Urantia Symposium 1991 Oklahoma Papers
- Descripción
Descripción
Urantia Symposium 1991 Oklahoma Papers
Urantia Symposium 1991,Oklahoma,Papers
Page 1 |
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA C I , OKLAHOMA
This Special Conference Publication of the Fellowship Forum is made possible by the sincere, honest,
and thoughtful efforts of the participants in Scientific Symposium 11, conducted in Oklahoma City,
OWahoma, May 17-1 9,1991.
The Editors
CONTENTS: PAGE
Foreword Melissa Wells ii
The Ultimate Frontier: The Barrier of Mediocrity Larry Mullins 1
Coming Full C i ~ l e Joy Dirham 11
The Second Enlightenment: Religion and Liberalism Bill Granstaff 15
Engineering-Science and Magick L. Dan Massey, Jr. 22
The Life Pattern John Lange, M.D. 31
Paradise and the Topology of Space-A Theory of Ultimate Matter Philip G. Calabrese, Ph.D. 34
Manned Flight: From Fandors to FANDORS Paul W. Hemck, P.E. 38
Scientific Pdictions of The Urantia Book Irwin Ginsburgh, Ph.D.
and Geoffrey L. Taylor
Love and Science Charles E. Hansen 51
Personality and Will:
Inmasing Mastery of the Inner and Outer Worlds David Elders
New Models of Mind, Order and Chaos Brendan CYRegan 62
Psychology as a Variety of Religious Experience Marta
Elders, Ph.D. 70
Cosmic Design: The Creator’s Pin Mike Wisenbaker [A Separate Volume]
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
I havediscovered that when we askGod for help with
a problem, the solution can arrive in spectacular fashion.
Such was the case with Scientific Symposium 11.
This event, dedicated to the exploration of scientific
thought by students of The Urantia Book, was to be a
continuation of the initial effort by the Nashville study
group in presenting Scientific Symposium I at Belmont
College in May, 1988. Unfortunately, an incident occurred
during a regional conference held a year later at
the school which resulted in the termination of the use
of that facility as a site for conferences by the Nashville
study group.
Many months passed with no progress in finding
another site in Nashville for the second symposium,
which was tentatively scheduled for May, 1991. By the
spring of 1990, the location had to be resolved so that
the symposium could be announced at the International
Conference held at Snowmass, Colorado.
I discussed these problems with Berkeley Elliott from
Oklahoma City while we wereattending the 1991 spring
regional conference in Leesburg, Florida. Berkeley mentioned
possible sites in Oklahoma City, and I asked her
to check into them. Within a week, she had located two
universities that could accommodate our group during
May.
This was a pleasant turn of events for me, since I had
become a member of the First Society of Oklahoma a
couple of years earlier. Scientific Symposium I1 became
a project of that society and was scheduled for May, 1991
at Oklahoma City University.
This symposium was a continuation of a threefold
theme based upon a passage on page 1306 in The Urantia
Book which discusses human progress in planetary
development. «Man’s Increasing Control» was the topic
for the second symposium.
Many talented speakers with a scientific background
offered their expertise, ranging in subjects from the
social sciences to hard-core physics, with one speaker
dallying in the magick of it all. The second symposium
met goals which had been envisioned in early stages of
planning the first symposium.
First, a comparative
analysis of scientific thought in The Urantia Book with
prevailing thought in the scientific community was the
sub* of a paper delivered by Dr. Irwin Ginsburgh, an
engineering physicist from the Los Angeles area.
Second, a presentation by a scientist not involved in the
mainstream of Fellowship activities was made by Brendan
O’Regan of the Noetic Institute of Sciences in the
San Francisco Bay area. Many thanks to Larry Geis for
his time and effort to recruit Mr. O’Regan.
The work of volunteers in the Oklahoma Society in
preparing and hosting the symposium was exemplary.
Many travelers from the Oklahoma City airport would
pin me in thanking everyone who provided transportation
to and from the university. The spirit of serving
was beautifully demonstrated by the musicians and
singers who shared their talents during the went: Tom
Allen, David Glass, Susan Wright-Aldridge, Richard
Randall, Barbara Hester, Teny Pursell, Carol Hay, Joan
Batson-Mullins, Bill Granstaff, Phil Calabrese, Dan
Young and Waldine Stump. And Harry McMullan
deserves kudos for his gracious manner as master of
ceremonies.
A special note of thanks also to Kurt Cira of Milwaukee;
Dennis Bmdsky of Amherst, Wisconsin; and
Mike Hadilek of Phillips, Wisconsin for videotape
production of the symposium. Recognition should also
be given the Fellowship office staff who handled
registration and related finances. And thanks to Dianne
Menard, who has recently moved to Philadelphia from
Oklahoma City, for transcribing tapes of certain
presenters.
The symposium would not have been possible
without the volunteer efforts of the speakers, who invested
many hours, longdistance telephone calls, air
fares and other expenses in order to offer us their expertise.
My sincere appreciation for their efforts: Larry
Mullins of Boulder; Joy Dirham of Los Angeles; Bill
Granstaff of Oklahoma City; John Lange of Fort Smith,
Arkansas; Chuck Hansen of Silver Spring, Maryland;
Dave and Marta Elders of Darien, Connecticut; Michael
Wisenbaker of Dallas; Paul Herrick of Jupiter, Florida;
Irwin Ginsburgh of Los Angeles; Philip Calabreseof San
Diegd; Dan Massey of Boston; Carol Hay and Joan
Batson-Mullins of Boulder; and Brendan (YRegan of
San Francisco.
Scientific Symposium 111-Man’s Universe Integration-
is tentatively scheduled for May, 1994, at Oklahoma
City University Hope you can pin us!
-Melissa Wells, largo, Florida
MAY 17-19.1991 OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLAHOMA
The Ultimate Frontier:
The Barrier of Mediocrity
It is good to be back in Oklahoma. There is
no in my mind that it is here where
many of my spiritual roots lie, where they were
fostered and tested, and I hope dweloped to
some degree. About a year ago my daughter
Kathleen graduated from Oklahoma University
as an engineer, to my great joy. She was also
elected president of the Engineering Club.. .a
remarkable achievement in a man’s profession.
Kathleen used to kid me, saying that it took
twice as much for a woman to achieve the same
status as a man.. .that she would have to be
twice as good to achieve the same mgnition-«
But that is not very difficult,» she would
add. Kathleen was declared learningdisabled
when she was thirteen. It was because of Kathi
that I became passionately interested in the
science of motivation and human consciousness.
At Snowmass last summer I told the story
of how Kathi had lost her mother to cancer and
had lost an older sister to drugs, and my own
struggles to find God and walk with him.
Our theme today is «h4an’s Inapasing Control.»
There is no doubt that man has achieved
great strides in controlling his environment on
this planet. We are no longer wholly at the
mercy of the fickle elements. We can communicate
in nanoseconds with people all over the
world. There has been stunning progress in – –
virtually all the sciences.
But there is another frontier wherein humankind
has not been so successful. That is the
frontier of mediocrity that seals us off from 90%
of our potentiality. closely associated with the
frontier of mediocrity is the one area in which
humankind has total–or at least potentially
total–control. And that is the area of moral
choice.
And, yet, it is here where we have failed most
consistently. Here where we lag far behind our
material successes. This ultimate frontier-the
barrier of mediocrity that holds sway over most
of humanity-is the pb of all of us. You need
no special training to involve yourself with
work in this field. The laboratory of the ultimate
frontier is life itself. No one individual
has an advantage of any kind over another in
this study.
Some people have asked me over the years if
I have any special technique for approaching
the creative work I do. This is difficult to
answer; it would be like asking Dan Massey,
‘Wow do you think?»
The truth is that I don’t know anymore about
how the creative process works than anyone
else does. But I do know the means to set up the
circumstances by which the cmtive process
seems to happen. Actually, we know very little
about how the brain and the mind operate. If I
asked you a specific phone number that you
know, you would reply instantly. Yet, you do
not know what looked for the number nor where
or how it looked.
I will share with you the method I use to do
creative work. I also encourage you to share
your own ideas on the subject of development
of consciousness. As I said, the question of the
control and development of our consciousness
is the pb of us all.
I won’t make a lot of pkes this evening,
because this will be a serious talk. It is based
upon a very serious premise.
Irnmanual Kant said: «Do-and then be.»
Gurdjieff said: «Be-and then do.» And Frank
Sinatra said: «Shoo-be do be do.»
Today I am going to talk about the ultimate
frontier, that frontier we call mediocrity.
Mediocrity. Someoneonce said that it is not that
most people live lives of evil, but rather they
live lives of such utter innocuousness. Why?
Why do most of us here have the vague feeling
that we are using but a fraction of our total
powers, or personality credits, as The Urantia
Book might say? What can we do about it?
Just about a week ago Joan and I had a fantastic
week at ~ozumela, n island off Mexico,
nestled in the Caribbean Sea. Now, granted, we
were on our honeymoon. But there is no way
even a casual visitor could not be struck by the
glory for the senses.. .in the rich blues and turquoises
of the waters, the sky and the clouds,
the fresh, very temperate air.One day we took
a snorkeling trip on a big catamaran, along with
a couple of dozen other people.
I noticed one man sitting near us. He wore
dark glasses, and like most males on this planet,
he seemed to be trying to look as dangerous as
possible. But as he became more relaxed, he
began to talk in a friendly way. His name was
Joe. Joe was soon complaining about America:
it «isn’t what it used to be,» and taxation, and
this and that.
I gently and tactfully admonished him, and
Joe quickly modified his remarks. Later, he
would find other people to talk to and began to
harp upon his negative themes again. And
BY
Lany Mullins
A reader of The Urantia
Book for over 20 years,
Mullins is president of a
marketing and management
consulting firm in Boulder,
Colorado.
«Someone once said
that it is not that
most people live lives
of m’l, but rather
they live lives of such
utter innocuousness.»
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
Contrary to popular
belief, the greatest
moments of our lives
are not the times
when we were the
most receptive and
relaxed; our happiest
moments are usually
those times when we
stretched mind and
body to the limit in a
voluntary and successful
effort to
achieve something
worthwhile.
Why do we not enter
into some kind of
partnership with
God and go forth to
meet our destiny,
rather than seek to
avoid it all of our
days, only to be run
over by it in the end?
–William James
these other folks tended to agree with him and
began to chew a cud of negatives and petty gripes.
I ignored this discussion, but it occurred to
me: How is it that this man can talk in negative
terms about life, his country and all, when he is
engaged in activities and enjoying luxuries that
the richest man on the face of the earth could
not have duplicated a century ago? How can he
rail and be bitter about real or imagined wrongs
in such a setting, and a Viktor Frank1 can stand
in the freezing rain at three in the morning at a
Nazi death camp called Dachau, and make the
decision to create positive experience out of his
situation?
Or, how could a Lou Cehrig stand on wasted
legs in Yankee Stadium, his career cut short by
multiple sclerosis, and declare himself to be the
‘luckiest man on the face of the earth»? Or how
could a little black child named Wilma
Rudolph, who was born prematurely and was
crippled by disease as an infant, at twelve years
of age shed her braces against a doctor’s warnings
and eventually become the first woman to
win three gold Olympic medals in track?
Were these people gifted with a special ingredient
that Joe lacks? Or did they simply
access something that is available to us all-at
least to those of us who dare to go for it?
If Joe could meet Jesus, could Jesus turn him
around in a single conversation the way he
transformed Fortune? Why is it that it is
generally agreed among psychologists that we
achieve only ten percent or less of our potential?
Or, to put it another way, ninety percent or
more of our potentials never become actuals in
time and space upon this planet? Or why is it
that we use but two percent of our creative
powers when, at two years of age, most of us
utilized about eighty percent of those creative
powers?
Finally, why is it we share, as mortals of the
realm, a vague feeling that we ~IE not doing
what we need to be doing? Why is it that we
strive harder to avoid and escape our destiny
than we might have to if we sought to fulfill it?
As William Jamesonce said, «Why do we not
enter into some kind of partnership with God
and go forth to meet our destiny, rather than
seek to avoid it all of our days, only to be run
over by it in the end?»
I became interested in the process by which
we create our consciousness when I was a man
of about eighteen. It was then that I was presented
with the startling concept that we can
control our thoughts. I reasoned that if this is true,
and it seemed possible that it was true, we
could do virtually anything. No matter what
the situation, we could transcend it. With a
mind as clear as a mountain stream we could
achieve a kind of precise objectivity about ourselves,
as though our human personalities were
merely a subject of some noble experiment, and
wecould learn to dance thedanceof the human
condition with grace and skill.
This personal revelation about thought came
when I discovered a book called Raja Yoga or
Mental M o p m e n t , by Yogi Rarnacharaka. In
it the author asserts that we should be able to
discard an unwanted thought with the ease
with which we cast a tiny annoying stone from
our shoe. But, he laments, how rare indeed it is to
meet such a man. Instead, we watch the careworn
faces go by, faces haunted by bat-winged
phantoms that torture their minds, by this fearthought
and then another, or ruled by appetites
that have long supplanted their natural hungers.
People with whom we cannot carry on a
casual, relaxed conversation because the overbrooding
human ego is always there, suspicious,
watching, listening. I had no idea at the
time how difficult the task to control my mind
would be. It seemed impossible at times, and
success came very slowly. Today, after more
years than I wish to admit, I am a few inches
from where I started. But I was heartened when
I read that Jesus did not master his human mind
fully until he was nearly thirty.
Today there is an emerging school of psychology
that is based upon the optimal experience;
its premise is, essentially, that we create
our own experience. Understand that this is not
simply positive thinking. The process involves
reframing each and every situation that confronts
us in a manner that empowers, rather
than defeats, us.. .so that troubles invigorateus,
obstacles challenge us, and disappointments
spur us on.
Contrary to popular belief, the greatest moments
of our lives are not the times when we
were the most receptive and relaxed; our happiest
moments are usually those times when
we stretched mind and body to the limit in a
voluntary and successful effort to achieve
something worthwhile.
Last summer my six-year-old daughter,
Michelle, demonstrated this principle. She suddenly
swam the widthof the swimming poolwhat
we call the «big» pool. All summer long
she held the edge and would not attempt it.
Then she made a decision on her own to go for
it, and she did. When I lifted her out after her
triumph, she was spitting water and wasout of
breath. But she was ecstatic! Why? She made a
conscious decision to stretch herself to achieve what
she deemed an important milestone, and she
succeeded.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
Now let us examine four premises that are
key to what The Urantia Book says about the
question of dominion of our conscious mind.
The first three premises will be easy for you to
accept.
First of all, The Urantia Book presents a model
of the human being that is unlike any theory
ever forwarded by psychology, religion, or
philosophy. The Urantia Book asserts that the
human creature is indwelt by God in two different
ways: by the prepersonal Thought Adjuster
and the Personality essence. These two
endowments of God seek to find each other in
time and space and are wholly dependent upon
the decisions of the human personality in this
quest.
The second premise is that somehow, upon
this mysterious enchanted loom between two
unchanging realities, the human creature
weaves-or fails to weave-its own universal
identity. The degree of success achieved by this
effort to achieve cosmic birth is the measure of
actuality achieved by the human creature. That
is to say, we become more and more real, in a
cosmic sense, as wedevelop our own potentials
into actuals. For most of us that means a success
ratio of under ten percent.
Third, the finite tool we are loaned to achieve
our own actuality is a dual-hemisphered instrument
known as the human brain. This instrument
is specifically designed to apprehend
finite reality. Because of its dual nature, the
brain is able to grasp and evaluate fact, or the
way things are, and also grasp the emerging
patterns of the Supreme, which together represent
the way things ought to be. It is the synthesis
of fact and value that produces a grasp
of ever-changing, everemerging reality.
Please note that I am saying here that fact, or
things, are not, nor could they ever be evaluated as
though they represent an intrinsicdity, however
popular this concept is with people. I have
heard intelligent Urantia Bwk readers casually
equate the material finite world with reality,
rather than seeing material reality as a necessary
but not adequate tenet of reality. Reality is a
living, organic synthesis of facts and values.
The human brain was specifically designed
to synthesize facts and values. Four billion messages
go back and forth between the hemispheres
each second. A better thoughtinstrument
would have a third brain to do the
pb of synthesizing. And we know that such
three-brained creatures exist and are superior
to one- and two-brained mortals in their
spiritual development.
My fourth and final premise is that the teachings
of Jesus for this day and this generation
1 can be summed up in three words: serenity,
receptivity, and action. Without question this
premise could bechallenged. Some might point
out that selfless, loving service is the essence of
the message of Jesus. My answer is that some
of us need to work to achieve a state of mind
that makes loving service possible. Also, if the
mind is serene and calm, and the heart is turned
to God and receptive, the action that follows
will be attuned to the service of God and
humankind. So let’s be patient and examine
this formulation.
Serenity is the first requisite. A turbulent, immature,
emotional mind cannot be receptive of
the mind of Jesus. Much of the teachings of the
Master focused upon thecleansing of the mind,
the removal of resentments, the mastery of fear,
and the achievement of clarity. Receptivity is
possible once the mind has achieved serenity.
But to be receptive one must be humble, devoid
of preconception. Action, or the completion of
decisions, follows upon the wise formulation of
a decision-plan. Without action, all the rest is
vain.
These four premises form the basis for what
I have to say: The Urantia Book presents a unique
model of humankind, a cosmic playground of
mind and decision existing in the intervening
finite between the Thought Adjuster and Personality.
Second, we create our own cosmic
identity in this area of human personality
dominion; we make ourselves cosmic actuals
based upon our decisions. Third, the twobrained
human tool of thought is the finite
dual-brain–one brain designed for reasoning,
logic and the analysis of fact, and the other for
receiving patterns and concepts. The living and
continual synthesis of these two factors constitutes
emerging reality, or relative truth.
Finally, the essence of the teachings of Jesus can
possibly be summed up as serenity, receptivity
and action. With these premises in mind, follow
me in exploring four questions.
First, if the mind of Jesus emerges in advanced
and spiritually mature mortals, is there
any clinical evidence of it? Has psychology or
science found any viable proof that intrinsic to
the healthy mortal is a set of clearly defined and
associated principles that correspond to the
mind of the Master?
Second, if modem psychology is accurate,
and we use but a tiny fraction of our creativity
and our potential, does The Urantia Book offer a
clear path to breaking the frontier of mediocrity?
Or are most of us doomed and sealed
behind this barrier?
Third, if our survival as realities, or universe
citizens, is predicated upon decisions,
My answer is that
some of us need to
work to achieve a
state of mind that
makes loving service
possible.
Serenity is the first
requisite. A turbulent,
immature,
emotional mind cannot
be receptive of
the mind of Jesus.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
First of all, let me
say that the mind
of Jesus has been
clinically discovered
and defined in people
who are, or were,
clearly superior
mortals.
To simplify Maslow’s
remarkable insight,
imagine that you
wanted to know
about baseball
players. lf you
studied only those
who failed, who
languished in the
class D leagues, your
idea of baseball
players would be
rather dismal.
1 decisions and more decisions, and a decision is
not complete until it is acted out, is there a
methodology in The Urantia Book that leads us
to right action?
Finally, how can weapply this information to
our everyday lives? ~mmediatelv~i,v idly, and
with clear results?
Fist of all, let me say that the mind of Jesus
has been clinically discovered and defined in
people who are, or were, clearly superior mortals.
The discovery was made and validated by
an atheistic Freudian psychologist named
Abraham Maslow. Just before World War I1
hundreds of the best Jewish minds fled the
terror of Nazism and came to New York City.
Many of these intellectuals joined the staff of
New York University where a young Abraham
Maslow taught. Maslow enjoyed rubbing
elbows with these brilliant people.
As a Freudian psychologist, Maslow had
learned that the human mind is programmed
with a social system of values, and th&e values
restrain us. That is to say, we repress our normal
instincts to, for example, push an old lady out
of our way because society has instilled a conscience
in us. Freud called this conscience the
super ego. Much of our psychological stress,
according to Freud, is the effort of our conscious
ego trying to reconcile the pressures of
our unconscious natural instincts, called the Id,
with the repressive pressures of our super ego.
According to this model of humankind, we
are essentially ruthless animals without conscience
or values until we are artificially
programmed by society. Freud’s studies and
analysis of people who were seriously malfunctioning
seemed to verlfy this model.
~ a s l o w b e ~ taon n otice two special people
among the body of brilliant minds at New York
University. They were Ruth Benedict and Max
~ortheikerl.% ese two did not seem to fit into
the ordinary human pattern of mediocrity.
They loved their work and threw themselves
into-it. They were gracious, warm, creative and
confident. They laughed freely and were accessible
under most conditions. They were bigbrotherlike
in their attitudes toward their less
able and adjusted brothers and sisters.
Being a kind of guy who liked to analyze
things, Maslow began to take notes and generally
observe these two unusual individuals.
~ b raend more he became convinced that they
did not fit the Freudian model. Late one night
Maslow had an insight that was to eventually
revolutionize psychology. He looked over his
notes on Ruth and Max, and in a single flash
saw that he did not have a profile of two people
before him. Although they were totally unique
and individual, the two profiles before him
represented a new kind of person.
Maslow was studying something that had
never been studied before. He was studying
psychological health. And most important of all,
it seemed that when a human entity reached a
degree of health and maturity, it began to manifest
a system in intrinsic values-including
truth, beauty, and goodness. Not stuff programmed
into the mind to repress it, not reins
to hold it back. But rather horses to pull and
allure it forward.
Maslow did not refute Freud. Nor did he
contend that Skinner and his behaviorism were
false. He simply said that the concept of a
human creature totally under the sway of antecedent
causation was incomplete. It seemed that
as a human emerged from the confines of
immaturity into relative degrees of maturity,
she or he became more and more able to exercise
free will.
Maslow conjectured that the human, as he or
she approached maturity, became more and
more real. This is to say that the potentials of the
human being began to become actuals. Such a
maturing individual began to make his self
ACTUAL. Thus Maslow arrived at a concept of
the process of self-actualization. Self-actualizing
humans did not fit the model of Freud or
Skinner.
Maslow came to the conviction that Freud,
by studying only the ill and failing misfits of
humanity had created a sick science, incomplete
and inadequate. To simplify Maslow’s
remarkable insight, imagine that you wanted
to know about baseball players. If you studied
only those who failed, who languished in the
class D leagues, your idea of baseball players
would be rather dismal. But if you studied the
great and super achievers in the sport, you
would collect a totally different body of information.
Maslow determined that he would study
healthy people. He began a long and arduous
effort that flew in the face of the elite and
accomplished high priests of psychiatry. He
looked for historical examples and contemporary
individuals who manifested the remarkable
qualities that he had discovered in Ruth
Benedict and Max Wortheimer.
The resulting study included nearly 2500
people. These were by no means perfect people.
They all had faults and areas of immaturity, or
lack of development. But they were achievers
who had made important contributions to the
planet, and they were relatively happy and
well adjusted. Most of all, they seemed to
manifest qualities of healthy behavior that
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
were beyond the ability of ordinary mortals.
Maslow published his findings in a paper entitled,
Self-Actualizing People, a Study in Mental
Health.
In this historic paper Maslow showed that
healthy, self-actualizing people, regardless of
their social backgrounds, are a different type of
human than the vast majority of their brothers
and sisters. Not simply different in degree, but
rather different in kind. There were not many of
these people, probably less than one and a half
percent of the population. But they were clear
models of what we human beings could become.
These self-actualizers showed parallel
characteristics that were impressive and beautiful.
Humanity had a new standard, a new and
encouraging potential to strive toward.
The emerging profile of self-actualizers reads
like a partial description of the personality of
Jesus.. .creative, expansive, generous, devoted
to a cause. There follows a very brief synopsis
of these characteristics. Read Maslow’s Motimtwn
and Personality if you want to learn more
about this study.
The Self-Actualization Touchstones
Religious: Self-actualizers seem to accept the
religious experience, the Peak Experience.. .
they have a devotion and a commitment to
higher values.
Active Agents: Without exception, self-actualizers
are committed to some high-minded
cause that they hold to be more important than
themselves. They tend to have a capacity to
lead, an ability to commit.
Independence of Culture, Opinwns, Social Formalities:
Self-actualizers are less enculturated
and programmed. They tend to think and act
on their own.
Creative: Self-actualizers are creative.. .they
get things done. They are spontaneous and
unpdctable, less concaned with sodal mores.
(They seem indifient to these mores, they do
not seek to violate them. People who consistently
go against social standards are consided
conformists in reverse.)
Brotherhood: Self-actualizers have a tendency
to help those around them … they have unorthodox,
unhostile senses of humor.
Clarity: They seem to perceive reality with
clarity, with fewer hang-ups and ego concerns.
Problem Solver: Self-actualizers are problemcentered
rather than ego-centered. They tend to
focus upon the important situations at hand,
sometimes to the exclusion of their own immediate
needs.
Maslow determined that a human being
could not achieve the self-actualizing process
until he had satisfied certain deficiency needs. It
was in these areas of deficiency, or pemeived
deficiency, that the ideas of Freud and Skinner
seemed to bevalidated. But once the human being
no longer saemed to need to talQ things from his
environment to satisfy his needs, once he began to
give things back to his environment, Freudian
psychology and Skinnerian Behaviorism no longer
adequately explained his behavior.
Maslow’s pyramid or hierarchy of needs is
well known. His two key premises related to
this pyramid of needs are: a lower need must
be satisfied before another or higher need is felt;
and a satisfied need no longer motivates. Let’s
look at this hierarchy of needs.
- Biological needs. The entity must have food,
air, water, etc., before it will seek to satisfy
another need.
- Safety Needs. When a human feels biological
needs satisfied, he will seek to establish
security.
- Social Needs.Once the entity feels safe, he
seeks out social companionship, approval, acceptance.
- Hazing satisfied these needs the mature now
craves estern, recognition, power and control. The
ego operates in various arenas of life to satisfy
these needs. Once the human has achieved the
rare status of satisfying his esteem needs, he
passes into a new area: the area of relative
maturity.
- Self-Actualizing. This is the area where the
entity &eks to become real-an actual rather
than a potential. This is not a conscious pursuit
in the way one might seek social acceptance or
power. Self-actualization seems to be the byproduct
of the pursuit of some cause greater
than oneself. All self-actualizers were totally,
sometimes fanatically, committed to a highminded
task. [«He who saeks to find his life sM1
lose it, he who loses it for my sake shall find it.»]
On pages 576 to 577, The Urantin Book delineates
a very similar hierarchy of development
for humanity: (1) TheNutrition Epoch (biological
needs); (2) The Security Age (safety needs);
(3) MaterialComfort Era (described as an era
that permits leisure and comfort. The social
needs, such as competing for material status – –
described by Maslow, can be correlated with
this era.); and (4) The Quest for Knowledge and
Wisdom. (Unfortunately, on our planet this
quest is closely related to immaturepower and
ego needs. Thus Maslow determined that individuals
seek knowledge largely to achieve
status, esteem, recognition and control. Yet, an
honest quest for knowledge results in the
development of wisdom, and accumulated
wisdom results in enlightenment.)
The emerging profile
of selfddualizers
reads like a partial
description of the personality
of
Jesus.. .creative, expansive,
generous,
devoted to a cause.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
«The concept of
process is an
important one.
We never achieve
self-actualization,
we only enter into
the process. «
Then Iesus gave him
a stunning command,
«Arise my son
and stand up like a
man.» Jesus told him
in effect to get off his
duff.
