From Pearson's Magazine, July
1900. Illustrated by Warwick Goble
Many of us are apt, not without some reason, to regard the world we live in
as the centre of the universe, and to look upon the sun, the moon, and the stars
as objects placed in the heavens for the special benefit of the human race. That
the earth is but a minute object in the Cosmos; that it forms one of a number of
bodies, many of them larger than itself, revolving around their central
luminary, the sun; that there exist in the realms of space myriads of similar
suns, centres themselves of other solar systems; that millions of planets, which
we cannot see, are inhabited with races of intelligent beings -- these are facts
of which almost everybody must cognizant, but on which few bestow much time or
thought.
Astronomy teaches that, just as our solar system had a beginning, so it must
have an end, and that, as at one time life was impossible upon the earth, so
there will come a time when man will no longer be able to exist. Science, cold and calculating, has foretold the physical end of the world --
has prophesied the destruction of the globe and all its contents. Birth, life, death -- it has been well been said --appear to be the rule of
the universe at large, as well as in our own little corner of it. Suns and
planets are evolved, they flourish, and at length decay; and new suns and
systems will arise to take their places. The "End of the World" may be taken in two different senses, as meaning
either the annihilation of our planet by sudden catastrophe, or by gradual
decay, or else the disappearance of human life from the face of the globe, owing
to some state of circumstances, possible, at any rate, if not probable. It is our purpose in this article briefly to consider some of the opinions
held by men of learning and repute regarding the end of the world, and to
emphasize the lesson taught by Nature that the individual counts for nothing in
the history of the race, the race for nothing in the life of the planet, and the
planet for nothing in the duration of the Universe...
Sumerian :
In the eleventh tablet of the
Semitic Babylonian epic of Gilagamesh is a flood story that is the source for
the Noah story. The Gods resolved to cleanse the earth of an overpopulated
humanity, but Utnapishtim was warned by the God Ea in a dream. He and some
craftsmen built a huge (seven decks encompassing one acre in area) ark.
Utnapishtim then loaded it with his family, the craftsmen, and "the seed of all
living creatures." The waters rose up, and a storm continued for six days and
six nights. The Gods repented and wept upon seeing the global destruction of
living beings and stilled the flood on the seventh day. The waters covered
everything but the top of the mountain Nisur, where the boat landed. A dove was
loosed, but it returned, having found no place to rest. A swallow was sent, but
it too returned. Seven days later, after having loosed a raven that did not
return to the ark, the people began to emerge. Utnapishtim made a sacrifice to
the Gods. He and his wife were given immortality and lived at the end of the
earth.
Greco-Roman :
Zeus decided to punish humanity for
its evil ways. Other Gods grieved at the destruction because there would be no
beings to worship them. Zeus promised a new stock, a race of miraculous origin.
He was going to use thunderbolts when he remembered one of Fate's decrees: that
a time would come when sea and earth and dome of the sky would blaze up, and the
massive structure of the universe would collapse in ruins. With Poseidon's help,
he caused storm and earthquake to flood every part of the land except the summit
of Mount Parnassus. When Zeus crushed the hanging clouds in his hand, there was
a loud crash, and sheets of rain fell from heaven. The rivers began rushing to
the sea. When Neptune struck the earth with his trident, the rivers raced across
the plains. Sea and earth could no longer be distinguished; all was sea without
any shores, covering every living being except for one fortunate couple,
Deucalion and Pyrrha. Earlier, Deucalion and Pyrrha had consulted Themis at her
oracular shrine...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 35444 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Saturday, May 03 @ 00:21:18 CDT (35 reads)
The end may be near, but exactly how near is the sticky question. As
millennium fever swept the globe, party planners and doomsdayers alike were
fixated on the year 2000. Meanwhile, Judgment Day sticklers have been obsessing
over the fact that there never was a "year zero," and therefore A.D. 1 plus two
millennia equals 2001. But pinpointing Armageddon isn't quite that
simple. When it comes to end times, there are as many proposed dates as there
are fates (Rapture or Tribulation? Fire or Flood? Demons or Pleiadeans?). However, in the wake of past doomsday embarrassments (the world didn't end in
the year 1000, and the hoopla over the 1987 Harmonic Convergence turned out to
be the spiritual equivalent of 8-track tape), few latter-day prophets are
willing to stick their necks out and name a drop deadline. "What the prophets
try to do is make predictions and leave the fulfillment vague," explains Stephen
D. O'Leary, a millennial scholar at the University of Southern California. The
most successful millennial prophets remain "strategically ambiguous," he says.
