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  • 7/29/2019 Atlantis Rising 37 Sampler

    1/13

  • 7/29/2019 Atlantis Rising 37 Sampler

    2/1328 ATLANTIS RISING Number 83 Subscribe or Order Books, DVDs and Much Mo

    http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/http://www.atlantisrisingmagazine.com/
  • 7/29/2019 Atlantis Rising 37 Sampler

    3/13See Our Great 8-page Catalog Beginning on Page 74 Number 58ATLANTIS RISING 3

  • 7/29/2019 Atlantis Rising 37 Sampler

    4/13Subscribe or Order Books, DVDs and Much Mo10 ATLANTIS RISING Number 86

    EARLY RAYS

    n his book Underworld(2002), researcherGraham Hancock suggested that the long-

    sought evidence for antediluvian civilization(commonly thought of as Atlantis, though,in all likelihood, something much more farflung than any single place) could be foundin the coastal regions of the major conti-nents which are now under water. Thou-sands of years ago, they were not. One of theareas Hancock singled out as a possiblesource of the early civilizations of Mesopo-tamia was the Persian Gulf. Now a scientificpaper published in December, 2010, in thejournal Current Anthropology has made vir-tually the same case and is shaking up the

    world of conventional archaeology.From the pyramids to Stonehenge, the

    problem of missing precursors has long un-dergirded many Atlantean scenarios and in-spired those in search of lost civilizations.Precursor refers to the trial and error stagesthat should precede any development of civ-ilization (i.e., there must have been a ModelT before there could be a Ford Mustang; welearn to walk before we run; etc.). Great ad-vancements cant happen overnight, wevebeen told. But now, Jeffrey Rose, an archae-ologist and researcher with Britains Univer-sity of Birmingham has turned up evidencefor a wave of advanced human settlement

    along the shores of the gulf which has noknown precursors. Rose wanted to know howsuch a thing could be, and he is now con-vinced that the evidence of those precedingcultures is missing because it is, in fact,under the gulf, left there for at least 7500years before being covered over by rising wa-ters from the Indian Ocean.

    In years of digging, Rose has found alongthe gulfs coast a series of scattered huntingcamps which appeared virtually overnight.These settlements, according to Rose,boast well-built, permanent stone houses,long-distance trade networks, elaboratelydecorated pottery, domesticated animals,

    I

    and even evidence for one of the oldest boain the world.

    He believes the area now beneath the Pesian Gulf was once a virtual oasis the size Great Britain, and that it could have hostmodern humansproviding them refufrom the ice agesfor over 100,000 years bfore finally submerging beneath the s

    about 8,000 years ago. If he turns out to right, there will be many major revisions the widely accepted storyline for the histoof the human race and its presumed migrtions out of Africa.

    Verification of Roses argument shoualso raise questions about other regions curently under water which, before our presestandard model of history begins, were dland. Graham Hancock, Dr. Gregory Littand other researchers familiar to the readeofAtlantis Rising have already pointed other candidates for investigation, such Indias Gulf of Cambay and North AmericaCaribbean Sea.

    LOST CIVILIZATIONIN THE PERSIAN GULF?LOST CIVILIZATIONIN THE PERSIAN GULF?

    Jeffrey Rose (leand colleag

    search for artifac

    Jeffrey Rose (lefand colleagu

    search for artifac

    Satellite Image of thePersian Gulf (NASA

    Satellite Image of thePersian Gulf (NASA

    https://www.keysecure.com/atlantisrising.com/subscribe.shtml
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    5/13Number 86 ATLANTIS RISING 11See Our Great 8-page Catalog Beginning on Page 74

    he idea that there may be uni-verses beyond our own has

    gotten a big boost in astro-nomical and cosmolog-ical circles lately. Infact, say re-searchers at Uni-versity CollegeLondon, not onlyare there manyuniverses, but

    they have, on oc-casion, bumpedinto each otherleaving cosmicbruises.