I
The Urantia Book goes on to layer the self-actualizing
process into three distinct levels. It is
interesting to note that in the Maslow model we
have traversed four distinct levels of development
and entered into a fifth. In my own judgment,
these are the swenth through the third
psychic circles.
The Urantia Book describes the areas below
self-actualization as deficiency areas, remarkably
close to Maslow’s concept of deficiency
needs. The book comments that this residue of
animal indulgence and laziness is eradicated
upon the mansion worlds. Entering the third
circle, or the area of self-actualizing, as 1 have
said, The Urantia Bookdelineates threeadditiona1
levels:
- The Epoch of Philosophy and Brotherhood.
- The Age of Spiritual Striving.
- The Era of Light and Life.. .for an individual
human being, di& ~djustecro ntact and eventual
fusion.
According to Maslow, only about one and a
half percent ot the population enter the self-actualization
area, which I have conjectured is the
third circle. I must also remind vou that the
psychic circles are not levels of spiritual development;
they are only associated in some unspecified
way to spiritual development. This
would fit the maturitv criteria and discoveries
of Maslow about the kierarchy of needs.
We can reasonably conjecture that if seven
psychic circles do exist, they should give researchers
some evidence of their existence. It is
not unreasonable to associate the Maslow
hierarchy of maturity development with the
psychic circles.
My second and third questions were: Does
The Urantia Book give us a methodology to
break into the ultimate frontier, the barrier of
human mediocrity? Does it give us a method to
make decisions and complete them with action?
I believe it does. There are two pages in
the book which every student of psychology
should study with minute care. we are all
familiar with them. It is the encounter of Jesus
with Fortune. In this encounter lesus outlines a
program that caused Fortune to transform from
a languishing, fear-ridden mortal with the
potential to be ten times what he was, to a
magnificent reality in the universe-a jewel in
the mosaic of the Supreme. What Jesus said to
Fortune was the message he gave to all of
humankind-in clear, precise and unmistakable
terms.
Is it not true that most of us tend to languish
on our own private hillsideof doubt, indecision
and self-pity, at least to somedegree? Isn’t there
a vague uneasiness that the fire of desire within
us has been dampened by fear? Could this
common syndrome beour potentials raging for
expression? Maslow believed this restless unfulfillment
is the condition of most of hurnankind.
He conjectured that the discomfort we all
feel can only be satisfied by the cultivation of
our own undeveloped potentials. Else, these
potentials will eventually grow silent, decay
and die. In this case an inexpressibly precious
treasure has slipped through the fingers of our
stewardship.
Jesus knew the human condition far better
than Maslow. And I believe Jesus spoke to all of
us when he spoke to Fortune. The first characteristic
of the message of Jesus to Fortune was
that it represented a process, a complete cycle.
It began with a physical action and recycled with
a physical action. It was an endless process
prescribed by the Master. The concept of
process is an important one. We never achieve
self- actualization, we only enter into the process.
People are never self-actualized; they may become
self-actualizers. The process never ends.
The first thing Jesus did with Fortune was
open his mind to the ultimate goal. Remember
at all times and under all circumstances why
you are on this planet. The Urantia Booksaysthat
our primary goal should be to attain better and
better communion with our Thought Adjuster.
Here is the ultimate source of the values and
spiritual potential we should honor, the truth
we seek, and the solution to every problem that
confronts us.
There is not a person here without a set of
pmblems, and without a magnificent opportunity
for growth.
But let us go back to Jesus and Fortune. Jesus
first gave Fortune a perspective of the ultimate
goal, our spiritual destiny. Then Jesus gave him
a stunning command, «Arise my son and stand
up like a man.» Jesus told him in effect to get
off his duff. Alfred Adler noted this need for
physical action to break the inertia of the lazy
evolutionary mind: ‘Trust only movement.»
Then Jesus acknowledged for Fortune the
reality of his pmblems and obstacles. But he
reframed them for this self-pitying man in such
a way as to empower him: «You are sumunded
by small enemies and many obstacles. But
the big things and the real things of this world
and this universe are on your side. The sun rises
.to greet you as it does the most powerful and
prosperous man on earth.»
Jesus then points out that Fortune has better
than average physical equipment, but that it
was useless and wasted as long as he isolated
himself from humanity and nursed real and
fancied misfortunes. «You could do great
things with your body if you will hasten off to
where great things are waiting to be done.»
Then Jesus addressed the arena of thoughtthe
mind. He again acknowledges the reality of
Fortune’s problems, but he indicates there is
only one way out.. .one escape. And that is for
Fortune to take the initiative through assertion
of his dominion over his mind.
Jesus said to Fortune, «Look again. Your
mind is clear and capable. Your body has an
intelligent mind to direct it. Set it to work to
solve its problems, teach your intellect to work
for you. Refuse to be dominated by fear like an
unthinking animal. Your mind should be your
courageous ally in the solution of your life’s
problems rather than your being its abject fearslave
and bond servant of depression and
defeat.»
Then Jesus spoke of the spirit. He called this
the most valuable possession of all. He told
Fortune to mlease the spirit from the fetters of fear.
Once released, ~esus& id the spirit wduld
stimulate and inspire the mind to control itself and
activate t k body. This, in turn, would enable the
spiritual nature to begin to deliver Fortune
from the evils of inaction. And Jesus suggests
to Fortune that the ultimate tool to release the
spirit is living faith.-faith to release the spirit,
which will inspire the mind and activate the
body. The gift of faith. ..ours for the asking. We
need but ask for it and receive it.
Fdy,Je sus admonished Fortune once again
to action: «When you become so readjusted to
life within yourself you likewise become readjusted
to the universe; you have been born
again-henceforth your life will be one of victorious
accomplishment. Trouble will invigorate
you; disappointment will spur you on;
obstacles will stimulate you. Arise, young man!»
And now we have come ‘round full circle.
Jesus began with a perspective, and then suggested
a physical action. Next, he asserted
dominion of human personality over mind.
Then he advocated a &ease of the spirit, and
finally back again to a physical action. This is a
process, a cycle, something that happens simultaneously,
yet must be understood and ordered
sequentially by the evolutionary mind.
For those of us who have fears and doubts
and a haunting feeling of dissatisfaction, I offer
one final suggestion. I have devised a pragmatic
application of the process we have just
discussed, one that I find most valuable. It is of
great value in getting myself into the right
frame of mind to do creative work
The formula I use is simple, and based upon
the technique Jesus taught Fortune: 1 pray for
perspectiue, claim dominion over mind, and ask for
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
the humility to accept the gij? of faith. Finally, I ask
for the energy to act and the intep’ty to live up to
the light I am given. Each day, regardless of the
situation, I do this process.
Now, most of us eat some kind of breakfast,
but few of us feed our soul each morning. Few
of us prepare for the day. We plunge intiit and
cope with what emerges. No warmup, no preparation.
Imagine an athlete who failed to warm
- Imagine Mary Lou Retten attempting to do
her historic vault-the one that won her the
Olympic title–without a warmup.
So try this tomorrow morning. Get up at least
a half hour earlier. An hour is better. And begin
your day with an appropriate prayer to gain a
broad perspective. My prayer is simply to acknowledge
that on my own, with my human
mind and personal capabilities, I will fail. I ask
for the mind of Jesus. I ask that God direct and
help me. This initial process is the process of
gaining perspective … a reminder as to why we
are here.
Consider your ultimate objectives. For example,
if you were planning a vacation day,
you could plan to cram into each moment the
very most experience you can. Or, you could
plan to walk with God and to enpy a wonderful
spiritual experience. Also, if you elect to
follow the will of God each day, remind yourself
that God works with incredible economy.
There is no surplus of time or material supply,
but rather an exact amount at the exact time
needed. Too many of us live as though our
objective is to do as much as possible in any
given day, rather than to do what God may
want done.
So begin the day early with a reminder of
why you are engaged in living your life upon
the planet. This gives meaning to everything
that follows each day, rather than simply going
through the motions and coping. Try to do a
little physical exercise, some stretching and
breathing. Next, try to observe your mind. It is
a tool for you to use; it is not you.
Your emotions are not you, either. You are
sovereign over mind … claim your birthright.
Identify with the personality essence withinit
is that «thing» which observes, the thing that
cannot observe itself. Thus, it cannot be defined
or qualified; it is YOU, the essence of you.
Next, I ask that God grant me the ability to
accept the gift of faith. I ask that whatever elements
are in me that might prevent me from
accepting this gift be dissolved. And thus I seek
to release the spirit within from the fetters of
fear. By now, if 1 am successful, I achieve a kind
of serenity, a peace. Now I am ready to receive.
And in the silence of the morning I listen to
Jesus then points out
that Fortune has better
than average
physical equipment,
but that it was useless
and wasted as
long as he isolated
himself from
humanity and
nursed real and fancied
misfortunes.
So begin the day
early with a
reminder of why you
are engaged in living
your life upon the
planet. This gives
meaning to eve ything
that follows
each day, rather than
simply going
through the motions
and coping.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM 11
It has been said that
we are not punished
far our errors and
our sins; we are
punished & them. In
the same vein, we are
not punished far failing
to live up to the
light we are given;
we are punished @
not living up to the
light within our soul.
My formula is exadly
as I presented it.
Achieve serenity of
mind. Achieve an
attitude of receptivity.
And then act
according to the light
you are given. A
spiritual life is an
edifice that must be
rebuilt each day.
God. Although I do not hear his words, I open
mind and heart and trust that transactions are
taking placebeyond the scope of my conxiousness,
in the highest regions of my mind.
But this process of listening is not passive. We
must go to our Thought Adjuster with a purpose.
We must ask advice and listen as though
it was an alter ego. We must complete this part
of the process by honoring our spiritual potential,
and asking that what we have learned in
these precious moments beapplied to the arena
of life we are about to enter. We must bring
something back with us. And the light,
whatever we get, must be honestly lived up to
and sincerely honored. Else it turns to darkness
within the soul.
It has been said that we are not punished for
our errors and our sins; we are punished by
them. In the same vein, we are not punishedfor
failing to live up to the light we are given; we
are punished by not living up to the light within
our soul.
This hour or so in the morning is my most
precious time of the day. If, for some reason it
is not possible to get an hour with God, I try to
get a few minutes, but always in the morning.
Always I have at least the time to acknowledge
my helplessness and my need for him.
I should point out that I have observed the
very first thing to be neglected in the prayerand
process I have suggested is the acknowledgment
of my own inadequacy. If I am careless, I
seem to forget that humility is necessary. I must
admit that I need God-that I cannot do it by
myself. I personally must monitor this tendency
toward armgance very carefully.
There is one final suggestion I make. 1 complete
my session by a physical action: I write
down all thevarious things I need todoor think
I need to do. I then time-frame each of these
items and, finally, establish priorities. This is
the final physical action that reestablishes the
cycle and completes the process for the moment.
Remember, the process is endless. This is
the technique I use that seems best to help me
do creative work.
My formula is exactly as I presented it.
Achieve serenity of mind. Achieve an attitude
of receptivity. And then act according to the
light you are given. A spiritual life is an edifice
that must be rebuilt each day.
Try this system if you want to be invigorated,
spurred on and stimulated. Because Jesus
promised that if we are aligned properly with
the universe, our troubles will invigorate us,
obstacles will stimulate us, and disappointment
will spur us on.
I hope I have offered something of value. I
tried to show that the mind of Jesus has been
clinically discovered and studied. I have tried
to show a clear method by which Jesus taught
us to align our selves with the forces of the
universe. I have asserted here that if we but
learn three things from Jesus-serenity of mind,
receptivity, and action-we will do justice to his
teachings. We will achieve noble self-expression
and not simply be reactive to stimuli.
Disney used to say that to get better we need
to use the pause between stimulus and
response. The quality of that pause determines
whether we will react from the top of our heads
or the core of our being. I suggest here a pause
at the beginning of the day to realign your self
with the ultimate purpose of your life. If you
really can’t conceive of an ultimate purpose, do
this exercise tomorrow morning. Write your
obituary in a hundred words of less. Write your
obituary the way you would like it to read some
day. How would you like to be remembered?
When you have written your obituary in this
way, you will have written your ultimate purpose
in life.
In closing, to the scientists I suggest that
science is not a study of reality, but a study of
fact. Quantum physics dws not prove that the
very tiny is undeterminate; it proves we cannot
determine–as yet-how it works. It was the
arrogance of materialism that built an unsinkable
ship called the 7itanic. And it was science
without values that built gas chambers not
many decades ago.
The scientist who is a Urantia Book believer
will honor values, and will recognize that her
or his domain of expertise is fact. The domain
of value is that of religion, but it ultimately
belongs to all of us. And the domain of emerging
truth is the domain of the philosopher. And,
of course, we are all philosophers, and the
study of tmth is the pb of all of us.
I suggest we all spend an hour each morning
talking withGod. An hour spent aligning yourself
with your Thought Adjuster puts you in
tune with the universe and in liaison with God.
In liaison with God, anything, absolutely anything,
is possible.
In liaison with God, anything, absolutely anything,
is possible.
I love you, God bless all of you.
REFERENCES
The Urantia Book:
Reference to two-brained theory and threebrained
creatures: page 566. This information
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
predated the Speny split-brain experiments by
nearly two decades.
Encounter of Jesus with Fortune, pp 1437-8.
References to Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs,
pp 576-7. This information predated Maslow
by nearly two decades.
Selected comments:
[Intrinsic drives to self-actualization]-
‘There are present in all mortals certain innate
drives toward growth and self-realization
which function if they are not specifically inhibited.
The certain technique of fostering this
constitutive endowment of the potential of spiritual
growth is to maintain an attitude of wholehearted
devotion to supreme values.» (*1095)
[Transition from antecedent causation
toward self-actualization]- «Religion assures
man that, in following the gleam of righteousness
discernable in his soul, he is thereby identifying
himself with the plan of the Infinite
purpose of the Eternal. Such a liberated soul
immediately begins to feel at home in this new
universe, his universe.
«When you experience such a transformation
of faith, you are no longer a slavish part of
the mathematical cosmos but rather a liberated
volitional son of the Universal Father. No
longer is such a liberated son fighting alone
against the inexorable doom of the termination
of temporal existence; no longer does he combat
all nature, with the odds hopelessly against
him; no longer is he staggered by the paralyzing
fear that, perchance, he has put his trust in
a hopeless phantasm or pinned his faith to a
fanciful error.
«Now, rather, are the sons of God enlisted
together in fighting the battle of reality’s triumph
over the partial shadows of existence. At
last all creatures become conscious of the fact
that God and all the divine hosts of a well-nigh
limitless universe are on their side in the supernal
struggle to attain eternityof lifeand divinity
of status. Such faith-liberated sons have certainly
enlisted in the struggles of time on the
side of the supreme forces and divine personalities
of eternity; even the stars in their
courses are doing battle for them; at last they
gaze at the universe from within, from God’s
viewpoint, and all is transformed from the uncertainties
of material isolation to the sureties
of eternal spiritual progression. Even time itself
becomes but the shadow of eternity cast by
Paradise realities upon the moving panoply of
space.» (*I1171
[On evolutionary laziness]- «Evolutionary
man does not relish hard work To keep pace in
his life experience with the impelling demands
and the compelling urges of a growing religious
experience means incessant spiritual
growth, intellectual expansion, factual enlargement,
and social service. There is no real religion
apart from a highly active personality. Therefore
do the more indolent of men often seek to
escape the rigors of truly religious activities by
a species of ingenious self-deception through
resorting to a retreat to the false shelter of stereotyped
religious doctrines and dogmas. But
true religion is alive. Intellectual crystallization
of religious concepts is the equivalent of spiritual
death. You cannot conceive of religion
without ideas, but when religion once becomes
reduced only to an idea, it isno longer religion;
it has become merely a species of human
philosophy.» (*1120-21)
[On the technique of receiving the mind of
Jesus]- «The technique whereby you can
accept another’s idea-as yours is the same
whereby you may let the mind which was in
Christ be also in you.’ » (*1123)
[On the domains of science and religion]-
«Science becomes the thought domain of mathematics,
of the energy and material of time and
space. Religion assumes to deal not only with
finite and temporal spirit but also with the
spirit of eternity and supremacy. Only through
a long experience in mota can these two extremes
of universe perception be made to yield
analogous interpretations of origins, functions,
relations, realities, and destinies.» (9139)
«Even the discoveries of science are not truly
real in the consciousness of human experience
until they are unraveled and correlated, until
their relevant facts actually become meanings
through the encircuitment in the thought
streams of mind.» (*1120)
«This profound experience of the reality of
the divine indwelling forever transcends the
crude materialistic technique of the physical
sciences. You cannot put spiritual py under a
microscope; you cannot weigh love in a balance;
neither can you estimate the quality of
spiritual worship.» (*2095)
[On the stewardship of potentials]- ‘The
great challenge that has been given to mortal
man is this: Will you decide to personalize the
experiencible value meanings of the cosmos
into your own evolving selfhood? or by re@-
ing survival, will you allow these secrets of
Supremacy to lie dormant, awaiting the action
of another creature at some other time who will
in his way attempt a creaturecontribution to the
evolution of the finite God? But that will be his
contribution to the Supreme, not youls.» (*I 284)
When you experience
such a transformation
of faith, you are
no longer a slavish
part of the mathematical
cosmos but
rather a liberated
volitional son of the
Universal Father.
(*1117)
. . .at last they gaze at
the universe from
within, from God’s
viewpoint, and all is
transformed from the
uncertainties of
material isolation to
the sureties of eternal
spiritual progression
(*1117)
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
«Man’s eternal soul evolves its own eternal
destiny by association with the divine presence
of the Paradise Father and in accordance with
the personality decisions of the human mind.
What the Trinity is to God the Supreme, the
Adjuster is to evolving man.» (‘1282)
‘The Supreme Being did not create man, but
man was literally created out of, his very life
derived from, the potentiality of the Supreme.
Nor does he evolve man; yet the Supreme himself
is the very essence of evolution. From the
finite standpoint, we actually live, move, and
have our being within the immanence of the
Supreme.» (9283)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adler, Mortimer. 1990. Truth in Religion: The Plurity of
Religions and the Unity of Truth. New York: Macmillan.
Csiksmhnihalyi, Mihaly. 1990. Flow: The Psychology
of Optimal Experience. New York: Harper and Row.
Herbert, Nick. 1985. Quantum Reality: Beyond the New
Physics and the Meaning of Reality. New York:
Anchor Books.
Leichtman, Robert and Carl Japikse. 1982. Actiue
Meditation. New York: Ariel Fress.
Maslow, Abraham. 1970. Motiaation and Pmonality.
New York: Harper and Brothers.
Maslow, Abraham. 1970. Religions, Values and Peak
Exprimus. New York: Viking.
Ramacharaka, Yogi. 1%. Raja Yoga or Mental Dmelop
ment. Des Plaines, IL: Yoga Publication Sodety.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
Coming Full Circle
I want to talk to you this evening about what
I have come to explore in my own «gradual
accumulation of the knowledge of the laws of
the material world.» I will be speaking of
problems associated with the central nervous
system (brain and spinal cord), and the musculoskeletal
system (muscles and bones).
First, I will address some experiences I’ve
had, in the clinic, that transcend purely scientific
investigation, and go beyond anything I
was taught in school. Second, I will cite some
information from others that will substantiate
the occurrence of outcomes that transcend the
easily explained and their recognition of the
importance of these events. Last, I will offer a
brief explanation of my understanding of the
approach of Moshe Feldenkrais and his
philosophic/therapeutic method that offers a
plausible theory that sheds light on these transcendent
phenomena. Along the way, I hope to
allude to the need to reconsider our purely
scientific stance, and to come full circle by
realizing the importance of the ‘laying on of
hands,» both literally and figuratively; which is
to say, using actual touch and using emotional
touch. I hope to give you questions about your
own ability to come full circle, as an individual,
through looking back to your earliest development
and thinking about what behavioral and
physical habits you’ve formed which may no
longer serve you. An increase in personal control
can happen when we recognize our past
and free ourselves from it–come full circle.
As I stated, the transcendent experiences I’ve
had during my work with people with brain
injury and strokes have occurred as a result of
looking at a much bigger picture of the patient
than I was ever taught to look at in school.
Several important factors can affect the outcome
in giving these people an increase in
motor control. The ability of the patient to
respond cognitively is important, but of greater
importance is the ability of the body to experience
a feeling of normal movement. This
«feeling» of normal movement involves not
only the sensory perception of movement, but
also the emotional feelings associated with the
ease of normal movement.
Normal movement has an inherent lightness,
and in the impaired system, when this
movement happens, there is a profound emotional
response that reverberates throughout
the whole organism. In order to impose a feeling
of normal movement on a disrupted system,
it requires the therapist/teacher to view
the entire human organism sitting before her,
and to gently guide the distorted body parts
into a posture more related to normal body
postures. I have learned that the greatest success
can happen if this gentle guiding takes into
account the patient’s psychological need for
security-both physical and emotional safety. I
am able to establish this bond of trust by touch:
in the firmness or lightness of the touch, the
speed of the movement, the physical support
or lack of support, or sometimes by just placing
myself in the position to catch them if they fall.
Very little verbal exchange takes place. Furthermore,
an awareness of my own muscle tone, as
well as my own emotional tone, helps to establish
the necessary setting. The ad of utilizing
the correct components of movement, via
positioning the patient properly, which I have
been taught, could be elevated to a more
dynamic healing event when the whole person
was considered, and when the teacher/
therapist brought herself wholly to the task.
Occasionally, all of the elements come together,
and the patient experiences the look of recognition
associated with normal movement. I call
this event a «cordial connection» between
myself and the patient. It sometimes feels like
a hcly moment, and we are both blessed. I feel
that this must represent a true laying on of
hands.
In our search for purely scientific, reproducible
proof of how and why something works,
we have seen a loss of favor for the simple
loving act of laying on of hands. I do not
propose to take away anything from all the
marvelous discoveries that have been made or
the tremendous gains that occur through use of
the factual, reproducible, scientific method. I
have come to believe, however, that our search
for answers will increasingly bring us full circle
to the discovery of the potency of the laying on
of hands and the intangible, unreproducible
results that can occur. And this has to do with
the recognition of the whole person, and with
an interchange between two persons involved
in this creative act of healing.
Oliver Sacks discusses the split between science
and life, between the pure facts of science,
as in physics, and the variety of phenomena
that defy strictly factual explanation. We can
physiologically identify specific areas of the
brain in which memories and images are held,
where sensations and experiences reside. We
cannot, however, locate the geographic site of
judgment or the home of human dignity; these
BY
Joy Dirham
A student of The Urantia
Book 14 years, Dirham has
a B.S. degree in physical
therapy. Thefocus of her
work has been on central
nervous system dysfunction,
working with stroke
victims and those who haue
sustained traumatic brain
injury. She is cmtifred in
the Babath neurodeuelopmental
treatment technique
for adult hemiplegia.
It sometimes feels
like a holy moment,
and we are both
blessed.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
I have come to
believe, however, that
our search for
answers will increasingly
bring us full
circle to the discove y
of the potency of the
laylng on of hands
and the intangible,
unreproducible
results that can occur.
To one degree or
another, these
theoris draw upon
the body’s hidden
potential-the
transcendent intangible.
are transcendent functions of the mind. The
focus of science on the physiology of the mind
misses the importance of looking at the organism
in its entirety-looking at the total being.
By focusing on the lesion and treating only this
lesion, a failure to see the ramifying effects
throughout the whole person is inevitable.
Sacks discusses his book, Awakenings, and
cites the divergence in the particular manifestations
of catatonia seen in patients with Encephalitis
Lethargica Syndrome. Even in a
catatonic state, beyond a level of generic
similarities, the «sub-types» of the syndrome
became as varied as the individuals who possessed
them. When the drug L-Dopa was introduced
and these patients experienced an
awakening, after the initial euphoria, the
response to LDopa was not necessarily associated
with the degree of physiologic damage
that had taken place, but appeared to have a
great deal to do with the individual patient’s
state of mind. Sacks describes Rose R, who was
nostalgic for those things familiar to her, all of
which happened in the 1920’s (the awakenings
happened in 1%9). Rose finally concluded, «I
can’t bear this present time.. .all this television,
trash, nonsense.» Shortly after making this
statement, she suddenly ceased to respond to
the L-Dopa. More than one story hinges on how
other elements in a person’s life came to bear
on his or her response to L-Dopa. What became
obvious, as Sacks relates, was that the LDopa
was only the beginning, and what was necessary
for optimal success with the L-Dopa was
for the patient to find a life with purpose and
dignity.
A.R. Luria, considered by many to be the
father of neuropsychology, felt strongly about
the interrelatedness of a patient’s biology and
biography, a person’s electrochemical, cellular
processing of information, and the relationship
to individual personal experience. An understanding
of this concept ofhow a person grows
and becomes emotionally/psychologically,
and how that growing and becoming is connected
to the physical-body, is essential to attaining
increasing control.
Spinoza (1632-16771, in Ethics, states: «…no
one hitherto has gained such an accurate
knowledge of the bodily mechanism that he
can explain all its functions.. .The body can, by
the sole laws of nature, do many things which
the mind wonders at.. . .»
We are now in possession of a vast amount
of research related to the physiology of the
brain, but still the intangibles of the body’s
unexplained potential give us reason to
wonder.
This laying on of hands, of which I’ve been
speaking, is beginning to gain more and more
attention these days in the non-medical community,
and the reason is, we are finding that it
does work. We also are becoming increasingly
aware that traditional American medicine
often focuses only on the specific location of
bodily insult or focuses too much on the tests,
X rays, etc., to the exclusion of viewing the
whole person. (One of the greatest gifts you can
find is a medical practitioner versed in the
scientific knowledge necessary, and who is sensitive
to all the «ramifying» effects emotionally.)
Thereare many different theories about and
methods of touch therapy, both for dysfunctional
systems and for normal central nervous
systems. To one degree or another, these
theories draw upon the body’s hidden potential-
the transcendent intangible. All of these
methods come under the umbrella title, «body
work; there is Heller work, Traegger method,
the Rosen method, Mittendorf breath work,
and Feldenkrais method, to name a few.
I am going to discuss with you, this evening,
some of the ideas of Moshe Feldenkrais. I want
to makeclear that I do not think the Feldenkrais
method holds all the answers or the only
answer. This method of body work has had
special significance for me, because it has
reconfirmed experiences I have had as a practicing
clinician and has made me consistently
feel (physically and emotionally) the way 1
have striven to have my patients feel, but with
which I have met inconsistent success.
Dr. Moshe Feldenkrais lived from 1904-1984
and developed this method in the late 1940’s.
He held Ph.D.’s in mechanical engineering and
physics and worked with Fredric JoliotCurie
in nuclear research. He was the first European
to earn a black belt in Judo. synthesizing this
background with his deep curiosity about linguistics,
biology, perinatal development, and
athletics, Feldenkrais taught himself to walk
again, without pain, after a crippling knee injury,
This personal breakthrough led to Feldenkrais’
innovative contribution in showing
how the body, through movement, influences
the mental ~ k e s s -.
1 have b&n exposed to his teachings for the
past two years and have just recently begun a
four-year certification course to learn this
method of movement therapy. I am only a
beginning student in this method, so that my
ability to express Feldenkrais’ work must be
weighed in light of my inexperience. It is difficult
to easily or briefly explain this work, so
please bear with me. ~ h e nwia s fist exposed
to this work (and my first exposure was as a
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
recipient of the actual touch therapy), what I
experienced felt profoundly right to me based
on my work in the clinic, when I was the one
doing the teaching.
