration feel that they are hiding true facts which if
known to the public would cause them to reject Darwinism.
Rather, when a Darwinist encounters such [contradictory]
evidence, the Darwinist thinks, "Something must be wrong
with this. I don't know exactly what, but I'm sure that
a specialist in the relevant field would be able to point
it out."
Earlier
this year, I gave a talk to the department of anthropology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow. After I spoke,
one of the anthropologists was quite upset with me for talking
about the knowledge filtering process. She said, "We are
honest people." But then she also said, "I have not read
your book, but I'm sure that everything in it must be either
a mistake or a hoax. There is not any evidence that actually
contradicts our evolutionary picture of human origins."
So she denied the knowledge filtering process but at the
same time provided a perfect example of it, letting her
theoretical preconceptions govern how she treated the evidence.
Yes,
this is probably a very common reaction among those hoodwinked
by Darwinist propaganda. Another common reaction from a
"skeptic," in Forbidden Archeology's Impact, was
that you have "abandoned the testing of simpler hypotheses
before more complex and sensationalistic ones." It seems
to me that what makes something "simple" is the prior belief
in it. Yet, this "economy" argument is used quite frequently
by "skeptics" who feel that Darwinian evolution is so obvious
as to be unquestionable. How do you address this argument?
When
the simplicity argument comes up, as in the case you mentioned,
the skeptic assumes that the Darwinian explanation is the
simplest one, whereas an explanation involving creation
or intelligent design is the more complicated one. First
of all, I cannot think of a single instance in which I have
not given consideration to the Darwinist interpretation
of the evidence. Second, the Darwinian explanation is not
so simple. If we look at the neo-Darwinian synthesis, we
see that it involves quite a complex interaction of genetics,
developmental biology, population dynamics, and fitness
in specified environments. Actually, it's so complex that
Darwinists are unable to actually explain the origin of
the anatomically modern human species in the terms their
own theory requires.
For
example, if they want to explain the human eye, they would
have to specify the genome of some ancestral animal that
did not have an eye. Then they would have to specify a change
in the genome of that animal that would result in the first
step in the formation of the modern human eye. Let's keep
in mind that a gene just tells a cell how to make a specific
protein from amino acid subparts. So they should be able
to tell us what protein the mutated gene would produce.
We also have to keep in mind that this protein would have
to have an effect in the course of the development of the
organism, starting from the egg.
So they should be able to specify how the biochemical pathway
by which this protein would have some effect, way downstream
in the cell division process, perhaps after tens of thousands
of cell divisions, so that the first part of the eye is
produced in the organism. Then they would have to explain
how this change in the gene, etc., would become spread throughout
and fixed in a breeding population. They would have to explain
how this change would contribute to the fitness of the individuals
in that population in a specific environment. Then they
would have to iterate this process, to explain the next
step in the production of the eye.
Keep
in mind, we are not just talking about the structure of
the eye. There would have to be an optic nerve that could
carry signals to the brain. The eye would also have to have
sets of muscles to control it, and these would require nerves
going to the brain, and the brain itself would have to have
a neuronal structure capable of processing the signals from
the eye. The development of each of these subsystems would
have to be specified in exactly the same way as described
above. You will find no such explanation in any biology
text or scientific journal. So it might be debatable as
to what the "simpler" hypothesis really is. Ultimately,
there is no guarantee that the simplest hypothesis is the
true one.
Michael,
I noted on the Internet that you were born in Schenectady,
NY, in 1948, and you received your first copy of the Bhagavad-Gita
from some Hare Krishnas at a Grateful Dead concert. You
later joined the group and began writing for the Bhaktivedanta
Book Trust at ISKCON (International Society for Krishna
Consciousness). What prompted you to initially become involved
in what I might call your "Darwin Project"?
In
1984, the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust asked me to work with
one of the Hare Krishna movement's scientists, Richard Thompson,
to produce for the general public a statement of our positions
on various scientific questions, including the Darwinian
theory of evolution.