    The new thinking isbased on a model of cosmoscalled eternal inflation whichtheorizes that our universe is part of alarger and ever expanding universe. As theweb site PopSci.com explains it, our universeexists in a kind of cosmic bubble alongsideother universes contained in their owncosmic bubbles, and in these universes the

    T

    sraeli archaeologists havefound the earliest evidence yet

    for so-called modern humans. Ina cave in central Israel, a teamfrom Tel Aviv University has dis-covered 400,000-year-old humanteeth. If the findings hold up,they will certainly overthrow the

    widely accepted human evolu-tionary timeline.

    According to conventional ar-chaeology, modern humans(Homo sapiens) originated in Af-rica about 200,000 years agoand reached full behavioral mod-ernity only around 50,000 yearsago. Consequently, many haveruled out the possibility of ad-vanced civilization before theend of the last ice age on the as-sumption that there simply was

    IOldest Humans in Israel

    not enough time for such devel-opments.

    At this point the academic es-tablishment is, of course, skep-tical of the Israeli findings,claiming that the teeth can beunreliable evidence and mighteven be Neanderthal. However,

    Sir Paul Mellars, a prehistory ex-pert at Cambridge University,said the study is reputable, andthe find is important.

    To say the least, the new dis-covery is part of a continuingtrend of pushing the dawn ofhuman development further andfurther into the distant past,thus corroborating the stance ofthis magazine, and others, whoinsist that our civilization todayis a rerun, not a new episode

    South American Iron Geothite

    rules of physics could be far different than inour own.

    The case is based on the study of minutefluctuations in what is called the cosmic mi-crowave background (CMB). Oxford Univer-

    sitys Roger Penrose claims to havefound evidence of a cyclicaluniverse in patterns of con-

    centric circles withinthe CMB, which is

    taken to mean thatour universe is just

    one of manywhich have comebefore, simultane-

    ously, and will

    come after ourown. Other re-

    searchers say theyhave now found the

    undeniable fingerprintsof other such universes.

    Ancient Talmudic scholarswere not able to decide how many

    angels could sit on the head of a pin, andnow modern science cant decide how manyuniverses are in the cosmic neighborhood.The more things change the more they re-main the same. World without end, amen.

    hat is being called theoldest mine in the western

    hemisphere has turned up inChile, not too far from where 33trapped Chilean miners wererescued in the Fall of 2010. Theoriginal Chilean miners operatedabout 12,000 years ago and werelooking for iron oxide.

    Located in the Taltal area,the mine is said to be the workof the Huentelauquen culture.The iron, it is believed, was in-tended strictly for ceremonial

    W purposes. Mummies foundnearby were dyed with ironoxide. The use of iron as a metacame much later but perhaps noas much later as is convention-ally believed. Previously, theoldest mine in the Americas wasthought to be a 2500-year-oldone in the U.S.

    For more on the surprisingand amazing metallurgy of theancient Americans, see PhilipCoppens article elsewhere inthis issue.

    12,OOO-Year-OldIron Mine Foundin Chile

    12,OOO-Year-OldIron Mine Foundin Chile

    Cosmic BruisesCosmic Bruises

    Number 86 ATLANTIS RISING 11See Our Great 8-page Catalog Beginning on Page 74

    THE BRUISING BUSINESS OF BEING A UNIVERSETHE BRUISING BUSINESS OF BEING A UNIVERSE

    IsraeliTooth(AP Photo)

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    Subscribe or Order Books, DVDs and Much Mo22 ATLANTIS RISING Number 86Continued on Page 5

    That is, the students studied half of thewords after taking the test. By commonsensethinking this after-the-fact studying shouldhave no bearing on how the students did onthe test. However, such was not the case.The students did significantly better on the

    recall of the words that they practiced, eventhough the practice followed taking the test.To quote from Dr. Bems paper directly, Theresults show that practicing a set of wordsafter the recall test does, in fact, reach backin time to facilitate the recall of those

    words.These are astounding results

    but corroborate a huge array ofdata, which the skeptics and de-bunkers have consistently re-fused to acknowledge, sup-porting the idea that the futurecan influence the present andthe past.