As I lay on the massage table, my body was
gently manipulated by my teacher, with no
work on my part and no verbal instructions on
her part (similar to the nonverbal communication
I spoke of earlier). Almost immediately my
breathing changed dramatically-fuller, slower,
a feeling of the breath moving not only in my
lungs, but throughout my whole body. When
you hold an infant you can feel the breathing
throughout the whole body. This must be normal
breathing.
I had a deep sense of being more connected
in my body and realized that parts of my body
that were previously not touching the table
(the small of my back; between my shoulder
blades) were now in contact. It was a feeling of
being more normally aligned around my
skeleton.
What happened after my session, which Feldenkrais
teachers call «lessons,» was a feeling
of lightness, both physically and emotionally,
that lasted several days.There was no one thing
that I could point to as having changed, since I
had no real specific complaint to start with, but
I experienced such a generalized feeling of well
being, a feeling of being balanced over my feet,
of moving from a balanced center-and all
without conscious effort on my part.
This coincided with what I had worked years
to achieve in my patients with central nervous
system dysfunction this layingon of hands that
gave me a feeling of «normal» movement, unlike
anything I could remember experiencing.
It established the same «cordial connection,»
with me as the recipient, that I had experienced
on rareoccasions with a patient, but this cordial
connection had come about in such an effortless
way. Not only was I able to experience this
feeling through the laying on of hands of my
teacher, but I becameawareofexercises that can
be done gently and easily by myself, or in
p u p s , that could effect this change.
My understanding of Moshe Feldenkrais’
observations has to do with habituation of
movement patterns. His work discusses the
interrelatedness of movement and behavior,
the habituation of movement patterns that are
established in childhood that prevent ease of
movement, wen in a normal central nervous
system.
The mature person has the ability to learn
newer, more appropriate patterns of movement
and behavior, based on becoming aware
of habitual patterns. We start, as infants, with
free and easy movement; we habituate movements
that prevent free, easy movement; we
recognize these habitual movement patterns
and choose another way, thus freeing ourselves
once again. This is the avenue for coming full
circle, as an individual, that I promised to challenge
you with in my introduction. For example,
in our society we are chair sitters, so that
when we are seventy years old, our ability to
rise from sitting on the floor has usually
slowed. In a society of floor sitters, the seventy
year old has no such difficulty. Weall started as
infants with the same flexible skeleton.
Human infants, unlike other animals on the
planet, are subjected to a prolonged period of
motor development (as compared, say, to a
horse that stands up within the first few minutes
after birth), and an even longer period of
dependence on parents. At birth, we have only
primitive reflexes working intact, and we slowly
lay down motor patterns that are controlled
by the higher cortical centers. As the infant
begins to develop a sense of self and sense of
world-«myself’ versus «other»-movement/
action facilitates this emotional/ psychological
development. Superimposed upon these motor
and behavior explorations, because of the total
dependence upon the parent, are all the expectations
of the parent. To please the parent is
necessary for survival. Our experience of movement
and, hence, the appropriate behavior for
survival, becomes influenced by the society,
culture, economics, and education of our parents.
Therefore, movement becomes the expression
of behavior and behavior is shown through
movement, and both of these are the product of
our own individual personal experience.
According to Feldenkrais, faulty posture and
behavior come about when a normal child is
asked to perform a task that is beyond its ability
to perform with ease, based on its motor development
at that time. People slouch or tense
their bodies unnecessarily, not because of a
problem with the nervous system, but secondary
to attempting to perform tasks that were
beyond their means, as children, and they have
habituated that effortful performance. The
child’s dependence is so p tan d so linked to
survival fears that it will perform what is expected,
even if it is unable to accomplish the
task with ease.
Remembering that muscle control in
humans is gained through prolonged training,
our actions are more influenced by our experience
and environment than those of other
animals. This comes back to, and validates the
idea of, looking at the entire organism-the
whole person. There is also a definite connec-
When you hold an infant
you can feel the
breathing throughout
the whole body.
Remembering that
muscle control in
humans is gained
through prolonged
training, our actions
are more influenced
by our experience
and environment
than those of other
animals.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
. . .an attempt is made
to free the nervous
system from its
habitual patterns of
movement.. .and to
re-establish in the
body the feeling of
light, flortless,
normal movement.
tion, using this line of thinking, between the
highly individual nature of each person’s personal
experience and the highly individual nature
of each person’s healing and/or response
to healing (physical and psychological).
With Feldenkrais’ technique, in both the individual
lessons, called Functional Integration,
and self/group exercises, called Awareness
Through Movement, an attempt is made to free
the nervous system from its habitual patterns
of movement (even in its most subtly restricted
patterns) and to re-establish in the body the
feeling of light, effortless, normal movement.
In movements we performed for the first
time, we experienced the initial effort, and that
effort was repeated with each subsequent like
movement. In time, the effort becomes so
habitual and automatic that there is a complete
loss of awareness of the effort involved, as well
as of the subsequent restricted movement it causes.
An example would be to turn the head slowly
to the right, several times, staying within a
comfortable rangeof motion. While turning the
head, become aware the degree of smoothness
and ease of movement, and also notice the end
point, visually, at the end of motion. Next,
repeat the exercise, slowly turning the head to
the right again several times, while turning the
eyes to theleft. Repeatslowly, head right and eyes
left, for four to five repetitions. Now, resume
turning the head right with eyes following
right, and evaluate again the quality of movement
and the visual end point of the movement.
Are there any changes associated with
this break in the habitual pattern of neck movement
being influenced by eye movement? Did
you notice a slight increase in the range of neck
motion; i.e., was the visual end point of the
movement slightly beyond what you made
note of in the first exercise?
So, what we have talked about here are phenomena
that transcend measurable, reproducible,
scientific research, because they appear to
be-in one way or another-imbued with the
individual experiences, both physical and psychological,
of the person or persons involved.
We have discussed coming full circle in our
approach to healing by recognizing, rethinking,
the contribution of the laying on of hands
despite the intangible, unrepmducible results.
Further, we have talked about one theory of
touch therapy which acknowledges the importance
of individual experience in creating behavioral,
psychological patterns that influence
movement patterns, and vice wrsa. As we have
created these patterns because of survival
needs in early childhood development, so we
can recognize-rethink-these patterns and
recreate ourselves, thus «coming full circle» in
our own lives.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
The Second Enlightenment:
Religion and Liberalism
Beginning with Francis Fukuyama’s statement
that liberalism has won the ideological struggle
within the world’s economic and political institutions,
I argue that the world’s religious institutions
are on the brinkofa similar ideological struggle. This
essay holds that The Urantia Book is therefore the
vitai mechanism by which liberalism will uliimately
be acceptd by the world’s religious institutions.
I would be willing to bet that a demon lurks
within the consciousness of virtuallv werv Fellowship
member. It is not a demon that lifts us
up above our beds, scares our mothers or makes
our skin change colors. Rather it is a mind
demon whose small but undeniable voice calls
out for some trulymomentous world event that
would confirm the truths of The Urantia Book.
Our souls may tell us that personal religious
experience is what truly matters, and it may
also remind us how lucky we are to be future
Agondonters, but our demon remains unfulfilled
by such spiritual goodies. It whispers
things like: «Hey, wouldn’t it be nice if the new
orbital telescope sends back a few shots of
Satania?» It titillates us with: ‘Wouldn’t it be far
out if some archaeologist discovers Dalamatia,
or some Mediterranean diver finds the Garden
of Eden?» And it sullies our weak moments
with such thoughts as: ‘Wouldn’t it be happenin’
if someone actually translated-a chariot
of fire–on the evening news-complete with
reaction shots of Jerry Falwell and perhaps the
Pope? Boy, would that teach all my skeptical
friends a lesson, nyah, nyah, nyah, nyah.»
Demons are by definition disgusting, and we
are not, and should not be, proud of them.
Perhaps we should just continue to ignore them
as best we can.
But there is, in fact, something afoot in the
world-something that this demon might find
very interesting. The purpose of this essay is
twofold: first, I want to draw attention to a
momentous world went; second, and more
importantly, I mean to draw attention to this
momentous world event’s momentous implications-
implications which confirm the information
in The Urantia Book. And, by the way,
your demon might find this information very
nourishing.
The Event
In the summer of 1989 the deputy director of
the State Department’s policy planning staff,
Francis Fukuyarna, published an article in the
Washington-based quarterly, TheNational Interest.
Fukuyama raised an intellectual tempest by
announcing in this article, entitled ‘The End of
History?» the «…unabashed victory of economic
and political liberalism» over all «…viable
systematic alternatives.»O) He wrote:
What we may be witnessing is not just the
end of the Cold War, or the passing of a particular
period of postwar history, but the end of
history as such: that is, the end point of mankindti
ideological evolution and h e universalization
of Western liberal demwacy as the final
form of human government. (4)
Fukuyama characterizes the twentieth century
as a period of ideological struggle that
pitted two alternative ideologies, fascism and
communism, against liberalism. At the beginning
of the twentieth century liberalism in
Europe and the United States had many acute
problems. Fascism and communism saw these
problems as resulting from liberalism’s inherent
contradictions. By fascist and communist
lights these problems were the creation, not of
inferior people, inferior decisions or non-liberal
historical influences, but of the liberal structure
and philosophy itself. Therefore, these problems
could not be resolved within the context
of modern liberalism. Subsequently, fascism
and communism arose as alternative systems.
Fascism emerged in the early twentieth century
in response to liberalism’s problems of political
weakness, materialism, moral relativism and
lack of community spirit. World War I1 and
hurnanivs rewon of ultranationalism-with
its promise of unending conflict-subsequently
consigned fascism to histovs provehial dustbin.
Unfortunately, political weakness, materialism,
moral relativism and lack of community spirit
remained. Communism, however, was a more
serious challenge. (9)
Marx asserted that «liberalism’s inherent
contradictions were epitomized by the ifieconcilable
interests of capital vs. the interests of
labor.. . .» (See appendix A.) Lenin and Stalin
created one of world historfs most profound
social disasters-the Soviet Union-in the
name of resolving this so-called liberal contradiction.
But Fukuyama points out that according
to the latest generation of Soviet emigres,
Marxism as an ideology has lost all credibility
-especially among the Soviet elite. Contemporary
Soviets are united by a different ideology:
cynicism. (12) ‘There is a virtual consensus
BY
Bill Granstaff
A student of The Urantia
Book for 13 years,
Granstaff is studyingfor
his doctoral degree in
palitical science. He has
worked as a writer,
producer, and performer
of contemporary music.
World War I1 and
humanity’s rejection
of ultranatwnalismwith
its promise ofunending
conflictsub
sequently consigned
fisCiSm fo hiSfoly’s
proverbial dust bin.
Unfortunately, polit ia1
weakness,
materialism, mom1
relativism and lack af
community spirit
remained.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
The world community
has, in spirit
if not in fact, adopted
the liberal economic
and political
paradigm, and.. .
there appear to be
no more credible
alternatives.
among the currently dominant school of Soviet
economists now that central planning and the
command system of allocation are the root
cause of economic inefficiency, and that if the
Soviet system is ever to heal itself, it must permit
free and decentralized decision-making
with respect to investment, labor, and prices.»
(12) Further, Fukuyama describes the replacement
of the former economic/political principles
by other principles that «…do not amount
to liberalism per se but whose only connecting
thread is liberalism.» (12)
But what of the contradiction Marx referred
to-that of capital and labor? Fukuyama holds
that it is largely resolved in the contemporary
liberal welfare democracy. Though there are
rich people and poor people, capital and labor,
the mot causes of economic inequality have
more to do with individuals’ premodern cultural
and social characteristics than with the
underlying legal and social structure of our
society, which remains fundamentally egalitarian
and moderately redistributionist. (9)
But Fukuyama’s hypothesis-that Liberalism
is the final economic and political ideologystill
begs an important question. Given the
failure and dissolution of liberalism’s alternatives,
have the walled contradictionsor pmblems
that spawned them disappeared also? The
answer to this question is unfortunately quite
obvious. Any two year old can share it with
you. No! (Two year olds are rather emphatic.)
Assuming that Fukuyama’s hypothesis is
correct – and I believe it is – that liberal
economics and politics is now the accepted
planetary norm, what is it that humankind has
finally accepted?
Fukuyama never pmisely defines liberalism
(there may be no universally accepted definition),
but a definition is required for the purposes
of this essay. Robert Fowler writes that
liberalism consists of three closely related principles:
(1) a commitment to skeptical reason, an
affirmation of pragmatic intelligence, and an
uneasiness about both abstract philosophical
thinking and nonrational modes of knowledge;
(2) enthisiasm in principle (and increasinglyin
practice) for tolerance not only in political
terms but much more obviously in terms of
lifestyle and social norms; and (3) affirmation
of the central importance of the individual and
individual freedom.» (1989,4)
When Adam Smith wmte The Wealth of
Nations in 1776, he articulated liberalism as
applied to economics:
The natural effort which every man is continually
making to better his own condition is
the prindple which keeps the economic mechanism
in activity. ?he uniform, constant, and
uninterrupted effort of every man to better his
condition is the principle from which public and
national, as well as private, opulence is originally
derived (qtd. in Morrow 65).
Every man, as long as he does not violate the
laws of justice, is left pafectly fiw to pursue his
own interest his own way, and to bring both his
industry and capital intocompetition with those
of any other man, or order of men. The
sovereign is completely discharged from a duty,
in theattempt to perform which hemust always
be exposed to innumerable delusions, and for
the proper performance of which no human
wisdom or knowledge could ever be suffiaent;
the duty of superintending the industry of
private people, and of directing it towards the
employment most suitable to the interest of
society (qtd. in Friedman 20).
The United States Constitution and the Bill
of Rights among many other Western national
systems applied liberalism to politics. John
Stuart Mill, in his famous essay, «On Liberty,»
offered another very succinct canon of
liberalism, subsequently known as the «Harm
Principle.»
‘ h a t principle is, that the sole end for which
mankind are warranted, individually or collectively,
in interfering with the liberty of action of
any of their number, is self-protection. That the
only purpose for which power can be rightfully
exercised over any member of a civilized community,
against his will, is to prevent hann to
othas. His own good, either physical or moral,
is not a sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully
be compelled to do or forbear because it will be
better for him to do so, because it will make him
happier, because, in the opinions of others, to do
so would be wise, or even right. These are good
reasons for remonstrating with him, or reasoning
with him, or persua&g him, or entreating
him, but not for compelling him, or visiting him
with any wil in cas;he dootherwise. ‘lo jktify
that, the conduct from which it is desired to
deter him, must be calculated to produce evil to
someone else. ‘Ihe only part of the conduct of
any one, for which he is amenable to society, is
that which concerns others. In the part which
merely concerns himself, his independence is, of
right, absolute. Over himself, over his own body
and mind, the individual is sovereign (qtd. in
Diggs 190).
Put very simply, nations that adopt laissezfaire
policy and liberal democracy articulate
liberalism as applied to economics and politics.
With liberalism now more or less defined, I
can conclude this sedion by pointing out that
the scholarly community by and large agrees
with Fukuyarna-that the world community
has, in spirit if not in fact, adopted the liberal
economic and political paradigm, and that
there appear to be no more credible alternatives.
This is a momentous world event by
virtually any standard. But the event’s implicaMAY
17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
tions are likewise momentous, especially for
those of us in the Fellowship. In the next section
I will discuss these implications and the role
that The Urantia Book may play in the world
events that follow. You may inform your
demon that it is feeding time.
Feeding Time
Sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists
and others have arbitrarily divided
humankind’s social institutions into three general
categories: political institutions, economic
institutions, and religious institutions.
Fukuyama presents a convincing argument
that two out of three of the planet’s major social
institutions-those of politics and economics–
have adopted liberal norms and parameters.
The implication and my hypothesis should be
obvious: The next phase of planetary social
wolution and ideological conflict will concern
the adoption of liberal principles by the third
and final category of social institutions-the
planet’s religious establishment. And strangely
enough, it is at just this time that The Urantia
Book conveniently appears. But before dealing
with The Urantia Book’s role in this upcoming
struggle, I must answer a very important question
concerning the feasibility of my implication/
hypothesis. Would it be unusual for the
world’s three general social institutions to barrow
philosophies and norms from each other?
Once again we may utilize the communicative
abilities of our two year old. The answer, as 1
shall show, is: No! (I must, perhaps, give this
two year old a cookie.)
In order to illustrate the precedent for this
brand of institutional osmosis, I will briefly
highlight several important aspects of
European political/economic and religious
wolution. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) undertook,
principally in Niconrachean Ethics and the
Politics, to construct a science of the polis. He
understood the polisor city/state as an association
whose primary purpose was the formation
of character-+ means of creating quality citizens
(Diamond 1976,791, For him the polis was
an instrument by which the statesman could
make the citizenry self-sufficient in goods, and
fine-tune personality unification; it was as
much concerned as any church with the virtue
of its citizens (Diggs 11-12). But it is important
to emphasize that Aristotle and the Athenians
of his time had no true religion worthy of the
name. Their system of gods was more an intellectual
creation than a standard for normative
valuations. Thus Aristotle’s concept of the polis
naturally included elements that were soon to
fall under other jurisdictions. There was absolutely
no separation of political, economic or
religious institutions.
Christianity radically transformed Aristotle’s
classic state concept. And it is here that
we see an example of how a wholly religious
concept modified a political/economic concept.
Saint Paul said, ‘Tor ye are all one in
Christ Jesus» (qtd in Diggs 17), and later the
Christian Church became the representative of
the Word of God. Thus the Christian could
quote Aristotle in arguing that civil law was
subject to the judgment of higher authority; but
in claiming that the way to salvation and virtue
was in the Church, as distinguished from the
state, he broke sharply with Aristotle’s tradition
of the polis. The Christian Chmh created
the impetus for one of Western civilization’s
most important social norms: the separation of
church and state. The function of the state was
distinctly limited, and a person’s greatest good
was to be found outside its jurisdiction-in the
Church. Thus a religious concept profoundly
changed the political/economic institutions.
Over several hundred years this separation
of church and state, the Christian concept of
Christians being equal children of God, plus the
slow modernization of Europe led to what is
today called the Enlightenment. Probably the
Enlightenment’s most important economic/
political/philosophic result is called ‘liberalism.»
Liberalism was derived from the philosophies
and attitudes of such great thinkers as
Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Adam Smith,
Rene Descartes, the Baron de La Montesquieu,
and later Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill.
The following point is very important:
liberalism is the epitome of political/economic
institutions borrowing important concepts
from religious institutions. Liberalism articulated
in the political and economic sphere the
vital Christian axiom that all men are the equal
children of God, and expanded it into the sentiments
of basic white male equality and the
three principles I advanced previously: (1) a
commitment to skeptical reason and an uneasiness
about both abstract philosophical thinking
and nonrational modes of knowledge; (2) tolerance,
and (3) affirmation of individual freedom
(Fowler 1989,4).
Except for Locke-and wen his case may be
argued–none of the great European philosophical
contributors to liberalism from the
seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries
was an orthodox-Christian. But the classic
liberal thinkers simply did not propose to
separate religion from their liberal political and
social thought. Indeed, for all of them religion
was integral to liberalism, most commonly as a
The implication and
my hypothesis
should be obvious:
The next phase of
planetary social
evolution and
ideological conflid
will concern the
adoption of liberal
principles by the
third and final
category of social
institutions-the
planet’s religious
establishment.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
Thus liberalism was
designed to work
hand in hand with
religion to provide
life, liberty and the
pursuit of happ~’ness.
Assuming for the
moment that I am
correct, that religion
does sooner or later
adopt liberal principles,
what would
this religion look like?
philosophical and/or practical basis that
would maintain a cohesive moral standard, a
grounding for their social order (Fowler, 10-11).
Thus liberalism was designed to work hand in
hand with religion to provide life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness. Liberalism by itself
was never intended to do more than provide
economic and political security and enfranchise
the individual to makeimportant political
and economic choices.
One of the most important political results of
liberal thought was the subsequent overthrow
of European monarchies and their replacement
by liberal democratic political institutions. But
it is at this point in European history that religious
institutional influence changed in character.
Whereas before, Christian theology drew
political and economic progress forward via its
axiom that all Christians were equal children of
God, now, as a result of the Church’s closeness
to the European monarchical regimes–especially
the Catholic states, it stood against the
very forces of progressive liberal democracy
that its influence had nurtured. When the
citizens, especially the intellectuals, overthrew
these monarchies, they also rejected thechurch
and Christianity. In 1835 a troubled Alexis de
Tocqueville wrote:
Christianity, which has declared all men
equal in the sight of God, cannot hesitate to
acknowledge all atizens equal before the law.
But by a strange concatenation of events,
religion for the moment has become entangled
with those institutions which democracy overthrows,
and so it is often brought to rebuff the
equality which it loves and to abuse freedom as
ik adversary, whereas by taking it by the hand
it could sanctify its striving (1968,16).
Thus many Europeans could not separate
Christianity’s spiritual message from its political
and economic message, and with the French
Revolution and the Revolutions of 1848 the
European Church and Christianity were
severely discredited. European intellectuals
perceived Christianity and modernity as opposites
while many European commoners saw
Christianity as the monarchy’s prostitute. Instead
of responding positively to liberalism’s
progressive influence, European religious institutions
articulated another of their axioms
the axiom that states that «it is more blessed to
individualism and self-interest exposed and
unmitigated bythechurch’s spiritual influence.
And thus the stage was set for the homrs of the
twentieth century.
Shortly after the Revolutions of 1848, due to
increasing industrialization, information and
mobilization, heretofore unnoticed problems
began to bubble to the surface. Karl Marx saw
these problems as the result of internal contradictions
of capitalism. That the problems
might have had a spiritual cause never entered
Marx’s thoughts. After all, he was an intellectual
and an atheist. After WWI the fascists saw
European society’s political weakness, moral
relativism and absence of community spirit.
But once again spirituality had been discredited
in the eyes of the European intellectuals.
The thought that a more salient and
efficient spiritual system might be a solution
never occurred to them. These societal pathologies’
only solution, in the eyes of the fascists
and communists, was a radically different
political/economic system. Thus, as Fukuyama
has written, the twentieth century has experienced
the costly trial and rejection of both fascism
and communism as alternatives to
liberalism. Liberalism has been declared, as of
the dissolution of communism and the publication
of Fukuyama’s article, the winner.
To summarize, I have described how
European political and economic institutions
have allowed themselves to be transformed by
borrowing superior religious concepts. As my
two year old’s emphatic and previous «No!»
indicated, there is indeed precedent for these
three institutions to carry on syrnbioticallyeach
nurturinn the others. I have also shown
that since libeklism’s birth this symbiosis has
largely ceased, and I have speculated as to why
the modem world’s religions seem irrelevant
and unable to stabilize contemporary mores.
Now for the final element of my argument.
Assuming for the moment that I am correct,
that religion does sooner or later adopt liberal
principles, what would this religion look like?
I will now take Robert Booth Fowler’s three
liberal principles and apply them to the
spiritual medium.
Liberal Principle #1:
principles that had grown naturally from ( 4).
.,
give than to receive.» They therefore refused to
accept liberalism’s invigorating principles that
enfranchised individual choice-the very
~hristianity’so wn thklogy. The ~hurfhel ected
to become instead and in essence a thing I
… a commitment to skeptical reason, an affirmation
of pragmaticintelligence, and an uneasin,
aboUt both abstract philosophical thinking
and nomtional mode9 of knowledge ( ~ ~ ~ apart.
Liberalism, on the other hand, founz
itself standing naked, as it were, with its
Liberal religion will require a religionist to
sincerely evaluate spiritual theoriesMAY
17–19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
theologies-in relation to his/her own experience.
It would by no means require rejection of
them all. It would require mutable theologies
and careful validation of abstract thoughts by
observation in the empirical world.
Liberal Principle #2:
… enthusiasm in principle (and increasingly
in practice) for tolerance not only in political
terms but much more obviously in terms of
lifestyle and social norms (Fowler 4).
Liberal Spiritual Principle #2:
Liberal religion will respect other religionists’
belief systems. And, with qualification
similar to those that liberalism requires of
economics and politics will allow virtually
complete spiritual freedom.
Liberal Principle #3:
… affirmation of the central importance of the
individual and individual freedom (Fowler 4).
Liberal Spiritual Principle #3:
Liberal religion would hold that the individual
has the right to have his/her own concept
of God. The individual’s own concept of
God is hereby enfranchised by the world’s
religious institutions.
The previous example of liberalism applied
to the spirit medium should sound familiar.
The liberal spiritual principles embody some of
the most important spiritual concepts in The
Urantia Book. I will now cite some specific examples
that demonstrate how The ~rantiaB ook
validates and complements these principles.
Liberal Principle #1:
… a commitment to skeptical reason, an
affirmation of pragmatic intelligence, and an
uneasiness about both abstrad philosophical
thinking and nonrational modes of knowledge
(Fowler 4).
Liberal S iritual Principle #I/
Urantia 8 omplement:
The proof that revelation is revelation is this
same fad of human experience: the fact that
revela tion does synthesize the apparently divergent
sciences of nature and the theology of
religion into a consistent and logical universe
philosophy, a co-ordinated and unbroken explanation
of both science and religion, thus
creating a harmony of mind and satisfaction of
spirit which answers in human experience those
questionings of the mortal mind which craves
to know how the Infinite works out his will and
plans in matter, with minds, and on spirit (Urantia
&ok 1955,llM).
Reason is the proof of science, faith the proof
of religion, logic the proof of philosophy, but
revelation is validated only by human experience
(Umntia Book 1955,1106).
Liberal Principle #2:
… cr,thusiasm in principle (and mt-wasingly
in prxticcc.) for toltaranc~n ot only In political
tcrrns but much mow ~lbviuuslv . I ! t~:rrnr of
lifc?ityle and %xi&nx!) !~lis( i:c~wlc.4r; .
Liberal S iritual Principle k2i
Urantia $.o mplernent:
From this day, for thcremaindt~of his natural
life, Ganid continued to evnlv~a religion of his
own. He was mightily moved m his own mind
by Jesus’ broadmindedness, fairness, and
tolerance [my emphasis]. In all their discussions
of philosophy and religion this youth never
experienced fcelings of resentment or reactions
of antagonism (llrantia Rook 1467).
Nathaniel most revered Jesus fur his
tolerance. He never grew weary of contemplating
the broadmindednes an<! gmrerous sympathy
of theSon of Mar: fllmntia Bwk 1559).
Liberal Principle #3:
… affirmation of the central importanceof the
individual and individual freedmrl (Fowler 4).
Liberal S iritual Principle #3/
Urantia P omplement:
But I have come among you to proclaim a
greater truth, one which many of the later
prophets also grasped, that Cod loves youevery
one of you-as individuals (Umntia Book
1629).
The religion of the kingdom is personal, individual;
the fruits, the results, are familial, social.
Jesus never failed to exalt the sacredness of
the individual as contrasted with the community
(Urantin Bmk 1862).
James Zebedee had asked, ‘Master, how shall
we learn to see alike and thereby enpy more
harmony among ourselves?’ When Jesus heard
this question, he was stirred within his spirit, so
much so that he replied. ‘James, James, when
did I teach you that you should all see alike? I
have come into the world to prodaim spiritual
liberty to the end that mortals may be wpowered
to live individual lives of originality
and freedom before God. I do not desire that
soaal harmony and fraternal peace shall bepurchased
by the sacrifice ol fict. pnu~rdlitya nd
spiritual originality. What I rrqt~irr of you, my
apostles, is spirit unity . dibl that voii e.<-
pericmce in the jov ot v.:ar 11.1 ‘ , x i ..!-arl~caaonto
the wt~olriheai,altcd< ;loi.riyo t the wUo r nl\, k-atii*~
in heaven (Llrantia Hook 13iL))i. ‘
‘The previau.; rxampirc arp mc~r~lwvp rescntative
of the ovrrarching l~berasl pirit of The
Urantia Hook. The b k ‘ 5 central concept, that
each individual is indwelt by a fragment of the
Father, validates liberalism’s most profound
principlr-the importance of the individualthroughout
eternity.The teachings of The Urantia
Book are, in effect and in spirit, liberalism
applied to religion.
