On this piece of terrain embedded in cyberspace and
entitled my world, I have looked at philosophy and religion from a variety of
perspectives. Apart from Buddhism, I have also blogged quite a bit about Christianity and have approached and looked at it from different angles.
There is of course the traditional Biblical view through
a literal and figurative lens. I have also offered and proposed an innovative
and progressive reading to revive and modernize Christianity; there are
philosophical interpretations by thinkers like Hegel, Kant, and Kierkegaard;
there is the political and historical dimension, including viewing religion as
opium of and for the masses, and finally, I have also discussed the gnostic interpretation of the Bible, which, simply put, puts religion on its head.
Today, I shall be even more daring and controversial and
will add more twist and fire to the absurdity running through this blog by
speculating that God may be an alien entity.
Thinking outside the box is
something that comes to me naturally so when this unconventional idea in
question came to me, I knew I had to explore it to some extent. Like many
ideas, it did not come out of a vacuum, but it was inspired and stimulated by
my recent viewing of the documentary Unacknowledged by Michael Mazzola, which is
for the most part focused on the work and ideas of Steven M. Greer.
Before delving deeper into the subject matter and
before encountering and facing resistance and objections, and, more importantly, before you stop
reading or feel tempted to unfollow me on social media and / or my blog, I
would like to give an explanatory preamble here.
Some months ago – in the pre-Covid-19 era of little to
no physical distancing - I went to an astrophysics talk. It was on Black Matter
and Black Holes and included other equally occult and esoteric matters, such as
time-worms, bending the space-time curvature, string theory, and, everyone’s
favourite, quantum mechanics.
There was a point at the lecture where I felt a wave
of panic surge over my whole body. There were these scientists in front of me
who talked about bizarre events that made no sense whatsoever. In fact, the thought
crossed my mind that they must have been out of their minds. Schrödinger should
have used his time to feed and play with his cat instead of eternally trapping it
in a box within the nether world or no man’s (or no pet’s) land, that ominous threshold
between life and death, and not necessarily interchangeably so.
But indeed, I was being presented with science and
scientific facts. Einstein was right, and he told us so a hundred years ago.
Many of his own scientific community in the lecture hall must have felt similar
waves of panic as myself, and they must have thought this mathematical genius was
in fact a lunatic. The German words of weltfremd (literally estranged from the
world) and verrückt (crazy but in the sense of being displaced or removed from
reality) come to mind. It took us only a century to set our doubts aside and
prove Einstein right once and for all, at least for the time being.
Without doubt, the topic of aliens hits a raw nerve in
our modern world. We often dismiss it in equal measure as madness and nonsense.
We discredit those who claim to have had sightings and make fun of anyone who
was allegedly abducted. And I am not one to give them credence either, neither shall
I groundlessly vilify or ridicule them.
I shall remain skeptical of such claims
but perhaps to a somewhat lesser degree. There are things that we do not understand,
and that science cannot or refuses to explain. As an example, I myself am a
strong believer in psychic phenomena (prophetic dreams, Tarot cards,
otherworldly signs, synchronicity, and serendipity). People have the right and
freedom to refute them, but that does not make them less true.
I am also aware that there are many who are not honest
nor genuine and under the guise of the supernatural, they merely try to control
and take advantage of others to their own – often financial – benefit. In other
words, they either do not believe what they preach – and religion has far too
many examples of this – or they embrace so many clichés and stereotypes that
they lose credibility – the crystal ball, the incense, and abundant pearls and
necklaces or other kinds of hippie vibes that create more resistance in the
already doubtful and suspicious person. It would be like scientists never
taking off their white lab coats, which only serves to cast doubt onto their
credentials and their level of self-confidence, not to say their level of
sanity.
And let us end this preamble with a growing trend that
has put things into perspective. I was surprised when a renowned astrophysicist
like Stephen Hawking started talking about aliens in a serious tone and manner.
This had been a taboo topic for decades, and science was only used to discredit,
and worse, ridicule those who spoke about or believed in extraterrestrial life
and visits. The belief of aliens had been delegated to and firmly grounded within
the fantasy genre of books and movies; suddenly and out of the blue, a celebrated
scientist was warning us about a potential threat and / or invasion from outer space.
I could not believe my ears or eyes for that matter.
Yet why would it not be possible? We have this
ego-centric earth-centered view that we are the only living and breathing
creatures in the universe, but why should there not be other types of life out
there? Considering the vastness of our ever-expanding universe, it would be
statistically possible if not feasible that alien life could exist elsewhere.
The same way quantum mechanics put into doubt and made us question scientific
facts and truths, why should it not be possible that aliens exist?