    How can the future possiblyinfluence the past? Doesnt thisgo against everything weknow? Isnt the concept of the

    one-way arrow of time, with causes pre-ceding effects, fundamental to modern sci-ence and modern life? Many people assumethis is the case, but reality is much morecomplex. As the brilliant late physicistOlivier Costa de Beauregard (1911-2007)wrote:

    Irreversibility, or dissymmetry betweenpast and future, is . . . [a] . . . fundamental as-pect of physical time, appearing in the theo-

    BY ROBERT M. SCHOCH, Ph.D.

    ALTERNATIVE SCIENCENew Research ChallengesConventional AssumptionsAbout the Influence of the

    Future on the Past

    e live in a cause and effect world.Causes come before their effects,not vice versa. Time is unidirec-tional, moving from the past, to

    the present, to the future. We might regretor cherish the past, but we cannot go back in

    time. I teach. My students study and thentake the exam. It would not make sense forthem to first take the exam and do their stud-ying afterwards. Well, they might learn thematerial after the fact, but that is hardlygoing to help them on the exam that they al-ready took!

    In the last paragraph I havedescribed the commonsenseworld that most people knowand believe in. Few seriouslyquestion it, yet it just might bewrong. Take the example ofstudying for an exam aftertaking the exam. Recently Dr.

    Daryl J. Bem of Cornell Univer-sity reported on a series of ret-roactive facilitation of recall ex-periments (Feeling the Future:Experimental Evidence for Anomalous Retro-active Influences on Cognition and Affect,accepted for publication in Journal of Per-sonality and Social Psychology). Studentswere shown 48 words (nouns, such as namesof animals or foods) and then asked to recallas many of the words as they could re-member. After the recall test, the studentswere subjected to practice with half of thewords (picked randomly by a computer).

    Wries of wave propagation, thermodynamicthe probability calculus, statistical mchanics, and information theory. All these apects of irreversibility are interconnectebeing manifestations of one single fundmental universal irreversibility. This irreve

    sibility is factlike, not lawlike, meaning thit resides not in the equations but in the slutions selected as significant (Time, TPhysical Magnitude, 1987, p. xix).

    What he means by this is that while timusually progresses, or at least appears progress, on a macroscopic scale from tpast through the present to the future, theis nothing inherent in the mathematicequations we use to encapsulate our modeunderstanding of physics that precludes timmoving backwards, that precludes the effepreceding the cause. Classically any mathmatical solutions to complex physics prolems that involve the future affecting t

    past (invoking negative time) have bediscarded as simply nonsensical, for it known that the future cannot affect tpast. Yet, as we have seen with Bems recestudies, this is certainly not the case. Evwhen Costa de Beauregard wrote hmagnum opus nearly a quarter century agthere was plenty of evidence for the future present influencing the past, so-called retrcausality, such as well-attested cases of prcognition, documented retroactive psychkinesis using random number generatoand the like. Costa de Beauregard took su

    Daryl J. Bem

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    ThePrimeMinisterand the

    SpiritWorld

    Continued on Page 37

    hus runs the old adage,suggesting that the in-fluence of mothers

    over sons anddaughters is what finallydetermines who will riseto positions of leadershipin the world.

    This seems to betrue, and then some,for William LyonMackenzie King(1874-1950), PrimeMinister of Canadafor 22 years between1921 and 1948.King's mother, IsabelKing, daughter ofWilliam Lyon Mack-enzie, a famous pre-confederation Cana-dian political rebel,had a powerful shapinginfluence on her eldestson while she was alive;after her death, at nu-merous sances arrangedby or attended by Kingfrom 1920 to 1950, shecontinued to offer her fa-mous son counsel and sup-port.

    Other deceased members ofKing's family, including his

    brother, sister, father, andgrandfather William LyonMackenzie, also regularly vis-ited him from beyond the grave,as well as deceased politicalluminaries whom he ad-mired, such as Kingsmentor and predecessorCanadian Prime MinisterSir Wilfrid Laurier (1841-1919) and British PrimeMinisters Lord Earl Grey(1764-1845), BenjaminDisraeli (1804-1881), andWilliam Ewart Gladstone

    (1809-1898). King also, orso he recorded, receivedspirit messages from his bestfriend, Henry Albert (Bert)Harper, who died at age 27 whiletrying to save two people fromdrowning (King wrote a book about Bertcalled The Secret of Heroism). Other friendlyspirits who reportedly dropped by for a visitwith King were U.S. Presidents Franklin D.Roosevelt (1882-1945) and Theodore Roose-velt (1858-1919), Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1511), and deceased ministers of Kings Lib-eral cabinet like Minister of Defense Norman

    T

    BY JOHN CHAMBERS

    Rogers(killed in aplane crash onJune 10, 1940). Even Kings deceased Irishterrier, Pat, occasionally made his presencefelt.