Liberal religion
will respect ofher
religionists’ belief
systems. And, with
qualification similar
to those that
liberalism requires
of economics and
politics wili allow
virtu~llyco mplete
spiritual freedom.
The teachings of The
Urantia Book are, in
effect and in spirit,
liberalism a.p p. lied to
religion.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
For the liberal message
to successfully
and efficiently transform
world religious
institutions it must
be sufficiently
focused on the
spiritual.
The Urantia Bookrepresent
ing
liberalism-will inspire
the transformation
of the world’s
religions into institutions
capable of
answering the
spiritual needs of a
liberal world
1 Conclusion
So the stage has been set. Christ Michael’s
first visit to Urantia transformed Europe’s religious
institutions with the message that every
woman, man, boy or girl was a child of God.
Later this religious concept and the concept of
the Christian Church as the Word of God led to
a political event that revolutionized European
history: the separation of church and state. Still
later the world’s political and economic institutions
borrowed the salient Christian concept of
spiritual equality and enfranchised individual
political and economic liberty under the banner
of liberalism. The results were astounding. As
Fukuyama has pointed out, today, with the
dissolution of communism, virtually all the nations
of the world understand and accept, in
their various contexts, political and economic
liberalism.
And now is the time for the Spirit of Michael
to come full circlefrom the religious institutions
that taught spiritual equality, to political
and economic institutions that supported the
primacy of the individual, and now finally back
again to the religious institutions which will
one day enfranchise individual spiritual
choices. This is where The Urantia Bookanswers
a critical evolutionary need. Today, high
politics and economics define liberalism in as
many different ways as there are expertsand
there are many experts. It might take centuries
for a liberalism so loosely defined in terms of
politics and economics to slowly seep into the
religious establishment. For the liberal message
to successfully and efficiently transform world
religious institutions it must be sufficiently
‘ focused on the spiritual. The Urantia Book sys- tematically defines liberalism in spiritual
terms. The time for the struggle approaches.
1 Robert Booth Fowler writes that current
membership in mainline Protestant churchesthe
churches attended largely by the educated
elites in America, is well below their 1950s
proportionate strength of the total U.S. population
and in absolute numbers (1989, %). Further,
these churches are losing a good number
of their young adults (2035 years old) «…because
they a k simply no longer interested in
religion, certainly organized religion, though
they normally claim to believe in God and even
to have spiritual interests of some sort» (22-23).
Andrew Greeley complains that Catholics
‘ I . . . blithely practice a selective (or individualistic
and subjective) Catholicism, choosing those
parts of the religion they like and ignoring or
even denouncing those parts they don’t like»
(1984, ch. 1). Liberalism is slowly seeping in,
like it or not. But the people who Fowler and
Greeley describe are political leaders,
managers of businesses, lawyers, doctors and
educators who are wandering around in a spiritual
nether world, making important decisions
outside thecontext of stable mores. The religion
that these people are searching for is liberalized
religion-the religion of Jesus-the religion
described in The Urantia Book. Just as the Christian
Church provided the inspiration for
liberalism’s transformation of the political and
economic world, The Urantia ~ook-representing
liberalism-will inspire the transformation
of the world’s religions into institutions capable
of answering the spiritual needs of a liberal
world, and in so doing it will resolve the contradictions
that have tormented so many souls
in the twentieth century.
APPENDIX A
«Hitherto, every form of society has been
based, as we have already seen, on the antagonism
of oppressing and oppressed classes.
But in order to oppress a class, certain conditions
must be assured to it under which it can,
at least, continue its slavish existence. The serf,
in the period of serfdom, raised himself to
membership in the commune, just as the petty
bourgeois, under the yoke of feudal absolutism,
managed to develop into a bourgeois.
The modem laborer, on the contrary, instead of
rising with the progress of industry, sinks
deeper and deeper below the conditions of existence
of his own class. He becomes a pauper,
and pauperism develops more rapidly than
population and wealth. And here it becomes
evident that the bourgeoisie is unfit any longer
to be the ruling class in society, and to impose
its conditions of existence upon society, as an
over-riding law. It is unfit to rule, because it is
incompetent to assure an existence to its slave
within his slavery, because it cannot help letting
him sink into such a state that it has to feed him.
Society can no longer live under this bourgeoisie,
in other words, its existence is no longer
compatible with society. The essential condition
for the existence, and for the sway of the
bourgeois class, is the formation and augmentation
of capital; the condition for capital is
wage labor. Wage-labor rests exclusively on
competition between the laborers. Theadvance
of industry, whose involuntary promoter is the
bourgeoisie, replaces the isolation of the laborers,
due to competition, by their involuntary
combination, due to association. The development
of Modem Industry therefore cuts from
under its feet thevery foundation on which the
bourgeoisie produces and appropriates
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
products. What the bourgeoisie therefore produces,
above alll are its own grave-diggers. Its
fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally
inevitable» (Marx, Engels 1964,23-24).
References
de Tocqueville, Alexis. 1968. Ikma7acy in America. G.
Lawrence (Trans.). New York: Anchor Books.
(Originally published, 1635; VoL 2 originally published,
1840.)
Diamond, Martin. 1975. «Ethics and Politics: The
American Way.» In The Moral FoundPtions of the
A m h Republic, ed. R. Homwik Charlottesville,
VA.: University Press of V i .
Diggi, B.J. 1974. The State, Justice, and the Canm
Good. Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foreman and
Company.
Fowler, Robert Booth. 1989. UnconantionrJ Partnm:
Religion and Libeml Culture in the United States.
Grand Rapids. William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company.
Friedman, Milton and Rose Friedman. 1981. Fm to
Chwse. New York: Avon Books.
Fukuyama, Francis. 1989. «The End of History?» The
National Interest. 12(2)3-3-18.
Greeley, Andrew M. and Mary Greeley Durkin. 1984.
How to Save the Catholic C h d . New York: Viking.
Lord, Winston. 1989. «China and America; Beyond
the Big Chill.» Foteign Affnirs. 68(4): 1-26.
Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels. 1964. Thc Canmunist
Manifesto. New Yak and London: Modem
Reader Paperbacks. (Originally published, 1848).
Morrow, Glenn R. 1969. Thc Ethical and Emnomic
Theories of Adam Smith. New Yo& Augustus M.
Kelly, Publisher.
Rees, John C 1985. John Shcmt Mill’s 01 Llbcrty. Oxford:
aarendon Press
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
by
- Dan Massey, Jr.
A student of The Urantia
Book for 17 years, Massey
has a B.S. in physics mrd a
masters in applied mathematics
with postgraduate
work in computer science.
He is a s mscientist
for a resemch firm in
h4assachusetts developing
knowledge-basad simulation
and intelligent training
systems.
… the span of control
over reality which
engineering has provided
to humankind
has usually been
somewhat greater
than the scope of
understanding of the
controlled reality
provided through
established science.
Engineering -Science and Magick
…The ancients sought a supernatural explanation
for all natural phenomena not within the range
of their personal comprehension;and many moderns
continue to do this. The depsonalivltion of socalled
natural phenomena has required ages, and it
is not yet completed. But the frank, honest, and
fearless search for true causes gazle birth to modern
science: It tumedastrology into astronomy, alchemy
into chemistry, and magic into medicine. (‘901)
The intellectual history of the human race is
punctuated by the names of those scientific
visionaries whose superior grasp of the relationships
of d i t y ever and again enabled them
to explain and to expound the associations of
muse and effect by which the elements of everyday
experience are determined. The physical
record of the cultural attainments of humankind
is likewise marked bythe relics ofenginaering
prowess which bear silent witness to an
inspired vision of a different, more practical
kind. Scientists are remembered for what they
help their fellow man to understand. The practical
physical works which engineers help their
fellow man to create are often the only record
of the conceiving mind behind the action.
Though most people tend to conceive of
science and engineering as basically the same
activity, and although our culture often treats
the professions almost interchangeably, the two
disciplines, though related, are fundamentally
different in their approach and goals. Basically,
the scientist seeks to expand knowledge ofreality,
while the engineer seeks to expand control m r
reality. In contemporary technological culture,
the scientist pursues his objective by use of the
methods of rational analysis and drawing upon
a body of understanding established with great
effort over many centuries. The modern engineer
likewise uses methods of rational analysis
and works with theories dweloped and tested
by the scientific method. However, the engineer
willalso draw on a largebody of practical
information to achiwe the desired goal.
To the scientist, practical knowledge is of
value when it suggests possible directions for
fruitful exploration by experiment and analysis.
The scientist then seeks to find an allencompassing
theoretical viewpoint which illuminates
the underlying process. The engineer,
on the other hand, is satisfied to have and to use
practical knowledge for its own value in furthering
the control of reality. The engineer will
use practical knowledge effectively even when
there is no clear explanation for why it works.
For these and related reasons, the span of
control over reality which engineering has provided
to humankind has usually been somewhat
greater than the scope of understanding of
the controlled reality provided through established
science. In the twentieth century, with
the increasing effectiveness and breadth of
scientific theories, the intrinsic advantage
provided by pragmatic engineering appears to
have diminished.
As a modem example of this, consider the
recent discovery of so-called high temperature
su~conductorsT. hese materials were discovered
about five years ago by careful experimentation
pursued in spite of a well-established
theory seeming to suggest such phenomena
were impossible. Although no theory yet
satisfactorily explains the high-temperature
phenomenon, it is clear that it results from a
different physical process than that which
accounts for the low-temperature case.
Let me explain this in greater detail. A conductor
is any material which will pass an
electrical current. All known materials which
conduct electricity at room temperature exhibit
a characteristic called resistance. That is, they
appear to resist the flow of an electric current
to a greater or lesser degree. This resistance
eventually robs the current of its energy, which
is converted into heat, the random vibrations of
theatoms of the conducting material. Anumber
of years ago, when mechanical refrigeration
had become perfected to the point that it was
possible to liquefy helium, experimenters immersed
samples of conducting material into
liquid helium so that they were cooled to the
point that the internal vibrations of heat were
almost totally suppressed. In these very cold
materials a new phenomenon, called superconductivity,
was observed.
Superconductivity is the passage of an
electric current through a material without any
resistance. A ring of superconducting copper
(or lead or aluminum or iron) will conduct an
electric current virtually forever without the
application of an external power source. For
many years there was no known explanation
for this phenomenon, yet experimenters continued
to find new materials which could become
superconductors at higher temperatures,
hoping someday to develop a material which
might exhibit the property at room temperature.
Eventually a theory was proposed which
explained superconductivity in terms of the
quantum physics of solid materials.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA C I , OKLAHOMA
To understand this theory it is useful to recall
the much earlier theory by which Louis de-
Bmglie explained the physical stability of the
hydrogen atom. DeBroglie suggested that the
orbiting electron of hydrogen m t e d a wavelike
disturbance in the content of space by its
passage. According to the classical electromagnetic
theory of Maxwell, the radiation of this
wave would rob the electron of kinetic energy,
causing it to slow down and be drawn into the
nucleus. DeBmglie’s insight was that, if the
electron circled the nucleus rapidly enough, it
would encounter the field of its radiated wave
(on a subsequent oscillation) and would draw
energy from the wave. He suggested that, for
electron orbits of certain specific sizes, determined
by the wavelength of the radiated wave,
the gain of energy from the radiated field
would exactly balance the loss to the radiation
by the acceleration of the elestron in its orbit,
producing a stable atom.
I apologize to the members of my audience
who are familiar with the more modem interpretations
of quantum mechanics for this ndive
explanation. I have chosen it because it better
supports an intuitive understanding of the
accepted explanation of low-temperature
superconductivity. Basically, the theory which
explains superconductivity asserts that the
movement of electrons through a bulk conductor
is, at sufficiently low temperature, andogous
to the movement of a single electron
through an atomic orbit. The passage of an
electron through a conducting material disturbs
the alignment of the nuclei of atoms
within the material. The forces between the
atoms try to oppose this motion with the result
that a vibratory wave of energy passes through
the material.Sincetheelectrica1current ~:onsists
of a vast number of electrons slowly m grating
through the material in a common dirrction, it
is very likelythat the wave action whick retards
one electron will accelerate the mc tion of
another in the current so that there is no net loss
of energy to the current.
A very low temperature is required for this
phenomenon to be observed beca lse the
natural thermal vibrations of the atom of the
material tend to disrupt the electron flow in
ways which prevent this coupling frorn occurring.
Looked at another way, there is a lot of
background noise in the material ultil it is
made very cold. This background noi ;e limits
the distance over which the coherent lvave induced
by the passage of one electron c In affect
the motion of another. If the distalice over
which the emitted wave remains cohel ent does
not include a large enough volum? of the
material to provide a suitably positioned
electron to receive the emitted energy, the wave
will be dissipated as heat in the material, which
will then behave like an ordinary resistive conductor.
This theory seemed to imply that, above a
very cold temperature, superconductivity would
be impossible. Although the physicists who
developed the low-temperature theory won a
Nobel prize for their work, some experimenters
continued to search for materials that would
superconduct at much higher temperatures.
A limited number of applications of low
temperature superconductivity were achieved,
some on a very grand scale, such as the superconducting
magnets for the Tevatron particle
accelerator which has recently begun productive
work at the Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory in Batavia, Illinois. This mammoth
engine for high energy physics research contains
hundreds of very large superconducting
magnets for the simple reason that it is more
cost-effective to refrigerate the magnets than to
provide the power to overcome conventional
electrical resistance.
About five years ago, a team of experimenters
working in Germany discovered a ceramic
material of very poor conductivity at mom
temperature which becomes supemnductive
when cooled to the temperature of dry ice
(much warmer than liquid helium). Irnmediately
large numbers of experimenters worldwide
undertook to duplicate and to extend this
initial work. Without any clear understanding
of the underlying phenomena, these teams
achieved a rapid series of successes, so that the
application of superconductive material to
everyday needs has come several steps closer
to reality.
At the moment there is still no generally
accepted theoretical explanation for this new
class of superconductive phenomena, yet work
continues unabated to achieve practical commercial
application. It remains to be seen
whether theory will precede application; however,
it seems clear that the first practical applications
will emerge fmm painstaking practical
experiments guided by only a rudimentary understanding
of the underlying processes and
not from any grand synthesis of theory which
explains everything with a few equations. Of
course, eventually theory will catch up and,
probably, open doors to applications undreamed
of in the present crude experimental
stage.
This single case fairly represents the nature
of humankind’s scientific and technological
progress. Although we generally reach
This theory seemed
to imply that, above a
very cold temperature,
supercondudivity
would be impossible.
This single case
fairly represents
the nature of
humankind’s
scientific and technological
progress.
SCIENTlFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
– – – – – –
The achievements of
engineering that is
not based on a deep
theoretical foundation
have been
eclipsed by recent
successful applications
of theory.
Pre-scientijic growth
of technological
control mechanisms
is excruciatingly
slow, by modern
standards.
towards a deeper understanding of the natural
world, the most successful and powerful motivator
is usually the desire to attain control. Initially
we achieve control by practical methods,
1 that is, by doing what has been found to work,
I even when we do not fully understand the
reasons for it working. The extension of practical
control usually occurs from a foundation of
fully understood, less complex phenomena.
Eventually, the discordance between practice
and theory becomes so extensive that a reformulation
octurs in the way the real phenomena
of experience are understood. This reformulation,
called a paradigm shift, leads to new
theories which provide deeper, more comprehensive
understanding of the real world.
The practical, pre-scientific applications of
experience have, in recent years, been rather
undramatic. The achievements of engineering
that is not based on a deep theoretical foundation
have been eclipsed by recent successful
applications of theory. For example, neither
nuclear weapons nor nuclear power were
achieved until after the theory of relativity and
the principles of quantum mechanics were
available to provide a basic understanding of
the processes involved. In an earlier era, radio
transmission and electrical illumination were
developed almost entirely upon the predictions
of electromagnetic theory, yet the practical
reception of radio waves and the practical
production of electric light depended, at first,
on pre-scientific applications of practical
knowledge.
The most famous modem story of pre-scientific
invention is surely the legend of Thomas
Edison’s search for a material suitable to be the
filament of an electric lamp. The theoretical
science which underlay Edison’s invention was
the knowledge that a current passed through a
resistive conductor could produceenough heat
to make the conductor emit light. A second,
equally important piece of knowledge was that
highly heated things tend to melt or vaporize;
therefore, the desired material would be something
which did not melt or evaporate at white
heat. Athird point was that many things which
do not melt or evaporate will burn, so that oxygen
must be excluded from the hot filament.
This much had been well understood for
many years before Edison began his search. In
fact, the principles had all been fully tested and
proven in numerous laboratory experiments. It
remained to find a material which would meet
I the pactid requirements of a lamp filament
1 (which must also have included mechanical
durability and low cost). For this Edison undertook
systematic research using the only known
method, trialanderror. Having eliminated avast
number of possibilities for various well-understood
theoretical reasons, he then systematically
tested every remaining candidate until he
found something acceptable. The mapr problem
with such searches is that the theoretical
reasons used to exclude a possibility may not
be valid for the exact situation in which a solution
is sought, so that many good possibilities
are never really evaluated.
As we look back through the centuries, the
quality of human technical invention becomes
increasingly dominated by the pre-scientific.
Theearliest steam engines, used to pump water
from mines, operated with extremely low efficiency
because they were built on the practical
observation that expanding steam can do useful
work. Later, as a deeper, theoretical understanding
of thermodynamics developed, it
became clear that greater power could be obtained
from smaller machines with less use of
heat. The early steam engines were not magical
to anyone who troubled to understand the simple
mechanical principles involved, yet they
represented an unfamiliar synthesis of everyday
knowledge to achieve practical control
over important phenomena. The records of the
time show that, to many thoughtless people,
they appeared to border on the supernatural.
Pr~scientificg rowth of technological control
mechanisms is excruciatingly slow, by modem
standards. The further we look back, the
smaller the theoretical base on which innovationsare
founded and the more painstaking the
search to find efficient solutions. In addition,
the record grows more shadowy, since only a
few of the artifacts of pre-scientific engineering
have been preserved. We can still examine the
architecture of rnapr buildings, the properties
of household artifacts, the fabrication of
weapons, and the layout of irrigation, drainage
and aqueduct systems. In addition, there are
written or visual records of the design and
appearance of ,mills, clocks, building and dockyard
machine!;, ships, wagons, and military
engines, as ~rella s chemical and medical
recipes.
Fragments of pre-scientific technology have
survived from almost all mapr planetary cultures.
Within any cultural stream we know the
most where witten records survive. Only the
greatest artifacts survive across thousands of
years because of size and durability. A few
others have ken preserved because of great
cultural signific:ance or on account of accident.
Against this backdrop, we see that the general
human attitude towads technology has only
recently (on a historical time xale) become
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CI, OKLAHOMA
relatively rational. In past ages the practical
knowledgeof how the world worked (and even
the fact that the world worked systematically
at all) was held by the few and applied by the
few, sometimes to benefit and other times to
exploit or mystify the ignorant.
In the final analysis, the human approach to
contml over reality begins with the observation
of a desired result in nature and progresses to
attempts to recreate the conditions under
which the result occurred. Unfortunately, there
is no obvious way for the pre-scientific mind,
initially lacking any method for systematic discovery,
to detect among the multitude of apparent
conditions the few which effect the
d e s i d result. As a result, early human attempts
to establish reality control rapidly become
engulfed in large numbers of irrelevant
beliefs, or superstitions.
An interesting example of this is described in
The Urantia Book, in connection with Andon’s
discovery of a way to make fire:
. . . Andon signified to his mate that he thought he
could make fire with the flint. . . . Finally, one mning
about the time of the setting of the sun, the
secret of the technique was unraveled when it occurred
to Fonta to climb a near-by tree to secure an
abandoned bird’s nest. The nest was dry and highly
inflammable and consequently )lured right up into
a jkll blaze the moment the spark .fe ll up. on it.. .. … But it was a long time &re the twins learned
that d y moss and other materials would kindle fire
just as well as birds’ nests. (712)
These pre-rational confusions can only be
eliminated by systematic collection and
analysis of experiential observations and by
faith that such results are meaningful for
achieving enhanced reality control, and this is
the beginning of the emergence of the scientific
attitude. In many ways, the practically tested
conclusions of rational analysis are the scientific
theories of the past; however, they are so
far separated in their world view from our
present-day understanding as to merit the
designation pre-scientific.
The fascination of early superstition was the
mother of the later scientiftc curiosity. There w s
progressive dynamic emotionjear plus curiosity
-in these primitive superstitions; there was progressive
driving power in the olden magic. These
superstitions represented the emergence of the
human desire to know and to control planetay
environment. (‘970)
So, in earlier times the linkage between engineering
and science was less clear than it is
today. Many things were known to work, even
though no one understood why they did. I will
use the term mgick to characterize these prescientific
approaches of engineering to achieving
control over reality. I have chosen the older
spelling of the word, as is common in the Western
esoteric tradition, to distinguish it from
consciously planned deception, such as prestidigitation,
and from the supernaturaldelusions
of superstition, of which T k Urantia Book
warns:
…if modern methods of education should fail,
there would be an almost immediate reversion to the
primitive beliefs in magic. These superstitions still
linger in the minds of many so-called civilized
people. . . . And intelligent human beings still b e l h
in good luck, evil eye, and astrology. ($972)
The pre-scientific, or magicM phase of
humankind’s expanding control over reality is
simply that type of engineering in which results
areachieved without recourse toa fully rational
analvsis of causes and effects in terms of wellunderstood
fundamental principles. The
penetration of human understanding into a
phenomenal domain begins with the observation
and application of magick Magick which
has become systematized to the point that it can
be executed successfully from apurely mindal
viewpoint comes to be considered common
senseor practical knowledge. Oncean explanation
has been provided, reducing the knowledge
to a systematic combination of thoroughly
reliable principles, the phenomenon is considered
to bea part of practical xience and is ready
for full engineering application.
These considerations bring me to the second,
and altogether stranger of this presentation,
for-I desire to discover with you those
elements of contemporary thought and experience
from which control of new types of reality
may someday emerge. I will show you where
some rnagick is now. Let me clarify my terms:
The t e k magick denotes a regtionship between
human intention and d i t y extension.
The magickal relationship is hidden from
understanding; it is occult. Yet the cumulative
experience of-the individual and the community
progressively shows the relationship to be
reproducible, implying that it must have a
causal foundation. Once this causal foundation
has been illuminated, the relationship is no
longer occult and is no longer considered
magickal. It has become scientific.
We know that the finite reality of everyday
experience exists in four domains-literal,
mindal, spiritual, and personal. We also have
certain indications from The Urantia Book concerning
relationships of human intentional
control in these different domains of reality. For
example, in the spiritual domain we believe
and often perceive that the intentional
… the human a p
prwh to control over
reality begins with
the observation of a
desired result in nature
and progresses
to attempts to
recreate the conditions
under which
the result occurred.
Many things were
known to work, even
though no one understood
why they did.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
1s it not reasonable
to expect that there
exist ways in which
human mindal intention
relates diredly
to human mindal
extension?
The only occult
process is the personal
mechanism of
will by which the
intending individual
takes extensible
action.
remembrance of the mortal life of the Creator
Son enables the extension of his real presence
into our conscivus here and now. ~ h k o ~ n i –
tion of the remembrance supper as a magickal
relationship between human intention and
spiritual extension exists in some form in almost
all sects of presentday Christianity.
On the other hand, The Urantia Book tells us
that the human control relationship is quite
limited with respect to at least some literal
realities:
The spirit can dominate mind; so mind can control
energy. But mind can control energy only
through its own intelligent manipulation of the
metamorphic potentials tnherent in the mathematical
leuel of the causes and effects of the physical
domains. Creature mind does not inherently control
energy; that is a Deity prerogntive. But creature
mind can and does manipulate energy just in so far
as it has become master of the energy secrets of the
physical uniwrse. ($1222)
When man wishes to modify physical reality, be
it himself or his environment, he succeeds to the
extent that he has discovered the ways and means of
controlling matter and directing energy. Unaided
mind is impotent to influence anything material
save its own physical mechanism, with which it is
inescapably linked. But through the intelligent use
of the body mechanism, mind can create other
mechanisms, even energy relationships and living
relationships, by the utilization of which this mind
can increasingly control and even dominate its
physical level in the universe. C1222)
Between these two extremes, there is much
room for exploration and speculation. In the
few minutes that remain to this presentation, I
would like especially to focus your attention on
the relationship between the intention of will
and its extension to mindal realities. Is it not
reasonable to expect that there exist ways in
which human mindal intention relates directly
to human mindal extension? The Urantia Book
has much to say about such relationships
within the individual personality, but what of
the reiationship between the mindal levels of
several personalities? Exactly what is meant by
mind gr~vity? What does it mean to exchange
your mind for that of Jesus? In a few instances,
The Urantia Book provides some suggestive or
insightful comments. One of the more remarkable
is this:
Always respect the personality of man. Nmr
should a righteous cause be promoted by force;
spiritual victories can be won only by spiritual
power. This injunction against the employment of
material influences refers to psychic force as well as
to physical force. Overpowering arguments and
mental superiority are not to be employed to coerce
men and women into the kingdom. Mnn’s mind is
not to be crushed by the mere weight of logic or
overawed by shrewd eloquence. While emotion as a
factor in human decisions cannot be wholly
eliminated, it should not be directly appealed to in
the teachings of those who would adwnce the cause
of the kingdom. Make your appeals directly to the
divine spirit that dwells within the minds of men.
Do not appeal to fear, pity, or mere sentiment. In
appealing to men, be fair; exercise self-control and
exhibit due restraint; show proper respect for the
personalities of your pupils. Remember that I hnve
said: «Behold, I stand at the door and knock, and if
any man will o m , I will come in.» ($1765)
consider the things which this statement
seems to characterize as «psychic force.» They
are: overpowering arguments; mental superiority;
weight of logic; shrewd eloquence; and
emotion, including fear, pity, and sentiment.
The idea that such phenomena of influence
exist between minds is not remarkable. These
are obvious extensions of a person’s mental
function influencing that of another. The intentional
basis of these mindal extensions is unspecified,
but it is clear that the intention to
change another’s mind extends in these cases
through the observable information-patterning
of the physical environment. The only occult
process is the personal mechanism of will by
which the intending individual takes extensible
action.
Is it possible, however, that there is more to
this whole thing than the obvious act of deciding
what to say and of saying it? Is there some
quality of mind which mediates the exchange
of viewpoint beyond the information content of
the observable utterances? Let us examine a
series of remarkable statements.
… Mind Planners. These seraphim are devoted to
the w i v e grouping of morontia beings and to
organizing their teamwork on the mansion worlds.
They are the psychologists of the first h e n . . . .