The Netflix documentary Unacknowledged made me
doubt my own preconceived and dismissive notions about aliens and
extraterrestrial life. Although not everyone or everything in the show seemed
credible, there were scientists and intellectuals among them who may have been
onto something. Couple that with Stephen Hawking’s interest in the matter, and
my pendulum moved from only if hell freezes over to potentially
possible. At least, it would be warranted enough to listen to and perhaps consider
and reflect upon those ideas.
That night as I was falling sleep, I was startled with
the following thought: What if God was an alien? What if he was not a
supernatural spiritual being but rather a technologically advanced one? What if
he, an extraterrestrial being, one day decided to contact planet earth and humanity?
Let us look at the New Testament for instance. He
might have come down to Earth and chosen a woman to bear him his son, not
unlike Zeus and other Greek deities who would physically come down and have
offspring with mortals. Mary’s conception could have occurred not through
physical consumption but through alien technology. Instead of the enigmatic,
problematic, and cumbersome contraption of the Holy Spirit sent as a missionary
and go-between, this would be an alien who impregnated a human female
with a simple touch. Hence, Mary would still be a virgin at that moment.
Their son would be like Hercules, half-mortal,
half-god. The feats that Jesus would produce would not be miracles, but they
were demonstrations of his many superpowers. He could walk on water by
controlling and manipulating gravity; he could heal the sick and the blind with
a mere touch; he could revive the dead. These powers were then given to him via
alien knowledge and technology.
The Romans were afraid of him personally and not so
much of his ideas. They saw Jesus as a military threat who could
galvanize and weaponize the people. They crucified him, but then he reappeared
because he could not physically die, being half alien. He left our planet to
reunite with his father who lived up in the skies or in a far way and distant
part of the galaxy or universe.
What is deemed spiritual knowledge would be
transmitted through alien visits and technology, the same way in The Matrix
skills and information could be downloaded within seconds. This would also
explain St. Paul getting kicked off his donkey and an illiterate businessman
being able to write spiritual verses. They were visited not by angels but by
aliens who imbued them with knowledge or enlightenment.
And perhaps, there were other aliens among us. I know
that I am entering ancient astronaut theory right now that has been debunked by
science, but I have always wondered why Krishna was blue and looked like he had
just stepped out of the movie Avatar.
What if the Greek did not have
the level of imagination that we ascribe to them but that they were describing
their reality of aliens descending from the skies with powerful weapons like
lightning bolts, tridents, and forceful hammers? How did the Egyptians build
those astounding pyramids, and why do their gods resemble
aliens?
We only need to look at the description of the
Christian rapture, and it seems more like an alien abduction than God taking
people back to the heavenly realm. And there is our constant obsession with the
sky. We pray upwards and we believe that God dwells in the skies above, and that
heaven, our eternal home, is up there as well. Incidentally, in the German
language, we use the same word for sky and heaven: Himmel. What if the god that
we look up to is indeed an alien and that we are praying for the second coming hoping
to be revisited by this same entity?
3 comments:
Hi Arash, yes I nearly did unfollow you, thought you'd gone too far this time, scribbled nearly 10 pages of notes at 5 this morning. But then saw your labels at the end, showing it was all meant as entertainment, barring "philosophy" which I don't think it merits.
And it shrinks the vastness of what people mean and have meant by God---the vastness of profound experience and historic structures---into the theory of a set of garbled myths. Which put you in the same class of writer as Erich von Daniken!
I love the fact that you explore such notions and take the trouble to write your thoughts. Hope to see you move ever closer to wisdom.
Best wishes to you and yours!
So glad you decided NOT to unfollow me as you are (barring me) the heart and soul of this blog! You've endured it, fought with it and praised and commented on it for so many years that I cannot imagine it existing without your input, thoughts, and comments, dear Vincent!
I am also somewhat pleased with myself for having gone a bit (but not too) far, just pushing you to the brink and luring you into a comment ; )
For me, philosophy has always been both and interchangeably the serious and the comical, the realistic and the fantastical, and so this - alongside pretty much everything else - falls into that admittedly wide spectrum of things.
Be well and stay safe on your end as well!
I'm just as glad, Arash. Let us continue to be mutually supportive, I know I need it. Particularly as I've just realized that you are the ideal reader for a new site I've been setting up for a while now, under wraps. I'd love to send you the link by email, but it's not ready, perhaps never will be. These days we realize that it's impossible to predict anything with certainty, and I'm pretty sure my faculties are slowing down, what with age and so forth.
When I "put you in the same class of writer as Erich von Däniken", I hope you didn't think it was intended as a compliment! Of his writing ability I know nothing, only his wacko theories about alien visitations.
This, from Wikipedia : "Speaking in a 2001 documentary, von Däniken said that although he could not conclusively prove to the scientific community that any of the items in his archive were of alien origin, he felt that "today's science" would not accept such evidence, as "the time is simply not right". He argued that it was first necessary to "prepare" mankind for a "wonderful new world".
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