I
would like to discuss the paradigm you have offered in your
new book, Human Devolution. In your opinion, how solid is
the fossil evidence that H. sapiens pre-dates (precedes)
H. erectus or that the two co-existed?
The
evidence is quite solid - as solid as any other archeological
evidence - but it's not well known because of the process
of knowledge filtration that operates in archeology. Evidence
that conforms to the current evolutionary consensus passes
through this filter; evidence that radically contradicts
it does not. The truth is that over the past 150 years,
archeologists and other earth scientists have discovered
hundreds of anatomically modern human skeletal remains,
anatomically modern human footprints, and artifacts normally
attributed to anatomically modern humans.
Is
there evidence that H. erectus was an intelligent
ape?
The
taxon H. erectus is quite diverse, and many archeologists
and anthropologists have split it up into several species,
such as H. ergaster and H. heidelbergensis,
in addition to H. erectus. Some of the skeletal remains
look more modern, some look more apelike.
You state that human-like and ape-like beings co-existed
on Earth for hundreds of millions of years. In the Hindu
artwork we see humans pictured with what appear to be intelligent
apes or monkeys. What was the relationship between these
monkeys and humans in the Hindu accounts? Do you think this
artwork might depict reality at a certain time in prehistory?
Yes,
it does reflect a reality. The idea of ape-men is not something
that was invented by Darwinists of the nineteenth century.
Long before that, the ancient Sanskrit writings were speaking
of creatures with apelike bodies, humanlike intelligence,
and a low level of material culture. For example, the Ramayana
speaks of the Vanaras, a species of apelike men that existed
millions of years ago. But alongside these ape-men existed
humans of our type. The relationship was one of coexistence
rather than evolution.
In
your new book, please explain how you account for the "non-evolutionary
relationship" between australopithecines and modern humans.
The
Vedic writings speak of 400,000 humanlike species scattered
throughout the universe. In my opinion, anatomically modern
humans and the various hominids, such as the australopithecines,
could be placed among those 400,000 species. All of these
species, and all of the other plant and animal species,
were designed as vehicles for conscious selves. Today, we
see that auto manufacturers design and build many different
kinds of vehicles of different types and sizes and prices
for people of different tastes, needs, and purchasing power.
So the "intelligent designer" does the same thing: designs
and builds various kinds of bodies for conscious selves
with different desires and karmas.
How
does the age of the earth and the existence of life on it
correspond to the Hindu cosmological calendar? Where are
we now in the Hindu calendar?
The
Hindu, or Vedic, concept of time is cyclical. There are
cycles within cycles within cycles. The basic unit of this
cyclical time is called the day of Brahma. It lasts about
4.3 billion years. It's followed by a night of Brahma, which
also lasts about 4.3 billion years. The days follow the
nights endlessly in succession. During the days, life is
manifested in the universe, and during the nights it's dormant.
The current day of Brahma, the one we are in now, began
about 2 billion years ago. So by this account, we should
expect to see signs of life, including human life, going
back about 2 billion years on earth.
In fact, that is what we do see, as documented in Forbidden
Archeology. It's interesting that the oldest undisputed
fossil evidence for life on earth recognized by paleontologists
is also about 2 billion years old. We're talking about the
oldest undisputed fossils of single celled life forms. Some
scientists believe they can detect chemical signs of life
going back further, but that kind of evidence can be questioned.
So there does appear to be a parallel between the Vedic
cosmological calendar and the findings of modern paleontology,
with both indicating the first presence of life on earth
about 2 billion years ago.
Modern
geologists give the earth an age of about 6 billion years.
I think there is also a Vedic parallel here as well. First,
we have to keep in mind that the Vedic conception of the
universe is that it's pretty much like a virtual reality
system, giving the conscious self a temporary domain of
experience, apart from the eternal domain of the realm of
pure consciousness, or spirit. Under this conception, I
picture the earth, our particular domain of experience,
as being somewhat like a rewritable CD or DVD disk. It's
erased at the end of each day of Brahma.
What
is being erased?
All the geological and paleontological evidence that was
written on the disc. Then comes a night of Brahma, during
which the disk is reprogrammed. Geological information is
written on the disk. The night of Brahma lasts 4.3 billion
years. Then comes the next day of Brahma. And then biological
evidence starts to get written on the disk. And we are now
2 billion years into the day of Brahma.