Ewn on Urantia, these seraphim teach the mlasting
truth: If your own mind does not serve you
well, you can exchange it for the mind of Jesus of
Nazareth, who aluxlys m e s you well. ($553)
Because of the presence in your minds of the
Thought Adjuster, it is no more ofa mystery fo; you
to know the mind of God than for you to be sure of
the consciousness of knowing any other mind,
human or superhuman. Religion and sochl wnsciousness
haw this in common: They are predicated
on the consciousness of other-mindiss. The technique
wherety you can accept another’s idea as yours
is the same whereby you w q «let the mind which
was in Christ be also in you.» ($1123)
Spirit-gravity pull and response thereto operate
not only on the universe as a whole but also even
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
between individuals and groups of individuals.
There is a spiritual cohesiveness among the spiritual
and spiritized personalities of any world, race, nation,
or believing group of individuals. There is a
direct attractiveness of a spirit nature between
sprsprritualmlyi nded persons of like tastes and longings.
The term kindred spirits is not whollyafigure
of speech. (%2)
The fact of the cosmic mind explains the kinship
of various types of human and superhuman minds.
Not only are kindred spirits attracted to ench other,
but kindred minds are also my fraternal and indined
towards co-operation the one with the other.
Human minds are sometimes observed to be running
in channels of astonishing similarity and inexplicable
agreement. (*I911
… Adam and Eve, like theirfellows on Jerusem,
maintaid immortal status through intellectual association
with the mind-gravity circuit of the Spirit.
When this vital sustenance is broken by mental
disjunction, then, regardless of the spiritual level of
creatureexistence, immortality status is 1ost.Mortal
status followed by physical dkolution was the inevitable
consequence of the intellectual default of
Adam and Em. ($845)
Adam and Eve could communicate with each
other and with their immediate children over a distanceofaboutfifty
miles. This thought exchange was
effected by means of the delicate gas chambers located
in close proximity to their brain structures. By
this mechanism they could send and receive thought
oscillations. But thispowerms instantlysuspolded
upon the mind’s surrender to the discord and disruption
of evil. ($834)
1 believe that, if you will reflect on these and
related statements from The Urantia Book, you
will find that there is an underlying thread of
an idea, which is that there is a finite space of
mindal realities. In this space, mental state is
defined by a positional metaphor and mental
function (state transition) is defined by motion
in response to the influences of mind circuits,
mind gravity, and individual volition. Let me
underscore this view of mind function with an
additional quotation, which summarizes and
applies the thought.
Likewise does the Infinite Spirit draw all intellectual
values ~aradi&rd. Throughout the central
uniuerse the mind gravity of the Infinite Spirit
functions in liaison with the spirit gravity of the
Eternal Son, and these together constitute the combined
urge of the ascendant souls to find God, to
attain &ity, to achieve Paradise, and to know the
Father. (q55)
I suggest to you that, within the universe
view propounded by The Urantia Book, intermindal
communication occurs without the
mediation of observable physical energy
streams modulated by information patterns. I
further suggest that, where the transmission of
physically detectable information structures
(such as speech) appears to enable intermindal
communication, the total observed effect also
involves the action of occult (hidden or unobserved)
mind phenomena. The communication
of ideas which occurs when weread The Urantia
Book is not simply the decoding of the letters
and words on the printed page. Rather, the text
serves as a material information carrier which,
through the decoding process, affects the state
of the electrochemical mind to strengthen the
mind gravity grasp of the Spirit.
At the present stage in planetary development
our understanding of mind phenomena
is decidedly pre-scientific. In spiteof the sincere
efforts of generations of diligent students,
neither psychology nor psychiatry have advanced
towards effective, scientific understanding,
much less control, of mental phenomena.
In fact, neither discipline has succeeded in
clearly defining the object of its study. Such
epistemological issues as the distinction between
the organic brain and the rational mind,
to say nothing of the meaning of spirit and
personality, continue to be matters of heated
philosophical debate. Alchemy was more scientific
than this bythe time its practitioners had
generally agreed to talk about earth, air, fire,
and water.
Notwithstanding this paucity of rational
analysis, practitioners of psychology and
psychiatry often manage to accomplish useful
results. In fad, they do this by magick, clothed
in a semi-scientific rationale. If their magick
appears to be more effective than some other
magicks, it is surely because much honest critical
effort has been expended to try to discover
what magick works and what circumstances
allow a magick to work. There are plenty of
magicks that work much better than psychology,
while still being magickal. Computer program
design is, surprisingly, a largely magickal
discipline that has worked quite effectively for
many years, but is only recently starting to
become scientific. To say something is magickal
we do not mean that it is imaginary or ineffective.
Rather, we mean that it works by an occult
process. One does not get something for nothing.
It often takes a great deal of effort to make
one of these magicks work.
Of course, some magick is ineffective for its
intended purpose. The results achieved are uncorrelated
with the effort expended, either because
the basic principle is false (superstitious)
or because the antecedent requirements are
poorly understood. I will call magick which
The communication
of ideas which occurs
when we read The
Urantia Book is not
simply the decoding
of the letters and
words on the printed
Page.
To say something is
magickal we do not
mean that it is imaginary
or ineffctive.
Rather, we mean that
it works by an occult
process.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
We could infer from
The Urantia Book
that very strong
emotions might be
communicable
directly from one
mind to another by
physically occult
psychic means.
As always, there is
a real problem in
discerning the genuinely
magickal from
the fruits of fraud or
self-deception
works effective magick. There are undoubtedly
many magicks which are effective. Most
magicks are only partially effective because of
the problem of poorly understood antecedent
requirements, and this, together with theextensive
prevalence of outright superstition, brings
down much modern skeptical criticism on all
magickal endeavors.
An examination of human beliefs, as well as
the material I have quoted from The Urantia
Book, suggests that of all the widely reported
magicM phenomena, direct mind-to-mind communication,
telepathy, might work (occasionally)
because of a real, but occult, process. During
this century a relatively large amount of investigative
effort has been focused on demonstrating
the reality of telepathy and other parapsychologicnl
phenomena such as clairvoyance, precognition,
and psychokinesis. The fact that these
experiences, particularly the appearance of
precognition, are familiar to many people in
their everyday life has done much to bolster
popular belief in the reality of these things.
Unfortunately, the relatively large amount of
effort expended in parapsychological investigations
has not yielded any clearly demonstrated,
reproducible evidence of the reality of
any of the claimed effects. The tendency of
many self-proclaimed «psychics» to try to
deceive na’ive researchers, together with the
occasional unscrupulous or selfdeceived researcher,
has given the field of parapsychological
research an unsavory air in skeptical circles.
We could infer from The Urantia Book that
very strong emotions might be communicable
directly from onemind toanotherbyphysically
occult psychic means. I will call this limited
form of inherent, direct mind-to-mind communication
telempathy. If I were to seek to
demonstrate the reality of this phenomenon, I
would want to work with subjects whose
minds and value systems were as similar as
possible to (perhaps) enhance whatever mental
resonance would occur and to control the confounding
effects of interpersonal variation in
nature and nurture. Young homozygotic twins,
never separated since birth and sharing an intensely
spiritual contemplative nature would
probably be ideal experimental subjects.
I am inclined to believe, for various reasons,
that such experiments would be relatively encouraging.
I think the problem of modern
parapsychological research has been an unremitting
desire for the premature attainment
of statistically significant physical results. Such
results are desired because they would give the
subject «scientific» status and might lead to
direct applications. The Urantia Book does not
encourage much hope that «hard» phenomena
like telepathy, psychokinesis, or precognition
can occur without the mediation of volitional
spiritual forces. If only «soft» phenomena like
telempathy have an independent basis in
reality (and it is by no means certain that they
do), then the objective evidence will be difficult
to develop and relatively unpersuasive to the
dedicated skeptic.
It is clear that not all universe phenomena
have, at the present stage of human scientific
development, a rationally scientific explanation.
Not all universe phenomena have even
been observed or characterized. The skeptic
who seeks to limit the range of things that may
be designated real phenomena to those things
which are rationally explained defines a phenomenally
impoverished universe. The naive
believer who considers every magickal statement
to be true turns the universe into an undifferentiated
and incoherent morass of
causeless effect and inevitable contradiction.
The task of the rational pre-scientist (the
magicianengineer, usually called a wizard) is to
balance belief and skepticism in perfecting the
practice of a magick, discovering something
that really works.
There are many magickal beliefs of hurnankind
that are at least a little true. Even the
abomination of astrology contains a tiny fleck
of fact (in an ocean of superstition) in its recognition
of the twelve-fold classification of
human personalities. From this viewpoint we
can examine additional areas of partial truth in
which future expansion of human intentional
control may be expected. As always, there is a
real problem in discerning the genuinely
magickal from the fruits of fraud or selfdeception.
The desire for theextraordinary combined
with the will tobelieve provideample incentive
to selfdeception. When the subject of such inquiry
is the psychic mind itself, the focus of
both love and will, we should not be surprised
if selfdeception sometimes escalates into outright
delusion. It is no accident that so many
explorersof this frontier have relied on spiritual
realities to stabilize and to guide their work.
The twentieth century has witnessed an extraordinary
blossoming of the exoteric, as opposed
to theesoteric, sideof human intentional
control through the products of scientific and
engineering endeavor. This visible success has
, held the stage, front and center, while materialminded
charlatans have foolishly aped the ‘ scientific process, diverting attention from
remarkable esoteric disclosures. I would like I briefly to probe this esoteric side of the modem
From time immemorial there have been isolated
groups within the larger human society
who have possessed (and usually concealed
their possession 00 a greater knowledge of
planetary realities and cosmic circumstances
than the human norm. The Urantia Book confirms
the existence of such p u p s at various
stages in planetary history, Machiventa Melchizedektaught
truths of Havona and Paradise
to Nordan the Kenite and his associates. While
in Egypt, Jesus was seen by spiritual descendants
of Ikhnaton from Memphis, who understood
certain phases of his divine mission. On
Urantia today, there exists a cosmic reserve
corps of universe-conscious citizens.
Over the centuries many other groups of
people have, for various reasons, concealed the
true nature of their beliefs and practices from a
larger, unsympathetic community in which
they functioned. In modem Western society
during the last hundred years many of these
groups have felt relatively secure in making
their unorthodox world view public. With the
vast increase of international travel and communication
our understanding of the variety of
human psychic expression has been greatly
broadened. As one example, a remarkable
Englishwoman, Alexandra David-Neel,
traveled to Tibet and returned with a first hand
account of and experience in tantric yoga. Her
reports greatly influenced a number of imaginatively
inclined individuals who perceived
and elaborated the relationships between surviving
pagan shamanic traditions and the new
revelations of libetan esoteric practices.
By 1900 it was no longer fashionable to bum
witches, and the early years of the century
witnessed a virtual explosion of interest in the
esoteric, with the formation of public Secret
Societies dedicated to promulgating a syncretic
occult viewmint assembled from esoteric and
pagan sources with a large dash of florid imagination,
sometimes amplified by recourse to
psychotropic substances. Eventually the subject
passed from fashion, if not interest, resurfacing
again in the sixties and seventies and
settling down into a preoccupation with selftransformation
during the eighties.
An important thread in this development has
been the exteriorization of a body of extraordinary
material purporting to disclose the Hermetic
Tradition, the Secrets of the Ages, the
Meaning of the Qabalah, the Philosopher’s
Stone, the Awakening of Kundalini, the True
Masonic Rituals, the Mystery of Hasan al-
Sabah, the Knowledge of the Rosy Cross, the
Wisdom of the Sufis, and so on and so forth.
Some of these materials may have actually
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
come from private specialists and may have
carried a flake of arcane and ancient truth.
Whatever the source and truth content, the
esoteric tide has also produced a large number
of promoters, ranging frum Aleister Crowley to
Kmothy Leary and Ram Dass and beyond.
This overall body of expression contains
many themcs, of which self-transformation is
probably the most orthodox and conspicuous.
Among the conspicuous heterodox themes is a
preoccupation with the use of sexual «energf’
(kundalinO either to transform the self or to
effect the individual wiU. While different commentators
have different ethical views of these
practices, reflecting individual and cultural
preconceptions, there is general agreement
that, when properly controlled, this energy can
be used to reprogram the unconscious reactions
of one’s mind or to affect the unconscious
reactions of another’s.
The fact that such beliefs have been so widely
held and protected against ages of persecution
by great secrecy does not, of course, make them
true. The idea that strong sexual fantasies can
affect individual behavior does not seem particularly
remarkable to a generation raised on
Freud and television. On the other hand, the
idea that one person’s single-minded fantasies
can directly affect another person’s perceptions
and behavior is quite another matter. If we
sought a word to express this idea in unsensational
terms, I think we might choose the word
I have already introduced to describe the
hypothetical di~e~tcommunicatiofn e motional
states from one mind to another, telempathy.
To accommodate those among my audience
who are totally put off by this entire line of
discussion, I will conclude this talk with a true,
historical story, which is also a parable about
prophecy, magick, and shamanism. I leave its
interpretation as an exercise for the reader.
Ever and anon, true prophets and teachers arose
to denounce and expose shamanism. Even the
uanishing red man had such a prophet within the
past hundred years, the ShawneeTenshtawa, who
predicted the eclipse of the sun in 1808 [sic] and
denounced the vices of the white man. Many t w
teachers have qveared among the various tribes and
races all through the long ages of evolutionary history.
And they will m continue to appear to challenge
the shamans or priests of any age who oppose
general education and attempt to thwart scientific
progress. (*988)
By 1806, Indiana Governor William Henry
Harrison had become disturbed by the actions
of Tenskwatawa and his followers in cunducting
witch hunts and burnings among the
Shawnee, Wyandot, and Delaware tribes. He
From time immemorial
there have
been isolated groups
within the larger
human society who
have possessed (and
usually concealed
their possession of) a
greater knowledge of
planetary realities
and cosmic circumstances
than the
human norm.
The idea that strong
sexual fantasies can
affect individual
behavior does not
seem particularly
remarkable to a
generation raised on
Freud and television.
SCIENTIFIC S WOSIUM I1
. . .I will conclude
this talk with a true,
historical story,
which is also a
parable about
prophecy, magick,
and shamanism. I
leave its interpretation
as an exercise
for the reader.
made the following speech to the Delawares
concerning Tenskwatawa:
Who is this pretended prophet who dares to speak
in the name of the Great Creator? Examine him. Is
he more wise or virtuous that you are yourselws,
that he should be selected toconvey to you theorders
of your God? Demand of him some proofs at least of
his being the messenger of Deity. If God has
employed him, he has doubtless authorized him to
perform some miracles, that he may be known and
received as a prophet. If he is really a prophet, ask of
him to cause the sun to stand still-the moon to alter
its course–or the dead to rise from tk.eir graves. I f
he does these things, you may then believe that he
has been sent by God. «‘
. . . During the spring of 1806 several astronomers
had visited the Ohio Valley in preparation for a total
eclipse of the sun scheduled to occur on ]une 16.
… Somehow (througheitherdivineor secular sources)
the Prophet had learned of theeclipse ….l
… Delaware messengers brought copies of
Harrison’s speech to Greenville, where the Pmphet
considered the governor’s challenge … .
. . .ln early June Tenskwatawn assembled his followers
at Greenville and astonished even his most
b u t disciples by declaring that he would use his
power to darken the sun at midday. Instructing his
1 audience to spread word of the upcoming miracle,
t k Shawnee directed them to reassemble at Grmville
onJune 16, when theMaster of Life would send
a Black Sun as mute testimony of the Prophet’s
authority.
. . .Realizing that the upcoming m n t would undoubtedly
increase his influence, Tenskwatawa enkanced
the drama by remaining in his lodge
throughout the morning of June 16. Then, as the
noon sun faded into an eerie twilight, the Shawnee
holy man -red among his fightened followers,
shouting, «Did I not speak the truth? See, the sun
is dark!» The Prophet then assured his frightened
audhce that just as he had darkened the sun, so he
also would restore its former radiance, and as the
eclipseended, the ~ndhnws ere much relieved ….3
Copyright 1991
- Dan Massey, Jr.
Box 120
Sherborn, Massachusetts 01770-0120
1 Quoted in Edmunds, R. David, Eamseh and the
Quest for Indian Leadership, p. 86.
2 Quotation from hid.
3 Quotation from Edmunds, R. David, The Shawnee , Prophet, pp. 4849.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
The Life Pattern
Introduction
The quest for self-knowledge has been a
central theme of discovery in the field of medicine.
Over the past two years this quest has
defined itself as the Human Genome Initiative.
Researchers have taken on the challenge to
sequence all the genetic material contained in
the 48 chromosomes collectively known as the
human genome. Since the time of Vesalius in
the 1500s, scientists have been charting human
anatomy with ever-increasing precision and
finer detail. The delineations of the human
genome will be the «last frontief’ of human
anatomy. We shall one day know the secrets of
human nature as well as we know the topography
of the human skeleton today.
Today I should like to discuss the human
genome project from several viewpoints. You
will meet the person whose genome is being
sequenced. We will go on a pumey through the
laboratory of a molecular biologist where a
gene is being cloned. Some time will be devoted
to how all this applies to «the man on the
street.» And then we will moralize alittle about
our knowledge and its effect on human destiny.
Finally, we will end with some ‘Urantia talk»
about God as the connecting pattern.
I Am Joe’s Genome
Imagine yourself in the year 2005; you are
browsing through the newsstand, and you pick
up Reader’s Digest. The lead article is entitled, «I
Am Joe’s Genome,» and it reads something like
this.
Let me introduce myself to you. My story
begins nearly two decades ago at the end of the
1980s when scientists under the leadership of
Dr. James Watson set about to sequenceor spell
out the genes (sentences) in all the human
chromosomes (paragraphs). Taken together, all
these chromosomes are known as the human
genome (the story of life). So you can know me
better, I need to acquaint you with somedefinitions.
I am composed of long molecules arranged
in a double helical configuration known
as DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). The two strands
are composed of deoxyribose sugars, and they
are linked together by four nitrogen bases
adenine (A), thymidine 0,c ytosine (C),a nd
guanine (G) bridging the two strands together
at regular intervals. At the bridgepoint, an A
always opposes a T and a C opposes a G. An
A-T together or a CC together are known as
base pairs.The four bases A-TCG are thecode
words into which proteins am translated.
I am inside the nucleus of the cell and do not
leave. I send messengersout into the cytoplasm
to order the production of proteins that are
engaged in biologic activity. I can self-replicate
and move through time from one generation to
the next using each individual as a culture
medium, because the messages in my tape are
immortal. Nearly 100,000 genes and 3 billion
bases were sequenced in this project. Printing
this in sequence would have filled fifteen
volumes kthe old Encyclopaedia Britannica.
After the first two years of work, nearly 4,600
genes had been sequenced.
– I am the of biologic life, and now
humankind, through application and endeavor,
is gaining apparent control of this pattern. It
is fortunate I gave up my secrets slowly, for the
experts had the time to gain ethical maturity as
this power was placed in their hands.
Cloning a Gene
We now travel to Dallas, Texas, to the laboratory
of Drs. Brown and Goldstein where
they have recently cloned the gene responsible
for familial hypercholesterolemia. This body of
work took fifteen years, and for their efforts and
the prospects for health worldwide, they were
awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine in 1985.
In essence, there is a receptor on the surface of
liver cells and other cells throughout the body
which serve to remove cholesterol-carrying
lipoproteins from the circulation. Thus plasma
cholesterol is kept at a low level. There are
certain people who have a mutation in the gene
that codes for the receptor. Their cells cannot
make these protein receptors, and they cannot
remove lipoproteins fmm the plasma. Their
cholesterol builds up to very high levels and
they subsequently get atherosclerosis and heart
attacks. The fact of a mutation in that gene was
something they reasoned based on abstract
thinking. They subsequently cloned thc gene
and isolated the gene from both normal people
and patients with this mutation. They have
been-able to show that, indeed, there is a part
of the gene missing in the patients.
Cloning genes these days involves somehow
fishing out the messenger-RNA which encodes
for the protein. Then it is treated with purified
reverse- transcriptase (an enzyme ha;ing the
power to convert RNA back to DNA) and a
DNA copy of the RNA is made. The DNA copy
is takenand introduced into bacteria. The &scovery
of certain enzymes recently has made
by
John Lange, M.D.
A student ufThe Urantia
Book for 2 1 years, Lange
is a medical doctor. He has
done research in endoninology
and currently has a
private practice in a specialty
clinic in Ft. Smith,
Arkansas. He has ~ c e n t l y
been appointed to a Federal
panel to set guidelinesfor
surgery in his freld.
We shall one day
know the semefs of
human nature as
well as we know the
topography of the
human skeleton
today.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
These special bacteria
have been used to
produce human
growth hormone,
human insulin, and
tissue plasminogen
activator, to mention
a few.
— –
This technology can
also be used to
delineate the origin
of cancer, for the
molecular targeting
ofdrugs, and in the
diagnosis of diseases.
all this possible.
To clone the LDL receptor, the first thing is to
isolate tissue making LDL receptor. The
adrenal turned out to be the most abundant
soume. Human fetal adrenals from late abortions
were used for this purpose. These adrenal
1 glands were then ground up and the RNA
, taken out. The tissue contains millions of different
kinds of RNA, and only one in 10,000
codes for our protein. The other 9,999 are
coding for all theother proteins in the cell. Then
DNA copies were made of the whole RNA by
adding this enzyme reverse transcriptase.
What you then have are single-strand copies
with a special name, c-DNA, or, complementary
DNA.
Now you do what is called recombinant
DNA. To clone a gene, you take advantage of
the fact that bacteria have plasmids. They are
autonomous pieces of genes in bacteria. (They
were originally discovered by a microbiologist
studying the development of antibiotic resistance.)
Then, through a series of enzymatic
steps known as restriction fragment polymorphism,
the circular DNA in the plasmid is
opened up, the gene inserted, closed or circularized
again, and then reintroduced into the
bacterial cell.
This process can be used not only to clone
genes but to produce proteins. These special
bacteria have been used to produce human
growth hormone, human insulin, and tissue
plasminogen activator, to mention a few. The
potential in the field is limited by human imagination.
Fortunately, a bacteria takes up only one of
these plasmids, so you have ten million bacteria,
each taking up a different c-DNA. The
challenge is to find the one that encodes for the
LDL receptor. To accomplish this they worked
with the microbiology department and, using
the adrenal glands from cows, purified a small
amount of receptor protein to homogeneity.
Next they sequenced a small segment of this
protein and then assembled a piece of DNA
with the corresponding genetic code. This
oligonucleotide probe produced in the test tube
was then made very radioactive. It was placed
on nitrocellulose paper which was in turn
placed on a petri dish where these millions of
bacteria were growing. The bacterial colonies
grew up onto the filter and the small piece of
DNA found its complementary plasmid containing
our gene. The filter was washed carefully
to eliminate unbound DNA and an X-ray
was taken. A dark spot on the film represents
your colony due to the radioactivity produced.
This specific colony is isolated and grown up
in large quantities. The gene is cut out of the
plasmid with another special restriction enzyme.
The rest of the plasmid is thrown away.
The gene is now sequenced and the proper
reading frame determined. This is all done
today by computer. Finally, having started out
with only eight amino acids, they discovered , the entire protein structure of over 6,000 amino
1 acids. he^ also know the conformational
1 status, how it is oriented in the cell membrane,
and how it binds LDL.
Towards a Healthy World
Molecular biology and genetic research have
given rise to a variety of clinical applications;
i.e., things that help patients.The most debated
topic in this area is gene therapy. One in 100
children is born with a serious genetic defect.
Ofthe more than 4,000 known inherited disorders,
most lack full effective therapies. Since the
advances in gene cloning, scientists are imagining
ways to introduce healthy genes into
patients to cure the inherited illness. Genes can
be transferred into germ cells (sperm, eggs, or
early embryos) or somatic cells (those not destined
to become sperm or eggs). Germ-line
therapy is not an option for the foreseeable
future, because the new genes would be passed
from generation to generation, a prospect raising
profound ethical concerns. -.
The most promising are diseases caused by
single genes that have been isolated, cloned,
and are available for transplant. This is accomplished
by using retrov&ses that have incorporated
the gene, maintained their ability to
infest somatic cells, but lost the power of
replication. Efforts have focused onteplacing
the defective gene or supporting the work of
the sick gene. It has been difficult to find ways
to insure that therapeutic genes are expressed
well and persistently in the body. Familial hypercholesterolemia,
hemophilia, cystic fibrosis,
&d inherited emphysema are singlegene diseases
under investigation at present.
This technology can also be used to delineate
the origin of cancer, for the molecular targeting
of drugs, and in thediagnosis of diseases. Great
progress has been made with Huntington’s
chorea by using restriction enzymes in a
process previously mentioned, known as
restriction fragment polymorphism. Restriction
enzymes are used to cut the DNA of affected
individuals. This gives DNA fragments
of many different lengths. All affected individuals
will have an identical inherited fragment
of the same length where the gene is
located. In this manner the disease will soon be
completely understood.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOhiA CITY, OKLAHOMA
God as a Connecting Pattern
As humans unlock the secrets of nature, with
each profound discovery we voluntarily assume
a larger responsibility. With the delineation
of the human genome, we are challenged
to a higher identity of «created cwreator.» This
new knowledge subordinated to spirit direction
provides the opportunity for attaining an
unprecedented level of human health. A
reasonable course is to foster the health resulting
from random genetic recombination within
the constraints of a reformulated commitment
to human dignity.
The question is then posed: If the future is
open, who is responsible for human transformation?
Seaxhing for an answer, we attempt
to redefine the relationship between divineand
human agency. Greater understanding is possible
by viewing the life pattem as it encompasses
the domains of finite reality. It includes not
only the material (DNA), but also the mindal
(archetype) and the spiritual (personality)
domains. As described by Jung, the archetyp
per se is prepsychic in that it precedes and
preforms human mind functions. It serves to
focus the ministries of the adjutant and cosmic
minds to develop psychologic integrity during
a lifetime. Personality is that manifestation of
the Father unifying the spiritual life and focusing
the ministry of the Thought Adjuster culminating
in morontia progression.
The life mechanism is the p d u c t of supermortal
creative design, and as such mortals can
never hope to totally control it. We have only
partial vision and must depend on God as the
pattern that connects. As we seek philosophic
coordination between scientific knowledge
and spiritual existence, we should first realize
we live in a connected relationship of pattern
between ancestral Deity and evolving
Supremacy.
The life mechanism is
the product of supermortal
creative
design, and as such
mortals can never
hope to totally control
if.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
by
Philip G. Calabrese, Ph.D.
Calabrese, a student of
The Urantia Bookfor 20
years, has a mnsters and
Ph.D. in mathematics and
physics and works in
relatedlzre#. Calabrese’s
paper entitled, «Algebraic
Synthesis, Foundation of
Logic and Probability,» was
published in Information
Sciences.
In the final analysis,
INFINITY IS, and
that is all there is to
say about it.
Paradise and the T of Space:
A Theory d U l t i m d a r
Fist of all, does anyone here have a problem
with the printed title of my t a k ‘The Ultirnaton
as the Nucleus of Paradise»? . . . I hope so,
because that title is reversed. It should be
«Paradise as the Nucleus of the Ultimaton.»
That title was phoned in by my good friend Dr.
Dick Prince, who alsovolunteered metodo this
presentation with the promise to be here with
me today. For ten now, Dick has been
working long hours on the Spanish translation
of The Urantia Book, which hopefully will be
done by the end of this year. Anyway, as you
can see, he’s not here today. So I’m going to
volunteer him right now, as soon as he’s-finished
with the Spanish translation, to begin the
Italian translation of The Urantia Book.