He prophets who do get specific tend to be the more marginal ones."
It's no surprise that the Internet, a haven for marginal oracles of all
strips, is home to millenarians who are bold enough to set a date. In fact, the
Internet has assumed an important role on the end-times stage. "The Internet
will be to the twenty-first century what the printing press was to the
sixteenth," says medieval historian Richard Landes of Boston University, who,
with O'Leary, cofounded the Center for Millennial Studies. Just as the printing
press made apocalyptic tracts available to the public five hundred years ago,
the Internet disgorges a vast literature of alternative doomsday scenarios. "The Internet has increased the amount and the kind of information people
have at their disposal to construct millenial scenarios," says O'Leary. "It also
gives people a chance to try out different interpretations and prophecies in
electronic discussion groups." In effect, he says, "the Internet provides a kind
of social reinforcement," a public-address system for "people who might
otherwise be relegated to the fringes as crackpots." Well, in the lottery of multiple Armageddons,
today's crackpot may turn out to be tomorrow's messianic seer...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 12582 bytes more | comments? | Score: 5 ) Posted by nuke on Saturday, October 06 @ 12:09:38 CDT (301 reads)
Among
most Westerners, the term "Jihad" ("struggle" in Arabic) often brings up images
of Muslim terrorists killing people who disagree with them. Jihad is an
emotionally charged word that is heralded by the Western news media in
descriptions of Middle East activities. People need not wait long to hear the
term used during nightly news and see the affects of present day Islamic
struggles in vivid pictures of destruction beamed to our televisions. But is
this a fair assessment of the Muslim community as a whole? Jihad has been
interpreted by Muslims in different ways. The Muslim sect of the Kharijites has
elevated Jihad to one of the Five Pillars of Islam -- making it Six Pillars.
This kind of belief is seen in the extremist Muslim groups we call terrorists.
They use the concept of Jihad as a justification for killing anyone who isn't a
Muslim. However, most Muslims disagree with this extremist position of some
Muslims and advocate peace.
These Muslims view Jihad as a
spiritual struggle against evil in a metaphorical sense.1 For the
most part, there is the Greater and Lesser Jihad. The Greater Jihad is the
internal spiritual struggle of the Muslim toward submission to Allah. The
Lesser Jihad is Holy War against non-Muslims based on principle of belief. It
is this latter that has caused the most concern among Westerners. Is that
concern warranted? Many think so. Islamic scholar Jamal Badawi, chairman of the
Islamic Information Foundation in Halifax, insists that a jihad is `permitted
only in self-defense or against tyranny and oppression--not as a tool to promote
Islam.'' But, experts added, the ancient Islamic empires were built as much by
force as by persuasion. Islam's founder, Mohammed, frequently used force, or the
threat of it, to unify the nomadic tribes of the Arabian peninsula. The caliphs,
who succeeded Mohammed as leaders of the Arab world, successfully took up arms
against the Christian Byzantine Empire in Egypt and the Holy Land. By the end of
the ninth century, Arabian armies had extended Islamic power from Spain to the
borders of India.2 ...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 16415 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Tuesday, June 19 @ 12:27:31 CDT (659 reads)
The Pentagon has more than 10,000
deadly nukes in its arsenal. Each hydrogen bomb is 50 times more powerful than
the atomic bomb that fell on Hiroshima, Japan in 1945. One such bomb
strategically placed could devastate a country the size of England. Hitler had
the H-bomb in 1945 and the Pentagon took Hitler's H-bomb to the U.S. and tested
it in Alaska on April 1, 1946.Theoretically, the Pentagon 9 megaton W-53
thermonuclear warhead shown on the left, could easily be encased in a small 'lookalike'
saturation diving chamber similar to that on the right, to protect it from the
massive 10,000 pounds per square inch pressures at the bottom of the Sumatran
Trench. The whole armored package would weigh less than five tons, allowing it
to be slipped over the stern of any oil rig supply vessel, of which there are
more than 300 in Asia alone. Who would even notice?