    According to Kings diaries and witnesses

    who spoke after his death,the Canadian Prime Min-

    ister never sought ad-vice from these dis-

    embodied

    visitors abouthow to runthe country

    and never fol-lowed advice

    proffered to himin unsolicited

    fashion. During oneclandestine visit in

    London, he told an em-inent British medium

    that, he made it a rule to ig-nore advice thus given: he trustedsolely to his own and his advisors

    judgment.

    Born in Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario,King received an M.A. in political sciencefrom the University of Toronto, then thesame degree, along with a Ph.D. in politicaleconomy, from Harvard. King was Canadasfirst Minister of Labor, in the pre-World WarOne Liberal government of Sir Wilfrid La-urier. Out of politics during the war, hespent much time in the U. S. studying laborproblems. King became Prime Minister in1921; he immediately set about drawing upand enacting important pro-labor legislation.During his entire tenure as Prime Minister,

    LOST HISTORY

    The hand that rocks the cradle

    Is the hand that rules the world.

    TheChannelingsof Canadas

    Wartime

    LeaderWilliam LyonMackenzie

    King

    MackenzieKing

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    Continued on Page 65

    uch of modern science seems torest on a foundation of dogmatic(and unproven) philosophical ma-terialism, a belief that matter

    (mass/energy/space/time), which the scien-tists cannot even define, is the prime reality

    and that mind/thought/spirit/consciousnessis a secondary manifestation. Aside from thefact that people who pride themselves onquestioning every hypothesis should not ac-cept materialism on faith, a little reflectionshould make it clear to anyone that none ofus can be absolutely certain of the indepen-dent existence of that material universe outthere. But we can be absolutely certain thatwe thinkmeaning that mind exists. Per-haps we philosophical idealists are correctand mind is the prime reality, and the mindthinks or dreams the physical universe(and much more), creating and sustaining it.Logically, if this is the case, it follows thatthere is some kind of afterlife, or perhaps re-incarnation. It would also seem that for all ofour individual minds to perceive, at least ap-proximately and usually, the same reality,our individual minds must be connected atsome higher level into a single, universalmindGod, the Supreme Being. But itwould also mean that since our minds thinkwith symbols and, collectively, create andsustain reality, then symbols, words, sacredgeometry, and numerology matter a greatdeal. An elite who understands this might beable, at least to a limited extent, to manipu-late reality for their own ends.

    Related to this is the question of free will.Most people imagine that they have free will,

    but can we even define the term? Obviouslythere are limitations on free will; we oftenhave little control over events or even overour own thoughts. A man might will himselfto fly, or reverse his aging process, or healhis illnesses, and yet he would still remain asick old man bound to the earth. Ourfreedom to act is limited by such conditionsas illness or poverty, and by laws, and by thewills of others. Theologians and philosophershave been divided over the issue, with peoplelike Martin Luther and John Calvin, for ex-ample, believing in theological determinism.They reasoned that since God is virtually om-niscient and omnipotent, He knows and has

    arranged everything that we think, every-thing that we do, and everything that willhappen to us. Logical determinists, withoutintroducing God, believe that a mechanisticuniverse makes free will impossible. Compat-ibilists like Thomas Hobbes and David Humebelieved that a deterministic universe limitsfree will, and William James argued in favorof free will.

    Most people do not realize that if rela-tivity theory is correct, there can be no freewill. If time is another spatial dimension, atright angles to the three we normally per-ceive, the future already exists and the uni-

    M

    BY WILLIAM B. STOECKER

    GREATER DESIGN

    verse, including us, is a four-dimensionalobject. But, as we have said, there aregrowing doubts about relativity.