To start off today, some of you may remember
the last Scientific Symposium in Nashville
when I concluded that there is no way for
human resurrection to occur on Jerusem «on
the third day after natural death» because the
guardian seraphim, who carries the human
soul, cannot travel there in less than twenty
years. The Urantia Book insists that there is no
way for a seraphim to traverse spaceany faster
than three times the speed of light (260). Since
the nearest star is 4.3 light years away and
Jerusem must be many stars away, the angel
can’t get there in days at her speed. Thedistance
from earth to Jerusem can’t be nine light days;
it is more like sixty light years away.
Now at the first Scientific Symposium in
Nashville I went so far as to suggest that some
nameless Melchizedek might have been called
on the carpet for using the expression «on the
third day after naturaldeath,» which we would
take literally. Well, today I am going to recant
my Urantia Bookapostasy; I’vethought of a way
for the guardian angel to get to Jerusem in less
than three days: The angel simply doesn’t
travel there under her own power! She must be
translated to Jerusem by some unrevealed universe
or Paradise technique. A careful reading
of The Urantia Book will reveal that in every case
where this trip by the seraphim from Urantia
to Jerusem is described, the author never says
that the angel gets there by normal seraphic
travel or transport. Instead, some vague expression
like «proceeds to Jerusem» is used to
denote the mode of transportation of the angel.
1 hope this explanation resolves the anomaly
and points to an unrevealed seraphic phenomenon
associated with human death. On, then,
to the main part of my presentation today.
So now let us reflect on the cosmos-the
Totality of Reality. Each one of us, no matter
what our status in life, has been afforded a
personal view of the cosmos, not only introspectively
in the attempted contemplation of
the indwelling spirit of the Universal Father,
but also externally as we each gaze up at the
stars in the night sky. This continuous view of
the cosmos stretches trillions of miles in all
directions, and spans millions of years into the
past, and allows projections millions of years
into the future. That the universe should afford
each one of us a personal view of the whole
cosmos, no matter how supposedly small our
doings here on earth, demonstrates how God is
concerned with each of us as individuals-not
just in the aggregate.
In the final analysis, INFINITY IS, and that
is all there is to say about it. … But, of course,
we’re going to try to say something else about
it, anyway! But before we do, let us pause in
awe for a moment to experience in our personality
consciousness, the infinite ONENESS
that we call God, perhaps to feel the loving
smile of the one that we may call Father.
Total Reality is Unqualified Infinity. Total
realityembraces unbounded infinity as well as
the Infinitude, and also these two unified as the
whole, the Infinite One. Before attempts at understanding,
the human mind must divide
Reality Totality into an infinitude(as contrasted
from a single unity), and an unlimited infinity
(as contrasted fmm the bounded finite), and
then somehow synthesize these two conceptions
into a unified whole.
In the first absolute transaction, the Infinite
One becomes the personal Father of the Eternal
Mother-Son (the original spirit person) and also
the eternal source of Paradise (theoriginal nonspirit,
nonpersonal manifestation). All conpint
action by the Father and the Mother-Son is
consummated by the MindGod, the Conpint
Actor, the Third Person of the Infinite Trinity.
Fmm Paradise emerges space, which, like the
concept of the master universe, is a tranxendentai
reality existing somehow between the
infinite and the finite. The fifth absolute is the
Unqualified Absolute, which pervades all
space but is not limited by space. The Deity
Absolute and Universal Absolute complete the
seven absolutes of infinity. These seven absolutes
are functionally unified in the fourteen
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
triunities, each a functional association of the
Father with two of the other six absolutes.
It is suggested that we may helpfully conceive
the total cosmos as an almost limitless
ellipse with one absolute focus located in
Paradise. What does The Uruntia Book say about
these matters?
On Paradise:
A flat ellipsoid, having upper, nether, and
peripheral regions
The most gigantic organized structure in
the whole Cosmos
The dwelling place of the existential
Trinity of three divine persons and (probably)
the focal center of all three of the
nonpersonal Absolutes (15)
The geographic center of infinity (‘126)
Has no time or space (except by volition)
but has absolute surfaaes and areas and
absolutely significant distances and directions-
north, south, east, west, up and
down
Universally pment as the physical grasp
of Paradise gravity, an instantaneous attraction
(T25,482)
Is the nucleus of each ultimaton (the
smallest material particle)
Located at the center of all things
No position in space but located at the
focus of space (1156)
Peripheral Paradise touches the relatively
motionless midspace zones of space existing
between the moving zones of space
(124 ).
On the Unqualified Absolute:
Pervades all space but is not limited to
space presence
Gives rise to primordial force, emergent
energy, and all finite matter
Reveals all that originates in Paradise
( 1 26)
The central focalization of its space
presence is in the outer zone of nether
Paradise (123).
On Space:
Needs seven dimensions, one for each
absolute of infinity (1439)
Is eternal but not absolute; is absolutely
ultimate (1297)
A transcendental reality before all beginnings
and after allendings; not the «final»
frontier. but the «ultimate» frontier
Partially transcended in human experience
only by mind (‘1439)
Pervaded by the Unqualified Absolute
(9 24)
The totality of space has a definite geo-
I metrical shape (q24)
I Seemingly originates just below nether
Paradise while time originates just above
upper Paradise
All matter contains space and moves in
space, but not all space is inside matter
(*I 297)
The midspace zones encapsulate all of
pervaded space and the space reservoirs
and the potential infinity of all outer
space.
On Ultimate Matter and Motion:
Ultimatons are minute spheresparticles,
not waves (‘475)
100 ultimatons make up a typical electron
but do not whirl around within the
electron like electrons whirl around the
atomic nucleus nor as planets whirl
around the sun (‘476)
Ultimatons have axial rotations around
their Paradise nucleus
Ultimatons may «huddle» together within
the electron (‘478)
When a particle moves in space it takes its
interior space with it (‘1297)
Ultimatons and electrons shift positions
and emit mass according to Am = LS/c2.
(‘474)
There is a plane perpendicular to any
given mass (‘126)
Sunlight is composed of highly heated
and agitated electrons (‘460-61)
The wave length associated with the
emission of a particle is 860 times the
diameter of the emitting particle (‘474,
476).
Now a number of questions arise:
How can Paradise be the nucleus of each
ultimaton without being in space?
How can Paradise have a universe location
(at the focus of the midspace zones)
but have no position in space?
How can Paradise be the geographic center
of infinity?
How can Havona and the supemniverses
(in space) whirl around Paradise?
What is an ultimaton made of?
What does an ultimaton look like? what
is its geometric shape?
How are the 100 ultimatons arranged in
an electron?
What does it mean for ultimatons to
«huddle»?
How can ultimatons and electrons shift
positions and emit mass?
How does the positive or negative charge
Space.. .
A transcendental
reality before all
beginnings and
after all endings; not
the «final» frontier,
but the «ultimate»
frontier.
The mve length
associated with the
emission of a particle
is 860 times the
diameter of the
emitting particle.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
Since Paradise is the
geographic center of
infinity, Paradise
must be a neighborhood
of infinity.
It somehow must
contain infinity.
The nuclear region of
each ultirnaton must
be located in nether
Paradise, where there
is the ‘%entral
focalization of the
space presence of
the Unqualified
Absolute.»
of an electron arise and why don’t light
particles have charge?
How do the wave properties of matter
arise?
How can an electron emit an electron (a
light particle) when it drops to a lower
energy state?
How does an electron absorb a particle of
light (an electron) and shift position?
[By the way, the last two provocative questions
and the above observation about sunlight
were contributed by Dick Bain in a personal
letter.]
Here’s how far I’vegotten on these problems.
Topology is that branch of mathematics that
deals with those aspects of geometry that are
invariant under stretching or contracting. For
instance, a doughnut and a cup with a handle
topologically equivalent because one can be
transformed into the other by a continuous
mapping. But a sphere and a doughnut are not
so equivalent. Topology also attempts to model
the «closeness» concept. Formally, a topological
space (a topology) consists of a universe U
of points together with a special collection of
subsets of U called open sets. The collection of
open sets has the property that the intersection
of any two open sets is also an open set, and the
union of my subcollection of open sets, whatwer,
is also an open set. A neighborhood of a
point is any subset of the universe that includes
an open set that contains the given point. For
example, the universe of points in the euclidean
plane together with the collection of the interiors
of all circles (and their unions) form a
topological space. Another interesting example
of a topology is called the co-finite topology.
Suppose we start out with a euclidean plane
of points and adjoin to it certain points at infinity.
We can imagineeach straight lineextending
out to infinity in both directions ending in
two points at infinity A line parallel to the first
line ends in two different points at infinity; and
a line intersecting the first two lines ends in still
another pair of points at infinity. The set P of all
pointsat infinity for all the lines in the plane can
be considered to be a «circle» at infinity. In
euclidean solid geometry we would get a «surfaceJfP
of points at infinity. A topological neighborhood
of infinity (i.e., a neighborhood of the
surface of infinite points) is any subset of the
universe whose complement is bounded, i.e.,
contained, in some finite circle. Thus a neighborhood
of infinity is any subset of the universe
that includes everything outside some finite
circle.
Since Paradise is the geographic center of
infinity, Paradise must be a neighborhood of
infinity. It somehow must contain infinity. After
all, the zone of infinity does exist at the center
of nether Paradise. The co-finite topology, applied
to solid euclidean space rather than the
plane, seems just right for modeling a cosmos
whose origin is at infinity instead of at some
finite point in space. Paradise must be the center
of what we commonly imagine as what’s
«out there» in the infinite reaches of outer
space, and even beyond, out to the very edge
of our mental concept of the master universe.
Now Paradise is not only «out there»; Paradise
is also at the focus of space, the focus of
those midspace quiescent zones of space intervening
between the mlatively moving zones, as
for example, in the atom, electron, and ultimaton.
Thus somehow Paradise is also located at
the center of each ultirnaton. Finally, Paradise
is also located at the center of the grand universe,
at the center of the superuniverses as
they whirl around. How can all this be? The
answer is that the topology of space must allow
Paradise proximity in all these ways at once.
Nobe, for instance, that peripheral Paradise can
be approached by a sequence of midspace
points.
Space must have a non-spatial hole at the
center of each ultimaton wherenether Paradise
acts to hold the ultimaton together as an individual
particle. The nuclear region of each
ultimaton must be located in nether Paradise,
where there is the «central focalization of the
space presence of the Unqualified Absolute.»
That must be why space seems to originate just
below nether Paradise. In addition, the macroscopic
grand universe must have a unique
space intrusion where, again, Paradise is located.
Space topology must allow this proximity
of Paradise to the central universe, which
exists in space, while Paradise itself is not in
space. The construction of ultimatons is the
work of the Paradise primary and secondary
Transcendental Force Organizers, and the
design of the master universe is the work of the
Transcendental Architects of the Master
Universe.
All this leads me to discard our contemporary
notion of space as a uniform void. Space
is neither uniform nor empty. Uniformity of
space is not really necessary for our physical
theories. All we need is the revolutionary motions
of matter in space about a center. But the 1
center itself need not be conceived as being in
space. Space must bevery «holey,» spelled with
an «e.» It must have a big hole in the macroscopic
center of the grand universe, little holes
at the center of each ultimaton, and finally an
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
inconceivable hole at the outer infinity center
of the master universe. Matter has a spirit
nucleus!
Now, what is an ultimaton made of, and
what does it look like? An ultimaton must be a
relatively thin, rotating, spherical shell of space
with a non-spatial nucleus. The Paradise
nucleus binds the shell together preventing it
from flying apart on tangents toward outer
infinity. An electron must consist of one hundred
concentrically arranged ultimatons witha
common non-spatial nucleus.
These concentric spherical shells of space
may rotate with different speeds and axes of
rotation, thus giving rise to angular momenta
with as many as 100 different axes. The result
is an angular momentum vector with components
in all three conventional spatial dimensions,
just as appears in contemporary
quantum mechanics (although contemporary
xience hardly gives physical interpretation to
this momentum vector). Huddling of ultimatons
means that the rotating shells of space
cluster by shrinking or expanding toward one
another.
An ultimaton may drop into a lower rutational
energy state by emitting some rotating
space (mass) in the form of another ultimaton.
In this case the change in the mass of rotating
space of the ultimaton equals the change in its
energy divided by the square of the speed of
light. On theother hand, captureof one rotating
particle (ultimaton) of moving space by
another ultimaton would increase its energy
and its rotational radius or speed and so its
mass. Similar transactions can be envisioned
when 100 ultimatons are concentrically arranged
in an electron. When a particle is
formed and emitted by another particle, vibrations
are initiated in the pre-ultirnatonic content
of space, and these secondary waves are
apparently interpreted bycontemporaryquantum
physicists as the particle itself. Hence we
have the confusing contemporary notion of a
«wavicleV–a hypothetical hybrid particlewave
duality. However, according to The Urantia
Book, these waves have a wave length 860
times the diameter of the emitting particle.
The generation of so-called positive and negative
electronic charge might also be explained
in terms of the spin of the 100 intraelectronic
ultimatons. For instance, if most or all of the 100
ultimatonic shells are rotating in the same direction,
then two such electrons might repulse one
another. On the other hand, two electrons (one
a positmn) with opposite revolutionary directions
might attract each other and cancel some
of each other’s rotational mass, emitting some
energy in the process. The construction of electrons,
protons and atoms from the ultimatons
is the work of the power centers (*473).
Although theseexplanations are still qualitative,
it does seem to me that most of the strange
phenomena of present-day quantum mechanics
are potentially explainable in terms of this
model of subelectron matter as rotating spherical
shells of space. I am just now working out
some of the quantitative implications of this
theory, and the preliminary results are very
encouraging, but time doesn’t permit me to get
very far into that here today. In the near future,
I to submit a more technical paper for
publication that will deal with these quantitative
aspects of the theory. This paper will redefine
mass as rotating space and will consider
the conservation of the kinetic and potential
energy and angular momentum of an ultimaton;
it will attempt to deal with energy mass
transformations and wave generation.
One last comment: Albert Einstein’s theory
of relativity predicted (and it has many times
been experimentally verified) that the mass of
a particle increases without limit as the speed
of that particle approaches the speed of light.
This has always seemed to be a very mysterious
phenomenon. But this theoryof ultimatons and
electrons at least offers an appealing way to
conceive of the situation without abandoning
common sense-by imagining that as the speed
of the particle increases, more and more of the
energy applied to the particle is transbrmed
into rotational energy (mass) rather than into
straightforward motion. Thus the mass of the
particle increases more than its speed as its
speed approaches the speed of light.
That completes my prepared remarks for
today. I will now try to answer some questions
….
An ultimaton must
be a relatively thin,
rotating, spherical
shell of space with a
non-spatial nucleus.
These concentric
spherical shells of
space may rotate
with different speeds
and axes of rutation,
thus giving rise to
angular momenta
with as many as 100
different axes.
SCIENTIFIC S WOSIUM I1
I Manned Flight: 1 I From Fandors to FANDORS
i 1 (Flapping Aerid Nuvigation Designed Omahologkd Replicas)
by
Paul W Herrick, I’F i AFctrar* 1 Historical Perspective
A student of The Urantia
Book for 28 years, Herrick
holds engineering degrees.
He works in lupiter, Florida
as an aeronuutical engineer
and has authored numerous
technical papers.
Archaeologists have
recovered several
man-made artifacts
which depid very
large andlor mancar
ying birds.
‘1 he tirst human aviators flew on enormous
birds (fandors) trained by Bon some 500,000
years ago. Man continued aerial navigation
aboard birds until some 30,000 years ago when
fandors became extinct. Several mythological
and archaeological sources include references
to very large and/or man-carrying birds. The
fist part of this paper will summarize these
Urantia Book and historical references and,
through modem aeronautical engineering and
ornithological knowledge, attempt to depict
and describe what a fandor must have been
like.
The remainder of the paper will document
man’s technological progress in developing
machines to replace the fandor. His first abortive
attempts were wing-flapping ornithopters,
but these were abandoned in favor of simpler,
though less versatile, concepts. The paper will
conclude by illustrating the recent aeronautical
technological discoveries which birds have
been taking advantage of for millions of years.
A «replica» of the fandor will be shown to be
the logical end product of this technological
evolution.
The Urlzntia Book mentions man-carrying
and /or transport birds on six different pages.
Page 5211 in discussing our system capital,
ierusem, states, ‘The transport birds fly at
about one hund~.dm iles per hour.» I’age 590
indicates that many inhabited planets enpy the
servicm of «enormous» passenger birds capable
of carrying «one or two average sized men
for a non-slop flight of over five hundred
milc~.»P age 694 describes an ostrichlikeancestor
of the «gigar,tic» passenger birds. This bird
ilvd on 1 ll-antia forty-f~ver nillion years ago,
The first mention i?f «fandors» ison page746
where Ben (one of the planeta~yp rince’s corporeal
staff) was successful it1 training them for
manned flight some half million yearsago.This
reference also states that «they became extinct
more than thirty thousand years ago.» Lastly,
the references to Adam and Eve flying on fandors
occu on pagcs 831 and 832. This was
about 37,000 yars ago.
It is not the intent of this paper to debate thc
possibility of mancanylng birds. Their existence
in our distant past will be assumed. As
their extinction predated recorded history, only
three areas of human endeavor are available to
shed some non-revelatory light on the subject.
These are paleontology (the study of fossils),
archaeology (the study of man’s ancient artifacts),
and mythology (a collection of stories
about the origin and history of man).
As we observe the physical world, it is obvious
that there are no existing birds that even
approach the size required to cany humans in
flight. The andean condor, with its ten-foot
wing span, is typical of the largest living birds.
Until the 1970s the largest flying animal that
ever existed was thought to be the pteranadon
(a ptemsaur with a 24-foot wing span), and the
largest flying bird ever was thought to be a
12-foot span teratorn. Many scientists thought
that these were the upper limits of possibility
for flying animals.
In addition to the ostrich, at least two other
very large flightless birds were known to have
existed. They are the moa of New Zealand (12
feet tall, 660 pounds) and the elephant bird of
Madagascar (10 feet tall, 1,460 pounds).
In the 1970s two paleontological discoveries
dramatically increased the upper limits of
known flying animal size. The bones of a ,3676-
foot wing span pterosaur (Quetzalcoatlus
Northropi) were discovered in Texas, and,
more relevant to fandors, the bones of a 25-foot
span flying bird (Argentavis Magnificens) were
unearthed in Argentina. Although both of these
animals probably were extinct by the time man
appeared, and neither was likely capable of
carrying a man anyway, the fact remains that
scientists had severely underestimated the
upper limits of size of a flying animal
Archaeologists have recovered sevurdi ma]. –
made artifacts which depict very large andlo!
man-carrying birds. A hammered copper
depiction of a lion-headed bird was found at
the temple at Al-Ubaid (near Ur) from the early
second millennium B.C. The bird dwarfs the
two stags it is depicted with. At least two birdrelated
Akkadian seal impressions from about
2300 B.C. were found. One purportedly shows
— -,
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
a iarge «Zu» bird froin Mesoptainiiin ~lnythology,
while the other clearly depicts a human
form riding on the back of a bird in flight. The
tamous huge drawings on the Plain of Nazca
in South America may also be related to man j
bird tlight ratherthan «ancient astronauts,» a la
Vo11 Daniken.
Mythology h r n all over &e world shares
stories or man.carrylng birds. Garuda, the king
(if birds from Indian mythology, is often portrayed
carrying two Indian god-man deities. ‘4
wood calving of a human figure riding a peacock
was found in southern India. According
to Maori legend, the god, Pourangahua, flew
from his legendary dwelling Hawaike to New
Zealand seated on a magic bird.
Fandor Description
The «specifications» for a fandor, as given by
The Urantia Book, are:
Type: bird (i.e., not pterosaur, bat, or insect)
a Range: 500 miles
Speed:100 mph
* Payload: one or two average-sized men
(or one eight-foot Material Son)
Size: «large,» «great,» «enormous,»
«gigantic»
a Other characteristics: «intelligent,»
«obedient,» «affectionate»
‘To convert the qualitative size descriptors to
quantitative values such as weight, wing area,
wing span, etc., we are forced to use judgment
based on known relationships of these parameters
for existing, though much smaller, birds.
For example, birds of prey, such as ospreys, are
known to be able to carry prey weighing up to
one-half their own weight. Since the fandor can
fly a long distance with men aboard (500 miles),
a payload of one-third their weight will be
assumed to be more realistic. Using two
«average-sized» men or one eight-foot pm-basketball
player as a typical payload, 300 pounds
seems like a reasonabie payload weight. As 300
is a third of 900, our hypothetical fandor will be
assumed to weigh 900 pounds (1,200 with the
full payload aboard).
Wing loading (weight divided by wing area)
br birds varies with takeoff requirements. Birds
that normally take off vertically h-om level
ground have low wing loadings (relatively
large wings), birds that normally run along the
ground (or water) to take off have higher wing
loadings, while birds that normally jump off
iimbs or cliffs to take off have the highest wing
loadings. For the sake of this discussion (and
because «fandor» may be related to «condor»),
the fandor will be assumed to be at the high end
1 of the Idngt: of wing loadings for large land
birds (1il.x r:ondors and vultures), which normally
take off vertically from level ground. This
gives a wing loading of about 1.78 pounds per
square foot (8.7 kilograms per square meter). ‘ This translates to a wing area of 505 square feet
for a 900-pound bird.
Aspect ratio for a wing is defined as span
s q u a d , dividtd by area. Large land birds have
aspect ratios ranging from about 6 to about 11
(the albatross, a sea bird, has an aspect ratio of
17). The corresponding wing spans (distance
from one wingtip to the other) for a 505-squarefoot
wing are 55 feet (aspect ratio equals 6) to
75 feet (aspect ratioequals 11). Wings of this size
would require nearly 6 seconds tocompleteone
flapping cycle. A sketch of what a fandor may
have looked like is shown in the figure. (As an
aside, the author hereby suggests the scientific name
«Ornithopteryx Fandori»for this bird in the event
that pdeontological evidence of its existence is someday
found.)
The power required for a bird to take off and
fly is generated by its large pectoral (flight)
muscle. Typically, this muscle makes up about
a quarter of the weight of a bird. A 900-pound
bird would therefore have a 225-pound flight
muscle. At a typical value of 0.156 horsepower
per pol~nd of flight muscle, the fandor could
generate 35 hp for short periods of time. As
early light planes in the same weight, speed,
payload, and range category used engines in
the K3- to 90-hp class, we can see that our
fand3)r must have some special technologies
to allow it to get by on less than half that
amo~lnto f power. The fact that light, twoplace*
helicopters (which can also take off and
land vertically) rcyuire about 180 hp makes a
bird’s capability even more remarkable. This
will irc addressed in the section entitled «Bird
Technology.»
Aircraft Development
The first sketches of heaver-than-air flying
machines were of man-powered ornithopters
(wing-flapping airplanes) by Leonardo da Vinci
in thc late 1400s. However, the Eirst successful
flying machine had to await the development
of the controllable, fixtd-wing glider, the gasoline
engine, and the airscrew (air propeller).
The flapping-wing concept had to give way to
the simpler, more understandable, and more
predictable flight schemes of a fixed wing for
lift and control and a rotating propeller for
prop~~lsioTnh. e integration of lift, propulsion,
stab~lity,a nd control into a flapping-wing aircraft
was, and still may be, too complex for
practical manned flight.
Mythology from
all over the world
shares stories of
man-car ying birds.
Wings of this size
would require nearly
6 seconds to complete
one flapping cycle.
This idea of twisting
a wing around its
spanwise axis to
provide lateral
control was probably
the singlemost significant
technology
contribution to the
Wright brothers’
success where so
many others had
failed.
Free flight efficiency
measurements of a
black vulture indicate
that the bird
does indeed keep the
ai$ow over its body
and wings laminar.
The mechanisms
for doing this are
just now being
understood.
Bird Technology
«My observations of the flight of buzzards
leads me to believe that they regain their lateral
balance, when partly overturned by a gust of
wind, by a torsion of the tips of the wings.. . .»
So said Wilbur Wright in a letter to Octave
Chanute on 13 May 1900. This idea of twisting
a wing around its spanwise axis to provide
lateral control was probably the singlemost significant
technology contribution to the Wright
brothers’ success where so many others had
failed. Numerous other aeronautical secrets
have since been discovered through the study
of birds, and with almost 9,000 species, there is
surely much more to be learned.
Some of the early lessons learned include:
dihedral for stability, camber for lift, ailerons
for roll control, and slots and flaps for higher
lift. Hollow bones with internal trusses is the
same concept used to allow monoplane, instead
of biplane, design. Birds also originated
the retractable landing gcar. These two innovations
were the major causes of a fourfold reduction
in aircraft drag. Variable wing sweep angle
is a concept that birds use which allows the
aerodynamic efficiency (lift/drag) to be optimized
over a range of flight speeds. This is used
on several modern fighter planes. Variable
camber is used by birds to optimize efficiency
over a range of life requirements. NASA just
recently flight-tested this idea (called a Mission
Adaptive Wing) with excellent results.
The fact that birds use inflight thrust vectoring
and reversing (of their wing-flapping
generated thrust) during evasive maneuvers
was recently determined by the author during
the course of a bird air combat agility flight
research program. Advanced fighter designs
are just now beginning to incorporate thrust
vectoring and reversing for air combat agility.
The bps of bird wings are either pointed and
swept back (sheared) or composed of several
pinion feathers curved upward and separated.
Until very recently the ideal wing-tip shape for
low-speed (subsonic) airplanes was thought to
be rounded. Again, recent tests done by NASA
have shown sigruficant drag reductions by both
of the concepts that are used by birds. Also,
airplane wings have always used smooth, trailing
edges, while many birds have trailing edges
that are both rippled and serrated. Yet again,
NASA has just recently demonstrated the drag
reductions possible by both rippling and serrating
the trailing edges of airplane wings.
Friction drag on both airplane and bird
wings and bodies is a major component of the
total drag of both flyers. If theairflow overthese
surfaces can be kept laminar instead of turbulent,
the drag can be reduced significantly.
NASA has shown that forcing the airflow to
remain laminar could result in large reductions
in aircraft fuel requirements. Free flight efficiency
measurements of a black vulture indicate
that the bird does indeed keep the airflow
over its body and wings laminar. The
mechanisms for doing this are just now being
understood.
There appear to be at least six different phenomena
at work (over and above those already
mentioned) to help a bird reduce its wing and
body friction and form drag. The beak of a bird
(and the bill of a swordfish) provides a low
surface area for the extremely high initial friction
shear stress to act upon. Wind tunnel tests
have shown that a body with a pointed protrusion
can experience a 5- to 10-percent reduction
in drag. The covert feathers of a bird (and the
scales of a fish) can both reduce the friction drag
and prevent flow separation (to reduce pressure
drag) to yield an overall drag reduction of
about 30 percent. The riblcts formed by the
individual barbs of the feathers (and the ridges
in a shark’s skin) can reduce friction drag by 5
to 10 percent. The compliant surface created by
a bird’s down (and a porpoise’s skin) can also
dampen turbulence and, thereby, reduce drag.
The coverts and down also form a «turbulent
streak cancellation surface» to further reduce
drag. Lastly, the body temperature of a bird
runs as high as 113 degrocs F. Kecent tests have
shown that when the temperature of a body is
higher than the air, the friction drag is reduced.
Thiscanamount to morethan a 10-percent drag
reduction for a high-flying (where the air is
colder) bird like a goose.