So
when we look at the evidence, we find geological evidence
that the earth has existed for about 6 billion years, and
biological evidence, in the form of fossils, showing that
life has existed for about 2 billion years. This is an interesting
parallel between the Vedic and modern scientific accounts.
Also, the day of Brahma is divided into 14 subcycles called
manvantara periods, each lasting about 300 million years.
Between each one there is a devastation, after which the
earth has to be repopulated. We are now in the seventh manvantara
cycle, and that means there have been six devastations over
the past 2 billion years. Modern paleontology also tells
us that the history of life on earth has been interrupted
by six major extinction events, spaced at intervals of hundreds
of millions of years, the last being the one that wiped
out the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago.
What
happens during the "night of Brahma" when the earth is "unmanifest"?
The
various living entities are put into a state of dormancy
or suspended animation, something like dreamless sleep.
In
Hindu cosmology the world is created and destroyed and recreated
how many times?
Endlessly.
We have been speaking of days and nights of Brahma. One
day and one night add up to a complete day of Brahma. There
are 360 such days in a year of Brahma, and Brahma lives
for 100 of such years, or 36,000 days. Each life of Brahma
corresponds to one breath of Maha Vishnu, who lies in the
Causal Ocean. That works out to about 311 trillion years.
We are now about halfway through the life of the present
Brahma in our universe. When the Maha Vishnu breathes out,
millions of universes come into being, at first in tiny
seed-like form, then in a burst of light, each universe
begins to expand. And in each universe, a Brahma comes into
being and fills that universe with living entities. And
when the Maha Vishnu inhales, then the universes contract
and go back into the Maha Vishnu. Again, there are many
parallels with modern cosmology. Many universes. Expanding
universes. Contracting universes.
This
corresponds to Velikovsky's idea that there have been "many
Adams." How many times has the world been created and destroyed?
Countless times.
If
energy can never be destroyed, would you say then that it
just moves into a different dimension and becomes "unmanifest"?
Yes, something like that. There is something in Vedic cosmology
called pradhana, which is the unmanifest, undifferentiated
material energy. During the creation cycles, this unmanifest
material energy becomes differentiated into elements, starting
with the more subtle elements and proceeding to the grosser
elements. Then the differentiated elements are manifested
into the forms of planets and bodies, which serve as domains
and vehicles, respectively, for conscious selves.
You
write that the true ancient Hindu cosmology was "dismantled"
by Europeans in order to bring it into line with the biblical
time scale. When was this done?
Yes,
this happened during the 18th and 19th centuries. They tried
to fit everything within five thousand years.
So
how ancient then is mankind according to Hindu cosmology?
In the current day of Brahma, humankind goes back 2 billion
years. In each day of Brahma, in each life of Brahma, not
only in this universe, but in countless other universes,
the human form has been manifest for vast periods of time.
Keep in mind that the human body is a vehicle for a conscious
self, and the proper use of the vehicle is to bring the
conscious self back to its original position in a realm
of pure consciousness, where spiritual human forms have
always existed beyond time. That is our original home.
When
we depart from there, the conscious self is covered by a
material form, a body. That covering process is what I call
devolution. But the process can be reversed, and the conscious
self can be freed of its coverings and restored to its original
pure state. That process I call re-evolution. Every genuine
wisdom tradition in the world has some means for accomplishing
that, some method of prayer or meditation or yoga. So I
encourage people to look deeply into their traditions and
take advantage of the revolutionary techniques that are
there. Of course, what I'm talking about here goes beyond
the externalities that most people identify with religion.
Michael,
quite sychronistically, I picked up from my bookshelf a
Manly Hall book called Invisible Records of Thought and
Action and opened it to a page on expansion of human
memory. He suggested that during a mystical experience part
of universal memory would be opened up. He writes, "it's
reasonable to assume that the end of all knowledge in terms
of history and time will be in this restoration of world
memory" and that "only by such restoration will it ever
be possible to establish ethical content in history." He
states that history is in a "lamentable condition" since
humankind has probably been here more like "a hundred million
years" and less than 5,000 years is being documented by
mainstream science. Hall presumes since nature is "profoundly
economical," this human memory is accessible somehow. Does
this tie in to your concept of re-evolution?