    There is evidence that either events arefated or there is a strong tendency for cer-tain events to occur, and that somethingother than causality is at work. Jung, the pi-oneering psychologist, and the writer ArthurKoestler believed in something called syn-chronicity, a non-causal ordering principlethat caused like events, people, and objectsto cluster together. In The Roots of Coinci-dence Koestler provided many examples ofthis, and it seems to go far beyond mere co-incidenceif coincidence even exists.

    Certain prophecies also seem to go be-yond coincidence. Abraham Lincolns friend

    Ward Hill Lamon said that three days beforehis assassination, Lincoln told him, MaryTodd Lincoln, and some other friends of a recent and troubling dream. Lincoln said thatin his dream, he wandered downstairs in theWhite House and heard people crying. He entered a room where a body lay in state and asoldier told him that it was the body of thePresident, killed by an assassin. Neither Lin-colns wife nor anyone else ever contradictedthis story. Several years before the Titanicsank, a man named Morgan Robertson wroteThe Wreck of the Titan, or Futility, about aship sunk after hitting an iceberg on hermaiden voyage. His ship, with the eerily

    Number 86 ATLANTIS RISING 39Number 86 ATLANTIS RISING 39Number 86 ATLANTIS RISING 39See Our Great 8-page Catalog Beginning on Page 74

    When Is

    Something Else?Probing the Mysteries of

    Synchronicity and theRiddle of Free Will

    Probing the Mysteries ofSynchronicity and theRiddle of Free Will

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    9/13Number 86 ATLANTIS RISING 41See Our Great 8-page Catalog Beginning on Page 74

    ccording to various surveys, polls,and studies, atheists account forroughly 10 percent of the U.S. popu-lation and around 25 percent of

    Canadas. There are indications, however,that the numbers are much higher, perhapscloser to 20 percent in the U.S. and as muchas 40 percent in Canada. One study suggeststhat only five percent of the U.S. populationborn before 1946 are atheists, but that 19

    percent of those born after 1977 fall in thatcategory. Although the numbers vary signifi-cantly from study to study, they all seem toagree that atheism is growing among theyounger generations. Then again, it could bethat the number of people declaring no re-ligion is growing, not really atheism, per se.

    The difficulty in coming up with moreexact numbers has to do with semantics andwith the stigma attached to the word,atheist. Many non-believers prefer not tobe labeled as atheists and therefore identifythemselves as agnostics (dont know) orsimply as non-religious, humanists, or secu-

    A

    larists. Realizing this, the researchers oftenjust ask the respondent for a religion orno-religion, and it cannot be inferred thatno-religion necessarily means the personis an atheist. Moreover, some people whomight list a religion in a survey have reallydivorced themselves from that religion andmay be de facto atheists, but, for one reasonor another, find it convenient to continuallyaffiliate themselves with their old religion.

    The simple dictionary definition is thatan atheist is one who denies the existenceof God but that requires a definition ofGod. If a person believes in a HigherPower of some kind but rejects the idea ofan anthropomorphic Godone with humancharacteristicsand further believes thatconsciousness survives death, is he or she tobe counted as an atheist? There are agrowing number of people in that category.Should Buddhists, who do not believe inGod, yet believe in some form of afterlife, beconsidered atheists for statistical purposes?

    While many non-believers prefer to re-main in the closet and not be labeled asatheists, there clearly are more and moremilitant atheists who wear the title as a Continued on Page 66

    BY MICHAEL E. TYMN

    badge of honor. They undoubtedly have beenencouraged by a flood of books on atheismduring the first decade of this century. Theauthors include Richard Dawkins (The GodDelusion), Victor Stenger (God: The FailedHypothesis), Christopher Hitchens (god isnot Great), David Mills (Atheist Universe),Michael Onfray (Atheist Manifesto), SamHarris (The End of Faith: Religion, Terror

    and the Future of Reason), and a number ofothers who have reached best-seller status.Their ideas have inspired more timid mindsand fueled a militancy that is increasinglyapparent in the media and on the Internet.They justify their aggressiveness by arguingthat religion promotes intolerance, impedessocial progress, and leads to war and ter-rorism.