The full benefits of wing flapping relative to
drag reduction and increased propulsive efficiency
are just now being explored. Birds with
high aspect ratio wings (like sea birds) «cruise»
by only flapping the outer portion of their
wings. NASA has recently run tests which
show that propellers mounted on wingtips can
reduce wing drag during cruise by 10 to 20
percent. In addition, some engineers think that
the flapping motion itself has a favorableeffect
on both friction and pressure drag. Obviously,
we have much more to learn from nature’s
flying machines.
Concluding Remarks
Mankind would really benefit from having a
«fandor in every garage [hangar; barn].» It 1 would be somewhat like having a horse, only
infinitely better. (Interestingly, horses also
weigh about 900 pounds.) It would not only fly
MAY 17-.19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
but fly fast (100 mph) for long distances nonstop
(500 miles) carrying one to two people. It
wouldn’t require petroleum products, runways,
mechanics, or air traffic control. Inflight
fires and structural failures would be nonexistent.
while midair collisions would be rare
and often survivable (bird’s bones and feathers
are so flexible that birds sometimes collide in
flight without even losing control). «Engine»
failure would be both rare and-xcept in the
case of a fandor heart attack-with sufficient
warning to be able to land. The rider wouldn’t
have to be a licensed pilot. He would just have
to indicate to these intelligent, obedient, affectionate
birds when he wants to take off, where
he wants to go, and where he wants to 1and.The
bird would do the rest. He could even have the
bird come to get him (a la page 832 in The
Urantia Book).
All of this is pleasant to dream about, but
since fandors have been extinct for over 30,000
years, that’s all it i s a dream. OR IS IT? There
are two remote possibilities for fandors again
to appear on earth in the distant future. The UB
tells us that they exist on many inhabited planets
-maybe they could be brought here. Slightly
more feasible: maybe we could genetically engineer
one and reverse the extinction process.
In all likelihood we’ll have to settle for a
FANDOR (Flapping Aerial Navigation Designed
Ornithological Replicata man-made,
highly sophisticated ornithopter. But even this
will be no small feat. Tremendous breakthroughs
will be required in the areas of wingflapping
propulsion, unsteady aerodynamics,
laminar flow control, active flight structures,
totally integrated flight/propulsion control,
artificial intelligence, non-intrusive instrumentation,
near-infinitely variable geometry, exotic
materials, and cost-effective manufacturing
techniques.
FANDOR or fandor … either way it is the
author’s belief that one of these two options
will eventually serve the personal transportation
needs of man.
Bibliography
Anonymous: The Umntia Bwk, Urantia Foundation,
Chicago, 1955.
Bandyopadhyay, P.R.: «A Low-Drag Nose-Body.»
AIAA-88-0135,1988.
Bushnell, D.M. et al: Viscous Drag Reduction in Boundary
Lnyers: Prwgress in Astmutics and Aenmautics.
AIAA, 1990.
Campbell, K.E. et al: «How Big Was It? – Determining
thesize of Ancient Birds.» Terra, Summer 1990.
Gao, G. and W.L. Chow: «The Principle of Drag Reduction
in Turbulent Flows.» Unpublished paper,
Apd 1990.
Gray, J.: Near Eastern Mythology. Hamlyn, 1975.
Greenewalt, C.H.: «The Flight of Birds.» American
Philosophical Society, July 1975.
Henderson, W.P. et al: «Induced bag-Historical
Perspechve.» Society of Automotive Engtneers,
892341,1989.
Hemck, P.W.: «Air Combat Aghty Flight Research:
A Novd Approach.» Society of Experimental Test
Pilots, Cockpit, 1990.
Ions, V.: Indian Mythology. Bedrick Books, New York,
1–9 -M -..
Langston, W.: «Pterosaurs.» Scientific American,
February 1981.
Lin, J.C. et al: ‘Wall Temperature Control of Low
Speed Body Drag.» AIAA Ioumal of Aircraft,
January 1986.
MacCready, P.B. et al: «Development of a Wmg-Flap
ping Flying Replica of the Largest Pterosaur.»
AIAA-85-1446,1985.
McMasters, J.H.: «Reflections of a Paleoaaodynamidst.»
AIAA44-1446,1984.
Raspet, A,: «Performance Measurements of a Soaring
Bird.» Aenmautical Engineering Rmiew, I h m b e r
1950.
Taylor, M.J.H. et al: Milestones of Flight. Biddles Limited,
1983.
Vijgen, P.M. et al: ‘Wind-Tunnel Investigations of
Wings with Serrated Sharp Trailing Edges.» University
of Notre Dame, June 1989.
Von Daniken, E.: In Search of Ancient Gods. Bantam
Books, 1975.
Werle, M.J., et al: «Trailing Edge Separation/Stall
Alleviation.» AIAA lournal, April 1987.
Wilson, B.W.: Birds. Readings from Scientific
American. W.H. Freeman. 1980.
In all likelihood we’ll
have to settle for a
FANDOR (Flapping
Aerial Navigation
Designed Omithological
Rq1ica)–a
man-made, highly
sophisticated ornithopter.
But even this
will be no small feat.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
coauthored by
Irwin Ginsburgh, Ph.D.
and Geoffrey L. Taylor
Ginsburgh has B.S. and
Ph.D. degrees in physics
and muthematics. He was
an engineenneepnhnygs icist for
a major oil company and is
now semiretired, consulting
on explosions and new
technology. He has 50 U.S.
patents, has received five
R&D 100 moards, and has
au t hored a book published
by Simon & Schuster which
reconciles science’s version
of creation and the Bible’s
version.
Taylor has a background in
aeronuu tical engim’ng
and 20 years experience in
the turbine engine industry.
He has 7 patents, is a
co-winner of the Design
News 1988 Design of the
Year Award and has
m’ved one R&D 100
m r d for an outstanding
technical ddopment.
He curnntly operates a
consulting engimn’ng
company in Winnipeg,
Canada, where he is
working with the National
Research Council to develop
a remote, precision
measuring system.
I Scientific Predictions of
1 The Urantia Book
I
The Urantia Book contains much scientific information
that was revealed between 1925 and
1935 to an individual who cared little about the
material. Some of this information disagreed
with science’s version. Half a century later,
some of this originally conflicting information
now agrees with science, and some still does
not. The information deals primarily with creation
of the universe, the Earth and man, as well
as the fundamentals of matter and energy.
Theories about these kinds of subjects evolve as
science matures, and some of science’s ideas
change. These changes have brought about the
new agreement between science and The Urannow
agrees with science and can beconsidered
predictions of what science would discover
after 1935. We will examine some of these predictions
and see how many now agree with
science. If enough of them do, they can enhance
the believability of the rest of The Urantiu Book.
However, we must remember that, presently,
science only deals with the physical world,
while the book deals with physical, spiritual
and other matters.
Much of the scientific information in the
book agreed with science, but some differed.
Where they differed, the subjects cover matters
such as creation of the universe, creation of our
tia ~ooka,n d the now agreeing Urantia infor- world, creation of life, fundamentals of energy,
mation can be considered to have been etc. Many of these subjects cannot be tested in
predictions.
The authors consider about thirty predictions
that are in their areas of expertise or interest,
but there are many others in the book.
Science does not now know some of the information
in the book. There is a distinct possibility
that some of this Urantia information
may also turn out to be scientific predictions in
the future. If more of these predictions ultimately
agree with science, it will give the scientific
part of The Urantia Bookan authenticitythat
will enhance the believability of the rest of the
book. The authors examine about thirty scientific
predictions in The Urantiu Book, compare
them with science’s versions, see how much
agreement we can find, and how much more
we can anticipate. Those predictions that now
agree with science and that partly agree constitute
about one-third of all the predictions
considered.This can beconsidered remarkable.
Most predictions have yet to agree, but this is
to be expected of a book with a very long life.
More prediction analysis is warranted in the
future, as is more detailed study of individual
predictions.
I ‘ Introduction
After studying The Urantia Book, one comes
I to grips with a personal question: Is the book
completely correct or only partially so? Of
course, one could take it all on faith and believe
it completely. To help make this choice, we will
examine the book’s scientific information. The
scientific information in the book that we will
consider was either unknown to science in 1935
or differed from information generally accepted
by science in 1935. Some of this information
a laborat-ory. Science’s theories about such matters
are designed to fit the available evidence.
Historically, some theories change with time as
science matures and new data become available.
Those 1935 disag~mentsw hich now
agree with science a unique way of
testing the validity of the scientific part of The
Urantia Book. The remaining disagreements
may agree in the future, and these could provide
additional confirmation of the scientific
part of the book.
Limitations of Disclosure
The Urantia Book warns of the limitation ofthe
English language (‘469) for transmitting some
ideas, and these ideas may not get through
clearly or correctly. This is a problem with all
telepathically received books which discuss
matters that are unknown to the meiver. The
understanding of the receiver can be a limitation.
In addition, there are a number of
presenters, and some may be more skillful at
revelation than otherscspecially in dealing
with information that is unknown to the
receiver. Furthermore, much of the material
was originally recorded by stenography, and
translation from stenographic notes is not always
perfect, especially if the stenographer is
unfamiliar with the material. (The first edition
of Mind at Mischief by Dr. William S. Sadler,
Funk & Wagnalls 1929, has a note about the use
of stenography in the transmission of the Urantia
Papers.)
In dealing with future events, the names that
will be used in the future are not known, and
this may hinder identification. For example,the
book discusses «continental drift» on the
Earth’s surface, while science talks of «plate
tectonics»; but there is no problem with identification
in this case.
The book clearly states there is a time limitation
on the information that can be presented,
and information can only be provided if we will
soon discover it ourselves. This is an understandable
restriction on revelation, because
there are many cases on Earth where an advanced
culture introduced advanced technologyto
a less developed culture, and this usually
harmed or destroyed the less developed culture.
Analysis of Predictions
With revelation, a fully developed theory is
presented to a human receiver. If science finds
a need for a new theory or improvements to an
existing theory, the new theory starts out as an
idea in someone’s mind. The idea is changed,
expanded, modified, etc., until it appears to fill
the necessary data requirements. When the
theory is completed, it is publicly announced to
other scientists in the field, and the publication
date is usually considered as the discovery
date. Then it has to pass the acid test of experimental
verification and reverification by
other scientists. Other workers in the field compare
the old and the new theories and informally
decide which best explains the phenomenon.
There may be several years between conception
and verification. During this time period, the
idea may be discussed with other experts in the
field, and the new information is known to this
small group of experts. We will use the announcement
date as the discovery date, even
though the concept was known to a small group
before this. Members of this group might have
been an inadvertent source of information for
the presenters. We will also present major criticism
of some predictions, since it exists in the
real world and makes a more balanced presentation.
Science allows for improvements in its
theories, and these changes have given rise to
the scientific predictions in The Urantia Book.
Much of our material is science that has been
developed after 1935. There are two major
categories for the predictionsthose that disagreed
with science in 1935, and those that were
unknown to science in 1935-and one minor
one. There are several classes in each major
category. Much of the material in the fist category
involves science that has been developed
within the authors’ lifetimes. The categories
and the classes are:
I Predictions that disagreed with science in
1935
A Predictions that now agree with
science
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA C I , OKLAHOMA
B Predictions that partially agree with
science
C Predictions that still disagree with
science
I1 Predictions unknown to science in 1935
D Predictions that are actively being
researched
E Predictions that can be tested by
science today
F Predictions still unknown to science
111 Predictions that seriously disagree with
science
G Predictions with very strong disagreement
with science.
* * +
The A, B, and C categories cover a wide range
of subjects. The seven predictions of category A
can be considered remarkable. These predictions
clearly disagreed with science in 1935.
Since then, science has improved its theories
and created the agreement. Critics will say that
some developments were underway in 1935,
and a few experts in each field were aware of
some of the development work in 1935. But the
information was not generally known at that
time, and there was no assurance that the work
would succtvd. However, this information
matches the book’s limitation on revealing information
that we will develop shortly.The two
predictions of category B partially agree now,
and agreement could improve with time. Category
D is even more remarkable, since these
items were unknown to science in 1935.
Category C, with f~vper edictions, disagrees
with science, but that does not mean the predictions
are wrong. They just disagree with
science’s ideas on the subject. But the nature of
the information is such that science’s theories
could change in the future. The history of a
subject in science isoften a series oftheories that
improve with time.
Categories D, E, and I: are mostly unknown
to science even today and could be the most
intriguing, since future scientific discoveries
could verify some of these far-out predictions.
In fact, four of these predictions are being researched
today (category Dl, because science
now needs this kind of information. Five more
predictions can be tested with modem technology
(category E). Eight predictions are still unknown
to science (category F). This type of
information is important for a book with a very
long life. Verification of some of these predictions
in the future could make it easier to
believe other parts of The Urantia Bwk.
The thirty-odd predictions to be briefly discussed
can be categorized as follows:
Science allows for
improvements in its
theories, and these
changes have given
rise to the scientific
predictions in The
Urantia Book.
The seven predictions
of category A
can be considered
remarkable. These
predictions clearly
disagreed with
science in 1935.
Since then, science
has improved its
theories and created
the agreement.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
There is much
material in The
Urantia Book which
agrees with science.
These cannot be used
for predictions.
The Urantia Book
claims that healing
chemicals for wounds
will be discovered. . .
and this is a
prediction that has
partially come true.
AA Information known to science and The
Urantia Bwk: Speed of light.
I Predictions that disagreed with Science in
1935:
- Predictions that now agree with
science:
- Healing chemicals for wounds.
- Plate tectonics or continental
drift.
- Source of the sun’s energy.
- Temperature at center of sun (35
million degrees F.).
- Chemical element with atomic
number 101.
- Discovery of neutrino particle.
- Mass of the meson particle.
- Predictions that partially agree with
science:
- Creation of the sun.
- Creation of the Earth and the
moon.
- Predictions that still disagree with
science:
- Continuous creation of matter
and energy.
- Creation of our solar system.
- Life implanted on Earth 550
million-years ago.
- End of Cretaceous age.
- Breakup of fifth planet from the
sun (asteroids).
I1 Predictions unknown to science in 1935:
- Predictions actively Wig researched:
- Dark matter the universe.
- Organization of matter in a
superuniverse.
- ~rran~emeonf ts even superuniverses
in the grand universe.
- Use of DNA for human evolution.
- Predictions that can be tested today:
- Reduced gravity effect on
calcium ion.
- No gravity effect on free neutron
particles.
- Origin of sunspot cycle.
- ~welvepl anetsin our solar system.
- Two unknown types of energy.
- Predictions unknown at present:
- Cause of wave action of light.
- Speed greater than speed of light.
- Two kinds of gravity.
- Anti-gravity.
- Major energy of space.
- Ultirnaton particle.
- Neanderthal to Cro-magnon
transition.
- Life span of a star.
I11 Predictions that seriously disagree with
1 science: G. Predictions with very strong
I disagreement with Science:
- Periodicity of similar chemical elements-
seven elements spacing.
- Surface temperature of the sun.
Brief Discussion of Individual
Predictions
AA-Information known to science and The
Urantia Book
There is much material in The Urantia Bwk
which agrees with science. These cannot be
used for predictions. However, it is useful to
discuss oneof these subjects. Thebook says that
the speed of light is 186,280 miles per second
(960). This figure has six known numbers in it.
The speed of light measured by science in 1931
was 186,270 miles per second-10 miles per
second difference. By 1949, the value increased
to 186,282 miles per second, and it has
remained close to this ever since-2 miles per
second difference. This shows the degree of
accuracy of some of the information in the
book, about one part in 100,000. However, there
areother places where the information isvague
or incomplete.
Category I-Predictions that disagreed with
science in 1935
I.A.1 .-Healing Chonids for Wounds (Medicine,
*735)
[Parentheses show the field of science and
The Urantia Book page number. Scientific information
is available in any good modern encyclopedia
.]
The Urantia Book claims that healing chemicals
for wounds will be discovered. In 1928,
penicillin was discovered, but serious workdid
not start until ten years later. Sulfa drugs were
discovered in 1935 but came into use five years
later. Both of these chemicals fight infection and
speed up the healing process. Both discoveries
were essentially unknown in 1935, and this is a
prediction that has partially come true. The
book also speaks of healing chemicals that involve
the cells themselves, and the book hints
at other discoveries of this type which will be 1 made in the future.
I.A.2.-Plate Tectonics or Continental Drift (Geology,
*663,668)
The book says that the continents drift slowly
over the surface of the Earth, and the drift
started about 700 million years ago. This was
proposed in the early years of the twentieth
century and had not been proved by 1935.
However, a look at the east coast of South
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
America and the west coast of Africa readily
shows the ancient fit. But science requires
proof, and proof came in 1969 by matching
subsurface earth layers on the two continents
and finding an ocean floor crack between the
continents. However, the start of the drift was
recently computed by science as starting 200
million years ago, based on the oldest ocean
bottom rocks in the Atlantic Ocean. Another
prediction essentially came true even if science
calls this plate tectonics.
I.A.3.-Source of the Sun’s Energy (Physics,
Astrophysics, «464)
The book says the sun generates energy by
combining four hydrogen atoms to form one
helium atom, using carbon as a catalyst. This is
a mass-to-energy conversion. Science worked
out this technology in 1939. This prediction also
came true.
I.A.4.-Temperature at the Center of the Sun
(Physics, Astrophysics, ‘463)
The book claims that the temperature at the
center of the sun is 35 million degrees F. in the
mid ’30s, science only guessed at a temperature
of millions of degrees. An estimate of 29 million
degrees was made in the late ’30s. This is good
agreement.
IA5.–Chemical Element with Atomic Number
101 (Nuclear Physics, «478)
The book says that the very heavy element,
number 101 (the number relates to the structure
and electric charge of the atomic nucleus)
would be so unstable that it would disintegrate
radioactively almost instantaneously. In 1935,
the heaviest naturally occurring element
known was Uranium, number 92, and it disintegrated
slowly. Experiments to make heavier
elements were done in the late ’30s, but with
little success–certainly not up to number 101.
This was finally done years later, was labeled
Mendelevium, and it turned out to be stable for
about an hour. This is not a bad fit for the
prediction, but critics will say that a competent
scientist could have made a good guess.
I.A.6.-Discovery of the Neutrino Particle
(Nuclear Physics, ‘464,479)
The book mentions a small, unnamed,
chargeless particle which could be the particle
that science calls the neutrino. The particle was
theoretically predicted in 1931 and was labeled
the neutrino; but because it was so difficult to
detect, it was not found until 1938. Here again
critics might argue about an educated guess,
but the prediction did come true.
I.A.7.-Mass of the Meson Particle (Nuclear
Physics, «479)
The book uses the term «mesotron» instead
of the presently used word «meson.» The mesotron
term was used in the 1930s when the early
theoretical work was done on this particle. The
presenters were familiar with the mesotron
work. The book claims the mesotron has a mass
that is 180 times the mass of the electron.
Science has found that the mass is 207 times the
electron mass. This is a small discrepancy.
However, the presenter was aware of the term
mesotron,and this shows knowledgeof human
thought. This prediction does agree with science,
but it was made at a time coincident with
the discovery.
Score: Seven predictions agree with science.
I.B.I.4reation of the Sun (Cosmology, Stellar
Physics, «651)
Science says that the sun was created when
an enormous cloud of gas contracted by gravity
and heated itself by gas compression until it
was hot enough to become a solar furnace. The
book says the samething except that there were
about one million other suns that were also
created from the same enormous Andronover
Nebula. Their creation took about two billion
years, and they were ejected from the nebula
after formation. Science does not know about
the other million suns or the nebula or the
ejection from the nebula, but there is good overlap
in this case.
I.B.Z.4reation of the Earth and Moon (Cosmology,
Astronomy, «659)
Science says that the Earth condensed when
the sun did and picked up some material by
accretion of meteors and planetesimals. The
moon was created when a planetesimal hit the
Earth and ejected enough material that coalesced
to form the moon. Interestingly, an old,
discredited theory said that the moon was tom
away from the Earth, leaving the pacific basin,
but did not specify the cause. The book says
that the arth hand the moon coalesced asa pair
of twin planets after the giant Angona Nebula
came close to the sun and pulled away enough
material to form all the planets. The sun and the
moon both grew by accretion-the Earth enormously
so, compared to the moon. Again, there
is some overlap, but differences in details.
Score: Two predictions partially agree with
science. In time, this number could increase.
l.C.I.–Creation of Matter and Energy (Cosmology,
Physics, *49,55,468)
The book says that matter and energy are
continuously being created in many places in
The book says the
sun generates energy
by combining four
hydrogen atoms to
form one helium
atom, using carbon
as a catalyst.. .
This prediction also
came true.
The book mentions a
small, unnamed,
chargeless particle
which could be the
particle that science
calls the neutrino.. . .
Here again critics
might argue about an
educated guess, but
the prediction did
come true.
SCIENTJFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
The Urantia Book
does speak of an
enormous disturbance
in our part of
the universe eight to
ten billion years ago,
which could have
been a local big bang.
Science has produced
the building blocks
of life, but has never
combined them to
produce any lifelike
structure that can
reproduce itself.
Science has never
craated life from
scratch and does not
know how to do it.
the universe, especially beyond the seven superuniverses.
Science has a discredited theory
about continuous creation, but the accepted
theory today is that all the energy in our universe
was created ten to fifteen billion years ago
in an instant and in one place. This is called the
Big Bang theory. This energy has been spreading
out ever since and has resulted in the entire
universe. Interestingly some of the newest experimental
results are raising questions about
the Big Bang. The Urantia Book does speak of an
enormous disturbance in our part of the universe
eight to ten billion years ago, which could
have been a local big bang. While there is disagreement,
perhaps there is a glimmer of agreement.
Remember that science’s measurements
are all made here on Earth and are used to
explain events that happened fifteen billion
years ago and very far away. The extreme extrapolations
in time and distance could lead to
mneous results. I ranember that in the twentieth
century, science’s universe kept getting olderand
older. Has science found the right agenow?
I.C.2.–Creation of Our Solar System (Cosmology,
‘655)
In the 1930s, one of science’s proposed theories
was that a massive body came close to the
sun and tore out huge amounts of matter which
later coalesced to form the planets. This theory
is no longer accepted, and the best theory now
says that the planets were created by the coalescence
of matter adjacent to the sun at the same
time the sun coalesced. The book says that the
giant Angona Nebula came close to the sun and
tore away lots of matter which coalesced to
form the planets. This particular theory explains
the additional sevendegree tilt of the
sun’s axis to the plane of the planets. The best
science theory, above, does not explain this tilt.
In this case, the book and science originally
agreed, but science has changed its mind. However,
agement may return in the future. Remember
that there are several hundred astronomer/
cosmologists in the world, and they reach a
consensus about which theory best fits all the
available scientific data; changes in this theory
can occur.
I.CJ.-Life Implanted on Earth 550 Million Years
Ago (Pnleontology, ‘667)
The book says that life was implanted on the
Earth 550 million years ago, but it does not
specify exactly what was implanted. Science
says that life started over 3 billion years ago, as
singlecell life. This is based on circumstantial
evidence of ancient cellular structures that
resemble living singlecell structures. Science
also says that multi-cell life with significant
DNA-structures in a cell that control all
phases of cell life-appeared 600 million years
ago. The differences here may ultimately be
resolved. Science has produced the building
blocks of life, but has never combined them to
produce any lifelike structure that can reproduce
itself. Science has never created life from
scratch and does not know how to do it.
I.C.4.-End ofthe Cretaceous Age: 65Million Years
Ago (Geology, *690)
Science knows that the dinosaurs and many
other classes of life disappeared about 65 million
years ago in what is called the end of the
Cretaceous age. Science’s newest theory is that
a 10-milediameter meteor struck the Earth;
this created a long-lasting dust and cloud cover
that blocked sunlight and adversely affected
plant growth and, thus, many other living
species. The crucial clue is the presence of a
high concentration of the heavy element, iridium,
in the boundary layer of deposits at theend
of the Cretaceous. Iridium is not plentiful at the
Earth’s surface; it is found deep in the Earth or
on certain meteors. The book says that the
greatest lava flow of all time occurred at theend
of the Cretaceous-it covered parts of several
continents. It could havecome from deep in the
Earth, thus providing a source of iridium.
I.C.5.-Breakup of the Fifth Planet from the Sun
(Astronomy, Cosmology, *658)
The book says that the fifth planet from the
sun was slowly attracted by the gravity of the
giant sixth planet, Jupiter. When it was close
enough, Jupiter’s gravity pulled the fifth planet
apart. Science now says there never was a fifth
planet, and that the asteroids are pieces of space
matter (planetesimals) that never formed a
planet.
Score: Five presently unfilled predictions.
[The following category is even more interesting
than category A, because this material
was not known to science in 1935 and is now
being actively investigated.]
Category 11-Pwdictions Unknown to Science
in 1935
II.D.l.-DarkMatter in the Universe (Astronomy,
‘1 73)
The book discusses dark matter and dark
islands of space and says that we will discover
dark matter soon. Because dark matter cannot
be seen (it emits no light), science knows little
about it. Science thinks that some dark matter
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
In 1935f science
thought that all the
galaxies were
uniformly djstributed
throughout
space- The em’stence
of hrge voids
between galaxies
and the dusteing
of galaxies have
only ~ecentlyb een
discovered.
Scientific Name
is different from normal matter, such as a dense,
cooled star. Recently, science has found several
good theoretical reasons for the existence of
such matter. Serious efforts are being made to
find such matter, and positive results can be
expected in the future. This has a very good
chance of coming true.
II.D.2.—Organiution of Matter in a S u p ~ n i –
wrse (~stronomy»,1 67,168)
The book describes the organization of matter
in a superuniverse. Science knows about
some of this information, but does not know it
all. In fact, science does not know about superuniverses.
The book says that science will discover
some of this information soon. The table
below compares the equivalent information
fmm science and 7ke Urantia Bwk. The first
column lists the Urantia criteria for the number
of inhabited worlds in parts of a superuniverse.
The other columns are selfexplanatory. There
is a question as to whether the Milky Way
galaxy is a local universe or a minor sector of a
superuniverse.
11.D3.-Location of Seven Superuniverses in the
Grand Universe (Astronomy, 764,165)
The book describes the seven superuniverses
circling around Havona in a planar elliptical
course. It also says that science has almost
found superuniverse number seven and will
find the rest soon. In 1935, science thought that
all the galaxies were uniformly distributed
throughout space. The existence of large voids
between galaxies and the clustering of galaxies
have only recently been discovered. This also
has a chance of coming true.
11.D.4.-Use of DNA to Evolve Human Species
(Genetics, ‘734)
The book says that the human species will no
longer evolve by natural means. Scientific
knowledge of DNA will be used in the future
to improve the human species. Science is just
getting started to map the entire human DNA
genome. After this is completed, we may be
our world Urantia Earth
1 ,m system constellation
100,000 constellation
10 million local universe Milky Way galaxy
1 billion minor sector l»Gd P U P
100 billion major sector cluster of galaxies
10 trillion superuniverse supercluster
100 trillion grand universe universe
able to start to understand how the DNA functions.
Even now we are just starting to attack
some genetic diseases which are apparently
caused by errors in the DNA. This will pxubably
come true in the future.
Score: Four predictions with good chances of
coming true.
II.E.l.-Redud Gravity E@ on Calcium Ion
(Physics, ‘462)
Calcium atoms usually have two outermost
electrons and are electrically balanced. At very
high temperatures, one of the negatively
charged electrons can be removed, and the
resulting ion is positively charged. The book
claims that such ions are slightly less affected
by gravity than normal calcium atoms (beyond
the mere loss of an electmn’s mass), and thb
accounts for the higher concentration of calcium
atoms on the sun’s surface rather than
inside. This reduced gravity is quite unexpected,
and might even be worth a Nobel prize
to the scientist who discovers it. A test of this
would require generating a beam of calcium
atoms and a beam of high-temperature calcium
ions, and comparing theeffed of gravity on the
two beams.