Without
having read the book, it's hard for me to say how much his
ideas really do match up with mine. But on the basis of
what you have picked out, I do see some parallels. The idea
of extreme human antiquity is something we have in common.
The idea that we have forgotten some original state of consciousness
is also a common theme.
Your
concept of "re-evolution" requires a deep commitment to
meditation? Are you speaking of attempting to go beyond
present individual memory to a deeper and collective human
memory?
It
depends on how you conceive of this collective human memory.
I do believe that we are all originally from the same place.
But our (now lost) memory of that higher dimensional spiritual
homeland is common, not collective. In some of the old Star
Trek shows, we heard about being plugged into the Borg collective
- "resistance is futile." I do not accept that we belong
to that kind of collective, and that our individual existence
is kind of an illusion. Say for example, we have a group
of expatriate Americans meeting in some far off place in
the world, in Ulan Bator in Mongolia, for example. And we
meet in a restaurant there. So we will all have our memories
of America. But those are individual memories that we have
in common, not collective memories. We are individuals.
We have individual memories. But those memories do have
something in common.
You
talk about the present time as being an important juncture
in the renegotiation of our picture of life. I think that
essentially we're sick of being lied to and some of us are
demanding a major correction to the textbooks. Would you
agree?
Yes.
The view that is presented in the textbooks is a strictly
materialistic view, which involves a Darwinian evolutionary
conception. But if you look at Gallup surveys of the actual
beliefs of the American people, you will find that most
people do not accept the Darwinian theory of evolution and
its underlying materialistic ontology. About 45 percent
believe that God created human beings in the beginning.
Now these same people may have some pretty sectarian religious
views, which I would not endorse, but I think they do have
it right on the question of evolution. An additional 37
percent of the American people believe that God created
human beings but He did it by evolution, while only about
12 percent accept the theory of evolution as it is put forward
in the textbooks, as a random natural process. So clearly
the vast majority of the American people do not accept the
theory of evolution as it's taught in the textbooks.
Gallup
surveys also show that most of the American people accept
things that contradict the materialistic worldview that
underlies the evolution theory. For example, about half
of the American people accept extrasensory perception (ESP).
And such beliefs are not confined to the people in general.
They have also infected the scientific community itself.
In various parts of the world, scientists are forming alternative
science organizations to investigate phenomena that are
out of bounds in mainstream institutions. Here in the US
we have the Institute for Noetic Sciences, founded by astronaut
Edgar Mitchell, and in the UK the Scientific and Medical
Network. So this is a situation that is not very stable.
The majority of people and many in the scientific community
are opposed to what is being forced upon us in the textbooks
by a now dominant elite.
What
would you like the textbooks to say in the future about
the genesis of humanity on Earth?
In
the immediate future, I would like the textbooks to present
alternative views of human origins. Let them present the
Darwinian theory of evolution, but let them also present
alternative ideas, such as intelligent design theory and
devolution. I think the extraterrestrial theory also deserves
mention. These alternative ideas should not be presented
in a derogatory way, but in a neutral way, and students
should be invited to make up their own minds about the question.
I think that if this is done, eventually, the Darwinian
theory is going to find itself in the place of an "alternative"
idea. I do not think it will ever disappear, but it will
assume a lesser status.
In my personal experience I have noted that children
in junior and senior high schools are pretty much bought
and sold on the Darwinian paradigm. What would you suppose
to be the first steps toward opening their minds to other
views?
My
experience is actually somewhat different. I find lots of
children in their teens who are very open to new ideas and
who are not sold on Darwinism at all. But for the others,
I would say the first step is to allow alternatives to be
presented in the classrooms and textbooks. But then, sometimes
I think maybe it's best to keep the alternatives as kind
of dangerous underground ideas, and let them circulate outside
the normal channels. That might make them really attractive.
But I suppose (sigh) that eventually I would want to see
alternative ideas making their way into the regular classrooms
and textbooks.
Perhaps
as a first step our textbooks should be more realistic and
honest about what we know and don't know, rather than presenting
a metaphysical theory as a scientific fact.