    Waving the banner of science, these mili-tant atheists fancy themselves self-appointedguardians of truth in the war on supersti-tion. And while recognizing that their philos-ophy dooms them to eternal nothingness,they rationalize that their truth combined

    with on-going science gives meaning to life.That is, life is all about providing a betterworld for future generations. However, in alltheir altruism, they stop short of explainingto what end the progeny or to which genera-tion full fruition. If a future generation expe-riences a world of peace with unsurpassedcomforts and conveniences, what will givemeaning to their lives? In effect, life remainsshort-term and meaningless for all genera-tions under the atheists banner.

    Evolution took a huge bite a while back,and recent work on the brain has shown noevidence for souls, spirits, or any part of ourpersonality or behavior distinct from the

    lump of jelly in our head, Jerry A. Coyne, aprofessor of ecology and evolution at TheUniversity of Chicago, wrote in a feature ar-ticle titled Science and religion arentfriends for the October 11, 2010, issue ofUSA Today. In championing the cause ofatheism, Coyne haughtily goes on to say thatscience is no more compatible with religionthan with other superstitions, such as lepre-chauns.

    There is nothing in the article to indicatethat Coyne, who says he is a former be-liever, is even remotely aware of all the sci-entific research suggesting that conscious-ness survives deathresearch in near-deathexperiences, mediumship, past-life regres-sions, deathbed visions, apparitions, astraltravel, and other paranormal phenomena. Ifconfronted with the evidence, Coyne wouldlikely parrot the words of well-known skep-tics like James Randi and Michael Shermer,claiming they have all been debunked in oneway or the other and were never subject tostrict scientific methodology in the firstplace.

    In fact, a very strong case for survival wasmade by a number of distinguished scientistsand scholars of yesteryear who represented

    TheTrouble

    with AtheistsClinging to Irrational Belief, Some Might Say,

    Is a Good Indicator of Brainwashing

    ALTERNATIVE

    THINKING

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    Subscribe or Order Books, DVDs and Much Mo42 ATLANTIS RISING Number 86

    ALTERNATIVE SCIENCE

    n his article forAtlantisRising #84 (Politics andPsychic Manipulation in Ro-mania), Boston University

    professor and author ofThe Par-apsychology Revolution(Tarcher/Penguin, 2008), Dr.

    Robert Schoch, wrote about aphenomenon called The VioletFlame, which he said had playedan important role in the historyof Romania. The color violet isunlike any other color, he ex-plained, and has long been afocus of attention by alchemistsand occultists. Seen as the boun-dary between the physical andthe spiritual, with the ability topromote transmutations betweenthe realms, in modern terms thecolor violet does indeed haveunique properties. Of the visible

    spectrum, violet has the highestfrequency... and in its representa-tion and manifestation spirituallycan be harnessed and channeledas a powerful force...

    Just weeks afterward, scien-tists at Scotlands University ofStrathclyde reported that a spe-cial, yet visible, violet light isenough to make bacteriacommit suicide. Clinical trialshave now proven the HINS-lightEnvironmental DecontaminationSystem is effective in getting ridof bacterial pathogens in the hos-

    pital setting. In other words, vi-olet light makes a great disinfec-tant, a fact which may not

    surprise those who have, foryears, used ultraviolet (UV)

    light in water purificationtechnology. Incidentally,Washington State Univer-

    sity researchers havefound that UV impactsgene repair and alsoactivates the creation

    of defense pro-teins. AlthoughUV and colored

    light are not tobe confused withthe violet flameof esoteric lore,

    they are thoughtto be its physical

    counterpart and toprovide useswhich, somefeel, might indi-

    cate what couldbe achieved werethe actual thingto be properlyharnessed.

    IBY JOSEFINE STARK

    Early in the twentieth cen-tury, Edgar Cayce (The SleepingProphet) recognized the powerof the violet light. In many of hisrecorded readings, he recom-mended a violet-ray electricaldevice that emits a violet-coloredcharge to treat a number of ail-ments. At the heart of this devicewas a Tesla coil. It was widelyused in the first half of the twen-tieth century and is still availabletoday.