Deadly hydrogen bomb is a nuke
within a nuke: The hydrogen or thermonuclear bomb is just a nuke within
a nuke. In other words, it uses fission and billions of degrees in a
conventional atomic bomb (primary) to trigger a chain reaction (fusion) in
another bomb (secondary) in order to create a nuclear explosion. A third or
tertiary stage can be added yielding up to 20 million tons of TNT!! Dr. Edward
Teller said that the limit on these monsters was 100 million tons of TNT!! The
first H-bombs produced in Nazi Germany were huge devices and needed special
refrigeration devices (cryogenics) to keep the liquid deuterium below 400
degrees Fahrenheit. A submarine was the ideal delivery method at that time but
the sub would be blown up in the explosion too. First test of an atomic bomb
took place at Port Chicago on July 17, 1944! The world's first atomic explosion
took place at Port Chicago just north of San Francisco on July 17, 1944. This
was a test of the gun-assembly uranium bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan
on July 6, 1945. The atomic test was carried out using the smokescreen of
conventional explosives...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 26920 bytes more | comments? | Score: 5 ) Posted by Nuke on Friday, March 23 @ 12:37:54 CDT (931 reads)
Space experts were poised to warn us that a deadly giant asteroid was about to threaten Earth. In scenes eerily reminiscent of Hollywood blockbuster Armageddon, it was feared the cosmic rock would come within a whisker of terra firma. Even astronomer Sir Patrick Moore sought to calm nerves with a "don"t panic" message. But US scientists were left redfaced when their gloomy predictions were scotched. A sharp-eyed Russian tracked the trajectory of the "asteroid"... and discovered it was a comet-ch... Read More
Anthony North: Occasionally the most tragic of events can hit the headlines. When it happens, we all wonder why. But all too often a cult can explode into violence upon itself, the result being mass suicide. Why does it happen? What social forces are involved in this will towards self-destruction? This essay is an attempt to understand. And we need to begin with a few examples. Order of the solar temple: For instance, on 22 December 1995, sixteen corpses were discovered on a plateau in the Frenc... Read More
Anthony north: Cults come in all shapes and sizes. They can be of any form of spirituality, from Christianity to the Occult, to Flying Saucer cults. They can appear strange and insular, while many do a great deal of charity work. Then we have the more sinister form of cult. Some of these make the headlines through mass suicide, but perhaps the most dangerous is the cult that ends up using extreme violence or intimidation. Rajneesh foundation: Typical was the Rajneesh Foundation of Bhagwan Shree ... Read More
High-tech telescopes on the ground and in space that perform daunting astronomical peep shows in a search for Earth-like worlds aim to answer one of humankind's most monumental questions: “Are we alone?” Arguably, a more pointed question might be: “Just how crowded is it?” There is on-going deliberation relating to the societal, philosophical and religious fallout that stems from resolving such a stellar inquiry. Michael Michaud is the author of a newly published exceptional book, "Cont... Read More
With the clamor over religious thriller "The Da Vinci Code" barely fading, a major Hollywood studio is mining the same vein with a Satanic "666" marketing campaign for its new horror film. "The Omen", a remake of the 1976 horror classic, is the kind of film that routinely makes it big at the box office, appealing to the coveted demographic of young and predominantly male thrill-seekers.Twentieth Century Fox has banked "The Omen" on a promotional campaign b... Read More
For one group of expectant mothers, their due date holds an extra dimension of dread. The prospect of giving birth on June 6, 6/6/06, has prompted talk of spawning devil children on Armageddon day. A British self-help group that usually exchanges routine tips on parenting has turned its attention to the dangers of a date marked by the satanic symbol. For Hollywood and the worldwide entertainment industry it is by contrast a once-in-a- century opportunity to turn evil into gold. Leading the charg... Read More