Oh
yes. It would also be helpful if they presented a more accurate
picture of the history of science. For example, every physics
textbook mentions Pierre and Marie Curie, who got Nobel
Prizes for their work in discovering radium. Why not also
mention that they were heavily involved in psychical research?
Why not mention the current research going on under the
auspices of the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research
Group, showing that mental intention can cause random number
generators to produce more zeros than ones in a string?
I
was wondering what your thoughts are on the anthropic principle.
I've given it a lot of thought and I believe it's bogus.
It's a huge part of the materialist mindset, the idea that
intelligence has got to evolve and cannot have been "in
the system" so to speak from the beginning. I notice that
you discuss it in Human Devolution specifically as
it regards the fine-tuning specifications of the universe.
Can you explain your position?
The
fine-tuning problem is a problem that requires an explanation.
The problem is that particular values for various fundamental
physical constants and ratios of forces appear to be entirely
arbitrary. If they were even slightly different, we would
not have atoms, planets, stars, or life forms. It would
appear that the values have been selected by a designer.
To get around that, the anthropic principle proposes we
should not be surprised to find ourselves in a universe
where everything is fine-tuned. If it were not like that,
we would not be here. But this still begs the question as
to why this universe is fine-tuned. It still could be because
there is an intelligent designer. To avoid that unwanted
conclusion, some propose brute chance. It just is that way.
That is not very satisfying, so they propose many universes,
each with different values for the constants and ratios,
and we just happen to have won the lottery, so to speak.
We are in the one where everything is properly fine-tuned.
But this idea assumes that there are in fact other universes,
and that all the other universes, or a good many of them,
are lifeless and have the fundamental constants and ratios
adjusted in a different way. But there is no evidence for
this. What if, for example, there are in fact other universes,
but they are all fine-tuned so that life can and does exist
in them. There is no way for them to rule that out.
So,
I accept that the fine-tuning problem is a sign of design.
I accept the general principle that we should not be surprised
to find ourselves in a universe where everything in fine-tuned.
But this still leaves open the question how it got fine-tuned.
It could be design. But some supporters of the anthropic
principle, in an effort to avoid intelligent design, jump
to a many worlds proposal, with the fine-tunings different
in each one, and we just happen to find ourselves in the
right one. But there is no proof of that. There could indeed
be many universes, and in all of them the fine-tuning is
there and life is there, because an intelligent designer
made all of them that way. Indeed, that is what the Vedic
cosmology teaches. As far as the one universe we can see
is concerned, it appears to be designed. The many worlds
version of the anthropic principle doesn't really allow
us to avoid that conclusion.
The
fine-tuning problem is the cosmological component of the
anthropic principle, but it also contains a biological aspect:
the minimum time required for the evolution of "intelligent
observers." Frank Tipler's enunciation of it, in The
Anthropic Cosmological Principle, requires a billion
years for the Darwinian evolutionary process to produce
intelligent beings from non-living matter. The term "intelligence"
is implied to mean only "human intelligence." It's, of course,
closely allied to an Earth-centered paradigm that insists
we climbed out of the muck of our local habitat, that we
are a localized, one-of-a-kind anomaly that "acquired" consciousness
along the way. In that sense, I refer to Darwinian evolution
as "Western man's totem." What are your thoughts on this
aspect of the anthropic principle?
I
disagree with Tipler's idea that intelligence comes only
after billions of years. It's there in the beginning. It
has always been there.
Michael
Cremo's websites are www.mcremo.com
and www.humandevolution.com
He
is the co-author of Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden
History of the Human Race (1993) (also on audio cassette)
and The Hidden History of the Human Race (Condensed
Edition) (1999). He is the author of Forbidden Archeology's
Impact: How a Controversial New Book Shocked the Scientific
Community and Became an Underground Classic (1998) and
Human Devolution: A Vedic Alternative to Darwin's Theory
(2003), all published by Torchlight. He is also the co-author
with Mukunda Dasa Goswami of Divine Nature: A Spiritual
Perspective on the Environmental Crisis (1995), published
by the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust.
http://www.mcremo.com/index.html
http://www.forbiddenarcheology.com/
http://www.humandevolution.com/
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