    The violet flame theme haseven made it into popular cul-

    ture. The Inn of the Seventh Rayis the name of a restaurant nearLos Angeles frequented by manyHollywood types who live nearby.

    In Romania even presidentialpolitics, it seems, is influencedby the Violet Flame. In 2009, de-feated candidate Mircea Geoanapublicly charged he had been at-tacked by violet flames. TraianBasescu, the winning candidate,might view this as yet anotherexample of the disinfecting capa-bilities of the seventh ray.

    Vibrating at between 785 and

    665 terrahertz, the SeventhRay, or, alternatively, the VioletFlame or light, is said by some tobe one of the best-kept secrets ofthe twentieth and previous cen-turies. The proverbial cat,though, it now seems, may beout of the bag. An Internetsearch for violet flame pro-duces over six million results.Doctors, nurses, teachers, archi-tects, engineers, and even headsof state outside of Romaniaaformer President of the Philip-pines for onehave reportedly

    attempted to deploy it.So what is the truth of thematter? Is there more to the sub-ject of the Violet Flame thanmeets the untrained eye? To gainsome perspective we need to lookat the larger picture, one fa-miliar for ages to initiates in thespiritual mysteriesthe SevenRays.

    Seven Rays of CreationFor centuries the concept of

    The Seven Rays has been partof many mainstream religions, as

    Violet light as a disinfectant in ScotlandTraianBasescu

    St.Germain

    The Annunciation (Jan van Eyck,Seven rays of light descend fromupper window at the left.

    42 ATLANTIS RISING Number 86

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    well as esoteric philosophies. Wikipedia saysit has been around since at least the sixthcentury BCE, in both Western culture and inIndia. In the west, the notion can be seen inearly mystery traditions, such as Gnosticismand Roman Mithraicism, and in the texts andiconic art of the Catholic Church as early asthe Byzantine era. In India, the idea has beenpart of Hindu religious philosophy and scrip-ture since at least the Vishnu Purana, datingfrom the post-Vedic era.

    The Seven Rays appeared in a modifiedand elaborated form in the teachings of The-osophy, starting in the late nineteenth cen-tury, first presented by Helena P. Blavatsky.The Theosophical concept of the Seven Rayswas further developed in the late nineteenthand early twentieth centuries in the writingsof C. W. Leadbeater, Alice Bailey, Manly P.Hall, and others, and in the philosophies oforganizations, such as, The I AM Activity,The Bridge to Freedom, The Summit Light-house, and various other organizationspromulgating what are called the teachingsof the ascended mastersthe immortalizedsaints and sages of all ages, East and West.

    In the mid-to-late twentieth century, asthe New Age movement developed, the SevenRays concept appeared as an element in met-aphysical healing techniques such as Reikiand other modalities and in esoteric as-trology.

    The idea is that all that exists emergesfrom the original white light of creation. Theseven rainbow raysinto which that lightcan be separated by a prismall possessunique properties which can and should benurtured and developed for the advancementof creation on both the individual and collec-tive level. These fundamental seven colorrays have been depicted in religious iconog-

    raphy as rainbow auras around the heads orhearts of saints, or around sacred relics. TheSeven Rays also correspond roughly to the

    seven days (or stages) of creation, as wellas the days of the week, the seven

    chakras, the seven churches in theBook of Revelations, etc.

    Mastery over the Seven Rays isstill considered by some groups tobe a requirement for the evolutionof consciousness. The processalso

    known as the spiritual pathis saidto lead to expansion of the rainbow

    body, or aura, of the saints. One focuses (ormajors) on developing the skills or virtuesassociated with one of the rays while ad-vancing generally with the others. Mastery ofthe green ray, for example, involves the useof healing energies and precipitation(making the spiritual physical). We see thiscolor used often in hospitals or in surgicalgarments as well as with alternative thera-pies, etc. Violet is usually associated with al-chemy or transmutation, and as the SeventhRay it corresponds to the seventh day of crea-tion; or the day of rest when the creationtothat pointis set free. In New Age circles itis usually associated with the Aquarian Age.

    21st Century ScienceMeets an AncientPrescriptionfor Change

    21st Century ScienceMeets an AncientPrescriptionfor Change

    Secretsof the

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    Secretsof the

    Se v e n t hR a y

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    or decades, metal sheets with writinghave been recovered from various ar-chaeological sites in South America.Until recently, all were labeled

    frauds, but slowly, archaeolo-gists are beginning to changetheir opinion. The ancient Ameri-

    cans, it seems, knew perfectlywell how to work with metaland, moreover, had a complexsystem of writing.

    The story of Father CarlosCrespi, an eccentric Italian Cath-olic priest living in the Ecuado-rian town of Cuenca, and his en-igmatic museum came to theattention of most of the worldwhen the Swiss ancient astro-naut author Erich von Dnikenrevealed Crespis vast collectionof metal plates and related arti-facts. Over the years, the priest

    had accumulated the collectionas gifts brought to him by the lo-cals. The plates displayed variousimages and strongly suggestedthat the real history of the regionwas far more interesting than thearchaeologists claimed. To offi-cial archaeology, of course, theartifacts in Crespis possessionwere nothing but fakes.

    Von Dniken wrote up hisvisit to Crespi in Gold of the Gods(Putnam, 1973), adding that thevarious pieces in the collectionpossessed certain common traits:

    All the pyramid engravings havefour things in common: a sun,but more frequently several suns,is depicted above the pyramid;snakes are always flying next toor over the pyramid; animals ofvarious kinds are always present.Such consistency between arti-facts collated over a number ofyears and from different sources,suggested a common origin. But where didthey come from?

    When Crespi questioned those whobrought him the artifacts, he was told theyhad been removed from subterranean cavesystems in the jungles. Crespi thereforemade sure the extraordinary stash remainedintact, using the courtyard of the church ofMaria Auxiliadora, of which he was in charge,as his museum.

    Alas, many of the artifacts were destroyedin a fire on July 20, 1962, an act of arson,some suspect, engineered to destroy the col-lection. Today, even less remains of theCrespi collection, which was dispersed to var-ious locations following the priests demisein January 1980. It is said that there are ac-tive attempts to reopen a museum with whatremains of the collection.

    From the moment the collection became

    FBY PHILIP COPPENS

    Continued on Page 7

    ANCIENT MYSTERIES

    known to the world, it has commonly beenlabeled a fraud. And it is true that Crespi wasprimarily a missionary, and not an archaeolo-gist. When poor people brought him theplates or other artifacts that the local peopleknew he collected, he made sure they were

    rewarded for their efforts. He knew severallocal families were poor but that pride pre-vented them from asking for money, unlessit was as payment for something. And hence,more and more metal plates found their wayto the priest. Some, Crespi himself was sure,

    were fakesoften the crudest executed. Themost elaborate, though, were clearly notmade by his parishioners. Included in thelatter category were vast quantities of pre-cious metals, like gold and silver. Those arti-facts only, seem unlikely to be frauds, espe-cially when we realize that the collection wasestimated to be worth at least a million dol-lars far more than Crespi was able to pay, orpaid, the locals.

    Researcher Richard Wingate visited thecollection in the late 1970s, when the 70,000pieces took up three rooms. He described itas follows: Rolls of intricately figured sheet

    metal stood haphazardly piled around tshed. The priest explained that it had betorn off the interior walls of long-abandonevine-choked buildings in the inaccessibeastern jungle. The Indian artifact huntebring this wallpaper in three different meta

    gold: a metallurgically unique, untarnishsilver; and an unknown alloy with the apearance of shiny aluminum. Every squainch of the peculiar sheet metal is decoratwith intricate designs, some of them dpicting long-forgotten ceremonial occasio

    and some of them humorous and cartoolike. The rolls come in heights that vary, fthe most part, from eight to twelve feet, anthey are often fifteen to thirty feet lonThese lengths are composed of many indvidual four-foot sheets which have been arfully riveted together.

    While to the average armchair archaeogist, the collection was bogus, anyone actally viewing it was provided ample evidenthat, at the least, at some point in the paEcuador had a highly developed metallurg

    The Surprising Case forAdvanced Ancient

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