II.E.2.-No Gravity Effect on Free Neutrons
(Physics, ‘476)
The book says there is no gravity pull on free,
uncharged, unattached electronic energy particles.
Wetakethistoinc1udefreeneutrons.This
is also quite unexpected, and might likewise be
worth a Nobel prize. It might be checked by
generating a very weak beam of neutrons and
measuring the effect of gravity on the beam.
Il.E.3.-The Origin of the Sunspot Cycle
(Astronomy, «459,656)
The book says that our 11-year sunspot cycle
is a slow remnant of the short-term (3.5 day)
Cepheid Variable phase of the sun. The
Cepheid phase of a star is a cyclic variation of
the brightness of a star, and the frequency of the
variation and the brightness are related. Al-
Number of Inhabited Worlds Urantia Book Name
SCIEIUTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
Astronomers are
presently looking for
other planets by
watching for ve y
small changes in
motions of the outer
planets, which could
be caused by the
gravity of two
faraway planets.
The book discusses
anti-gravity and
some parficles that
are a p e d by it.
Science speculates
that anti-gravity
may exist, but has
fao ideas about it.
though science does not make this claim, it is
plausible. A study would require accurate brightness
measurements of very long-term Cepheid
Variable stars and precise, space-based, longterm
measurements of the variations in the
sun’s brightness.
II.E.4.-Tu~elve Planets in Our Solar System
(Astronomy, ‘656)
While science knows of nine planets and the
remnants or pre-planetesimals of a tenth, the
book says there are twelve planets in the sun’s
family. Astronomers are presently looking for
other planets by watching for very small
changes in motions of the outer planets, which
could be caused by the gravity of two faraway
planets. The two space probes that are traveling
beyond Pluto, Pioneer 10 and 11, are also being
watched for small changes that might be
caused by the gravity of another planet or two.
II.E.5.-Two Unknown Types of Energy (Physics,
‘4 74)
The book discusses all the types of electromagnetic
radiation known to science. It also
discusses two other types of radiation that
science does not know. One is called infraultimatonic
rays and is involved in the first
stage of created energy. The other is called ultimatonic
rays and involves the conversion of
energy to ultimaton particles (see sixth prediction
of next section). Some of the experimental
work with highenergy machines may lead to
discovery of these rays.
Score: Five predictions awaiting further
work.
I I . f . l . 2 a u s e of Waw Adion of Light (Physics,
*461)
The book says that light consists of particles,
but another energy, unknown on Earth, acting
on the light causes the particles to bunch
together in a wavelike fashion. Science knows
that light has wave and particle properties, but
does not know why both properties exist.
111.2.-Speed Grater than the Speed of Light
(Physics, Theology, *260)
Science maintains that a physical body cannot
move faster than the speed of light. The
book discusses speeds faster than the speed of
light, but it is talking about spiritual matter
rather than physical.
IIS3.-Two Kinds of Gravity (Physics, «225)
Science is familiar with the gravitational attraction
between two physical bodies, but it
does not understand the fundamentals. The
book calls this linear gravity. It also talks about
radial gravity, which apparently works between
the central universe and certain other
bodies-free ultimatons-and between the
central universe and energy. Science has conducted
very difficult experiments to see if linear
gravity affects light energy. It does, but there
may be enough of a discrepancy to account for
another type ot grawty.
II.F.4.-Anti-gravity (Physics, ‘1 01)
The book discusses anti-gravity and some
particles that are affected by it. Science speculates
that anti-gravity may exist, but has few
ideas about it.
II1.5.-Major Energy of Space (Physics, ‘467)
The book says that light and electricity are
not the major energy of space. Apparently
neitheris gravity. Thebooksaid that sciencedid
not know about it in 1935. This energy apparently
flows through space in circuits. One
wonders if the book is referring to the strong
nuclear force which science now knows about,
and which is involved in the conversion of
mass to energy in the stars. However, this energy
does not flow through space.
111.6.-The Ultimaton Particle(Physics, ‘465,467,
472,473,476)
The book discusses the fundamental particle,
the ultimaton. This is the first mass particle that
energy is converted to. One hundred ultimatons
make up an electron, but they do not
use orbits of motion as electrons do; perhaps
some kind of structure is involved. Science has
no idea that electrons are made up of smaller
particles.
IIS.7.-Neanderthal to Cro-magnon Transltlon
(Anthropology, ‘890)
Science is aware that there was a rapid
change from neanderthal types of humans to
cro-magnon or modern man about 35,000 years
ago. Science does not know how this happened
so quickly, slnce evolution will not account tor
such aquick transformation.The book says that
the descendants ot superior extratemstr la15 –
namely, Adam and Eve–crossbred w~thin –
digenous Earth people to create modern man,
who wiped out the neanderthals.
II.F.8.-Life of an Ordinary Star (Stellar Physics,
‘1 72,465)
The book says that an ordinary star, like the
sun, can shine for billions of years (*465).
Science also calculates that stars can generate
enough energy to shine for billions of years. But
the book says (‘464) stars that are in the
mainstream of space energy flow can acquire
more energy and shine indefinitely. On page
172, the bookclaimsstar lifeof trillionsof years.
The existence of a special space energy flow is
unknown to science, as is the existence of flow
channels for this energy.
Score: 8 predictions science does not know
about.
Category 111-Predictions mat Are in Complete
Disagreement with Science
lIl.G.1.-Periodicity of Similar Chemical Elements
(Chemistry, ‘480,lO)
The book says that if the chemical elements
are listed by increasing atomic weight (relates
to atomic structure), the lighter ones repeat
their chemical properties every seventh active
element. However, there are inactive elements
in the sequence (the noble gases, such as helium
and neon), and this stretches the actual sequence
to eight elements. This is the number
that science Gses, and has known this for over
100 years. Some recently complded work has
shown that some of the noble gases are slightly
reactive, and this is now complicating the problem.
The book talks about a repetition every
seven elements, because seven is an important
spiritual number.
Ill.G.2.-Surface Temperature of the Sun (Astronomy,
«463)
The book says that the surface temperature
of the sun is 6,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Science
measures the temperature of the sun as 6,000
degrees Centigrade, or 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
This could be due to any of a number of
errors. There is another solar temperature mentioned
in the same paragraph, and this one
agrees with science’s value.
[These errors mostly involve numbers or
values-and emrs could be expected. It is interesting
that there are such a small number of
serious emrs in the book-less than ten percent
of the predictions we considered.]
Score: 2 disagreements which could bc explainable
or accidental errors
Conclusions
The tlurty-three discussed predictions involve
subjects that science developed or discovered
around 1935 or sometime afterward. Most of
these predictions come from these Urantia
papers: 57, Origin of Urantia; 58, Life Establishment
on Urantia; and 41, Physical Aspects
of the Local Universe. A tabulation of results
follows:
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
Category I-Predictions that disagreed with
science in 1935.
- Seven predictions now agree with science
(50% of category I).
- Two predictions partly agree with science
(almost 15% of category 1).
- Five predictions still disagree with science
(about 35% of category I).
Category 11-Predictions that were unknown
to science in 1935:
- Four are actively being researched
and could agree with science in the near
future (25% of category 11).
- Five more can now be investigated
with science’s technology. There is a
chance that some of these will agree with
science in the future.
- Eight mom are still unknown to science.
Category 111-Predictions that seriously disagreed
with science in 1935:
- Two such predictions are discussed,
and there is a good possibility that the
errors are all accidental. They usually involve
numbers or values of things. This is
less than 10% of all the predictions considered
and is a small percentage.
There are many other predictions in the
book. Those that have been analyzed are the
easiest for the authors to judge. he^ cover the
subjects of physics, cosmology, energy, etc.
There are more analyses that can be done by
experts in other fields and in later years when
more predictions may have come true.
Class A can be considered remarkable for
- This information disagreed with science
in 1935, but 50 years later there is agreement.
However, since the book was published in
1955, critics could claim that the 1955 date is
applicable. For the 1955 date, the predictions
are not exceptional. They are obviously in accord
with The Urantia Rook requirement that
revelation be limited to information we will
discover in the near future. Category B predictions
have reached partial agreement with
science and may agree more in the future.
Together, A and B are about two thirds of
category I. This indicates that some of the advanced
technical information in The Urantia
Book is correct. The presenters had access to
information that wasunknown to the human
mind. In addition, the information comes from
a number of presenters and covers a number of
fields of science. he remarkable predictions of
this information make it easier to believe some
of the other material in the book. Category C
There are more
analyses that can be
done by experts in
other fields and in
later years when
more predictions may
have come true.
The remarkable
predictions of this
information make it
easier to belime some
of the other material
in the book.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
The possibility of
predictions coming
true in thefuture is
very important for
a book with a very
long life.
still disagrees with science, but these are quite
fundamental subjects, and scientific data are
often quite sparse. This does not mean that
category C predictions are wrong. They disagree
with science’s present theories. Science’s
theories on some of these matters could change,
and there could be more agreement in the
future.
Categories D, E, and Fare even more intriguing,
b&use they were unknown to science in
1935 and even 1955. Category D has four
predictions that are well on their way to reaching
agreement with science. Categories E and F
involve some far-out subjects, and, if some of
these agree with science in the future, this could
enhance the believability of the rest of the book.
The possibility of predictions coming true in
the future is very important for a book with a
very long life. The book says that knowledge of
God comes through the spirit, and science now
cannot help with that.
here al;! other subjects that are discussed in
the book that may be amenable to prediction
analysis. These include material such as spirit,
mind, the Thought Adjuster, social science, etc.
These should be combed to try to find objective
material that could be new or predictive. Most
likely, such information will be subjective, and
this kind of material is very difficult to substantiate.
However, it might be interesting to
develop a survey questionnaire that could be
used to compare experienced readers with new
readers of the book. The results could be of
great interest to other readers. However, even
if such predictions are found, they would just
make the book easier to believe. They would
not necessarily pmve the correctness of other
parts of the book.
Revelation is matched to the needs of those
who receive it. It may not completely cover a
subject, and could even omit major parts of a
subject. It will not pmvide information that will
become useful far in the future. In this century,
some readers’ scientific needs are more stringent
than those of other readers. This could be
helpful to all readers, since it adds a factor of
revelatory truth to some of the scientific
material in the book, and implies that the rest
of the book is more believable. One final piece
of advice. Some of the secrets of understanding
The Urantia Book are repetition, thinking, and
not reading the book sequentially. Start and
read what you can understand; then go back
and study the other parts.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITYI OKLAHOMA
Love and Science
(Speech text and references are based on excerpts
from aforthcoming bwk entitled, The Technology
of Love, written with the assistance of Wesley L.
Tennant, to whom the speech is dedicated.)
If Love and Science were to get together, most
of us would expect Science to move in on Love
–and then probably kick Love out in the end.
Then again, this might not be the actual
result. When Freud went looking for scientific
principles at work in the human psyche, he
concluded that love was one of the foremost
factors operating within us humans. He found
love to be closely tied to the initial principle of
all life forms; what he called the «pleasure principle.»
Freud even went so far as to suggest that
love might be a basic force of nature. And Jesus
hints at a most fundamental role for Love when
he suggests that even the rocks can express
their affection toward him if the people do not.
Modern physicists will not likely be impressed
with such words, but it is such hints of
love being related to fundamental operations of
Nature that catches our scientific eye. As, for
example, when Freud writes that all of our
‘life’s instincts.. .are best comprised under the
name low; their purpose would be to form
living substance into ever greater unities, so
that life may be prolonged and brought to
higher development.»‘
This human tendency toward «higher
development» caught the scientific eye of
Abraham Maslow. He suspected some fundamental
principle at work which could account
for it. Maslow found that we humans
havecertain basic needs such as air, water, food,
shelter, sleep and sex. But he also found that
safety and security, love and belongingness,
and self-esteem by others were basic needshumans
actually become mentally ill and even
physically ill without them. After these basic or
«survival» needs are satisfied, he found that a
more developmental thrust emerges in
humans, a human tendency to pursue more
expressive or growth needs.2 These Maslow
defined as the need for Meaningfulness or Purposefulness
in our lives, the need for Slf-sufficiency
or Self-organization, for a bit of
Spontaneity or playful amusements which frequently
involve elements of Chance, the need
for Effortlessness or Efficiency the need for
Richness or Complexity. Yet we also have needs
for Simplicity, Order, Organization, Nonpartiality,
and Completeness. He found the need
for Necessity; that is, we have to be able to
consistently depend on some things. Maslow
found the need to pursue Perfection, even if we
never reach it; the need for Individuality or
Uniqueness, Aliveness, and a Wholeness to include
what one of his subjects, Einstein, labeled
«the ideals that had lighted his way»: Beauty,
Goodness and T r ~ t h . ~
Maslow found this pyramid of «needs» to
include those which, as Einstein’s words
reflect, guide us toward our highest development,
our fullest self-actualization as individuals.
Maslow found these needs to be
irreducible innate tendencies; our need for
Simplicity cannot be met by our need for Order
any more than we can meet our need for sleep
by eating more food. The problem is that
Maslow’s work has long lacked an integrating
factor, a fundamental principle, which ties all
these needs together. Actually, Maslow
suspected and wrote, much like Freud, that
Love may be just such an integrator?
And we are now ready to do what Maslow
left undone. If we consider our actual experience,
we do find something of Freud’s
«pleasure principle» at work within us. But we
seem to base our needs-fulfilling judgments not
on just immediate satisfaction or pleasure; rather
it seems the more appropriate broker of our
needs is that subtle, more encompassing calculation
of being pleased. This broader calculation
may even ac~ommodatep ain; and frequently
this calculation involves pleasing others.
And we humans are not alone in figuring out
this calculus, nor were we first to have it.
Trainers of dogs and other advanced species
ttll us that these animals do not perform just in
order to be fed, but to please their masters; praise
is the trainer’s greatest tool. Many would, in
fact, consider evidence in dogs and dolphins a
surer sign of a scientific principle at work than
that found in man, woman, and child.
And just what is this scientific principle that
seems to be at work at the core of Maslow’s
pyramid of needs? If we follow Freud and
as low’s clues, and a few others, we will find
that it is the invariant element at the core of
Love, the intent-to-please. Our entire human endeavor
can, in fact; be summarized as an intentwn
to please our internal needs-structure, or
that of others. We see that to please always
means meeting this pyramid of needs; whether
in the form of food or shelter, or in the form of
meeting needs for Efficiency, Order, Individuality,
Wholeness, or any of the other
BY
Charles E. Hansen
A student of The Urantia
Bookfor 13 years, Hansen
holds a B.S. in business
engineen’ng and an M.B.A.
He is a professional
economist in Silver Spring,
Ma yland, and has served
on the President’s Commission
on Cost Control.
Maslow found the
need to pursue
Perfection, even if
we never reach it; the
need for Individuality
or Uniqueness,
Aliveness, and a
Wholeness to include
what one of his
subjects, Einstein,
la beled «the ideals
that had lighted his
way»: Beauty, Goodness
and Truth.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
Whatever Love is,
being pleased is
how we ultimately
experience it; much
as Jesus himself
defined it in his
words, «I do always
those things that
please the Father.»
[Einstein] compared
the requisite state of
mind for doing his
physics to «that of
the religious worshiper
or the lover»-
«closely akin to that
which has possessed
the religious geniuses
of all ages. «
needs up through Beauty, Goodnessand Truth.
But meeting needs in the most pleasing manner
also involves an integration, however subtle:
we enjoy our food more if it is beautifully
colored and arranged; we try to keep both
Simplicity and some Order in our lives at the
same time, and so on. So if we stack up all the
needs in Maslow’s pyramid form (putting the
basic survival needs on the bottom, and the
expressive or growth needs on top, peaking
with Beauty, Goodness and Truth), and then
m our intent-to-please right down the core of
it, we find our solution, a solution spanning all
our human needs. Maslow’s missing integrator
is the intent-to-please.
This is, of course, the same invariant at the
core of all of our energy expressions of Love.
Whatever Love is, being pleased is how we
ultimately experience it; much as Jesus himself
defined it in his words, «I doaluxlys thosethings
that please the Father.» For Love’s actions must
always please the object or intend to do so. So
we seem to encounter a case of perfect symmetry.
Our intention to please ourselves and
the intent to please others is essentially the
same invariant principle at work as Jesus suggests
with the Golden Rule. And it can operate
only in relationship. We get nowhere, our
development stops cold, by attempting to
shortcut this symmetry and please ourselves
without pleasing others in the process. In fact,
modem ecology informs us that we had best
consider even what pleases the trees; that is,
what satisfies their needs.
We begin to see why the language of Love
and its invariant, theintent-to-please, infiltrates
all of our seeking and finding-whether we are
seeking our most fundamental survival needs
for food, safety and esteem, or our higher, more
expressive needs for Beauty, Goodness and
Truth-the peak of which to many of us is
actually finding relationship with God himself
and partaking of His thoughts.
Now this talk about Love and about ‘king
pleased» is a long, long way from the cold halls
of hard science. However, if we listen to perhaps
the greatest scientist of our era, Einstein,
we find something rather strange. Einstein expressed
his entire scientific endeavor as not
only one of being guided by Beauty, Goodness
and Truth, but more so as wanting to «know
God’s thoughts.» Said Einstein, «The rest are
details.05 And how is this to be done? Einstein
gives his formulae: he recommends «the compassion
to embrace all living creatures and the
whole of nature in its beauty.’I6 He even defined
this «embrace» as one of «cosmic religious feeling»
which embodies the highest statesof being
pleased. Einstein called it «joy,» «wonder,»
«awe,» and «rapturous amazement.» To be
more specific he compared the requisite state of
mind for doing his physics to «that of the
religious worshiper or the lovern7-«closely
akin to that which has possessed the religious
geniuses of all ages.’@
Of course Einstein’s views are not held in
particularly high regard by most scientists
today. Einstein believed there are objectively
real foundations in the universe, fundamental,
unchanging or invariant principles that we do
not invent in our heads, but have to pry out of
Nature by using our heads. In this process
Einstein held that we had to rely upon a «preestablished
harmony» between ourselves and
the universe. Such talk finds little favor with the
prevailing scientific views that there are no
foundations in the universe, no objective
reality, but only one (or more) that we create in
our minds for our minds to satisfy our local
cultural and linguistic conventions. Any suggestion
that we are dealing with the real Mind
of God, and in even approximate harmony or
relationship therewith, as Einstein held, is
hopelessly outdated in most halls of Science.
Einstein’s demise is usually credited to the
loss of his famous arguments about quantum
physics with Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg.
Quantum theory had reached a point,
with much help from Einstein, where only
statistical methods could be used to make
predictions at the atomic and subatomic levels.
The mathematics and methods of quantum
theory, by their own definition, act as kind of a
blanket beneath which we cannot peek. Quantum
events add up to give nice, smooth curves
in the blanket, but no individual event can be
precisely predicted. The vast majority of
physicists and other scientists considered this a
sign that, at its foundations, reality operates
only by randomness or Chance. Einstein, and a
few others, objected. We cannot logically say
what was happening beneath the quantum
blanket, argued Einstein, and surely it could
not be pure Chance because God would not
play di& with the universe.
Obviously, such arguments did not carry
much weight in physics. Einstein left the discussions
muttering to himself and went off to
work alone for the next thirty years on a better
solution. Meanwhile, most of us were told that
the solution was already found. However the
actual case among physicists is still much as
Einstein expressed it in 1940: «For the time
being, we have to admit that we do not possess
any general theoretical basis for physics, which
can be regarded as its logical fo~ndation.»~
Today we actually have about six or seven
«acceptable» versions of reality, or nonreality,
among practicing physicists, and no agreeable
logical foundation. As many others have
pinted out, Chance holds its current position
as prime contender as a matter of default, and
a somewhat faulty one at that: physicists cannot
actually find any pure Chance operating
even in quantum physics. Chance always
manages to behave within certain limits. Furthermore,
by using it to explain anything,
Chance actually explains nothing. It has huge
support, however, from those who hold that
there are no explanations. You get some idea of
why Einstein referred to the new «religion» that
had overtaken physics, and retired from the
debate.
Although stalled in his pursuit of a solution,
Einstein tells us that in order to make any
progress in establishing more logically
coherent foundations for physics we would
have to search out some new fundamental
principle of Nature.Io It would, in fact, have to
encompass the totality of our experience, up to
and including humanity itself. Its general features
would have to be quite easily grasped: it
could not be called a ‘logical foundation» if
only a few experts could understand it.
Now we normally think that breakthroughs
in physics require crucially complex mathematics,
supercomputers, and billion-dollar
particle smashers. On the other hand, many of
the crucial breakthroughs in modem physics
have been the result of attempting to explain
the most obvious. Modern quantum theory
arose from a discrepancy in physics that had
hot metals glowing the wrong color-something
the average iron-monger could observe.
And Einstein’s monumental achievement of
General Relativity he credited to the simple
thought of a man falling off a roof!
I bring these examples to attention not to
suggest that we should avoid penetrating into
nature’s hidden realms, but that by simply observing
«what is before our sight,» as Jesus
suggests, we might understand «that which is
hidden.»ll From this perspective, it seems that,
while we spend vast resources interrogating
everything from quarks and electrons to the far
distant stars and galaxies, the most profound
unification of physics, chemistry, and biology-
Humanity itself–exists right before our
eyes. And similar to the «ultraviolet catastrophe»
which marked the end of the old
physics, humanity does more than glow the
wrong color. According to our most advanced
physics, we humans should not exist at allexcept
perhaps as a «fortuitous accident» that
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
logically cannot be distinguished from the
impossible.
There is no question that Science has accomplished
great things while keeping humanity in
a «separate department of accidents.» Howwer,
it is highly unlikely that any ultimate
unification of scientific knowledge–including
physics-can occur with such segregation in
effect. There are sound reasons, therefore, why
top physicists, such as Roger Penrose, author of
The Emperor’s New Mind, are now looking at the
peak of humanity, the human mind, as the
possible key to the future understanding of the
laws of physics.
Penrose suggests that the most fundamental
laws of nature are somehow displayed in the
operations of our consciousness and its intentional
creativity, essentially the way our mind
operates-surely one of the least likely places
for traditional physics to look. In his book’s
Foreword we are told that «Penrose is one of an
increasingly large band of physicists who think
that Einstein was not being stubborn or muddle-
headed when he said his little finger’ told
him that quantum mechanics is incomplete.»
Penrose asks, ‘Is there a level beyond quantum
mechanics.. ., perhaps even deeper laws, essential
for the operation of a mind?»12
If we spelled that mind with a capital ‘%I,»
we would, of course, be heading back toward
«God’s thoughts» where Einstein held physics
to begin. If the universe itself does proceed
from God’s Loving thoughts, Nature itself
should, one would think, bear some indelible
mark of this in its most fundamental sense and
dynamic. Indeed it probably does: recall that
the invariant at the core of Love is not derived
from any considerations of God or theology.
That is not, for example, how Freud encountered
it, nor why he granted Love cosmological
status. Love’s invariant is derived directly and
solely from the most general features of how
our minds operate in our everyday needs-fulfilling
experience. As some of you will recall
from ‘The Mathematics of Love,» it appears to
be an invariant that penetrates all of Reality on
much the same order as any other scientifically
founded invariant principle. The Urantia Bwk
takes much the same approach. On page 137
we find what appears to be the invariant at the
core of Love described: ‘There is operative
throughout all time and space and with regard
to all reality of whatever nature an inexorable
and impersonal law [invariant principle]
which is equivalent to the function of a cosmic
providence.»
This sure sounds like something Science is
bound to encounter sooner or later–and will
. . .while we spend
vast resources interrogating
everything
from quarks and
electrons to the far
distant stars and
galaxies, the most
profound unification
of physics, chemistry,
and biology-
Humanity itselfexists
right before
our eyes.
Pen rose suggests
that the most fundamental
laws of
nature are somehow
displayed in the
operations of our
consciousness and
its intentional
creativity, essentially
fhe way our mind
operates-surely one
of the least likely
places for traditional
physics to look.
SCIENTIFIC SWOSIUM I1
. . .a beauty of
mathematics is this
tendency to almost
organize itself.
. . .the integrator of
all of the pre-logical
criteria upon which
mathematics stands,
seems to be the
intent-to-please…
and a certain «joy»
that mathematicians
acclaim when they
find a solution or
grasp some major
«truth.»
have to learn to live with.
So let’s take a closer look at physicist
Penrose’s work. Here we find some common
ground to investigate regardless of whether we
create reality in our heads or use our heads to
relate to a Reality that is really «out there.»
Whichever view we take, we find the most
fundamental language used by Science to
describe reality is mathematics. Although
mathematics is an invented language, «created»
in our minds we might say, the first mathematics
were probably not developed to solve
«mathematical» problems in just our heads.
Mathematics was more likely developed because
someone needed a simpler or more eficient
method of ordering everyday, real-world
experience-keeping track of fish, sticks,
stones and loans. This suggests that the human
strivings for Simplicity, Efficiency, and Order
predate or «underlie» the first mathematics.
In fact, even the most advanced mathematics,
which we usually consider as depending
solely on deductive Necessity, actually depend
on many other equally valid, pre-logical, «judgment-
forming criteria,» as Penrose labels them.
They are almost innate tendencies of the human
mind, long predating mathematics itself.
If we begin at Mathematics’ foundations, we
find Meaningfulness first on a long list of notions
that are themselves more fundamental
than mathematics. As Penrose reminds us, «It
is indeed ‘meaning1-not blind algorithmic
computation-that gives mathematics its substance.»
13 In addition, we of course find
Simplicity, Efficiency, and Order vital to mathematics,
followed closely by «pre-logical»
criteria of Completeness, Perfection, Complexity,
Nonpartiality, and, of course, deductive
Necessity. Then there is Self-sufficiency or
Selforganization:
a beauty of mathematics is this
tendency to almost organize itself. Other notions
such as Chance or randomness are vital to
many mathematical undertakings. We find that
even Individuality enters in at the foundations
of mathematics in terms of the discreetness and
uniqueness of each natural number. Mathematics
also uses the more inclusive criteria of
Wholeness. And Penrose points out how vital
the «pre-logical» notion of Beauty is to mathematics,
not asan extraneous frivolity, but asone
of its core guides. Plato even equated mathematics
with Goodness, and modern mathematician
Whitehead noted a similar affinity.
Finally, we find mathematicians must employ
some notion of «truth» which exists before and
goes beyond mere mathematical equations.
Now we have quite a laundry list here, with
a bit more to add. What is missing is a means
of integrating all of these notions. We need an
integrator or we should, for example, end up
pursuing Simplicity without regard to Completeness,
or Order without regard to Efficiency,
and so on. I think here we find our most
likely suspect; and it, too, predates formal
mathematics. Mathematicians will recognize it
as that constant wrangling to be pleased with the
endeavor at hand.
Indeed, the integrator of all of the pre-logical
criteriaupon which mathematics stands, seems
to be the intent-to-plense which actually begins
as the arbitrator of the most fundamental judgment-
forming notions of Simplicity, Efficiency,
and Order-and peaks as those aesthetic experiences
of elegance and Beauty, and a certain
«joy» that mathematicians acclaim when they
find a solution or grasp some major «truth.»
It is not surprising that Penrose concludes
that the non-dgon’thmic «judgment-forming
criteria» which underlie mathematics are closely
related to the operations of our mind as a
whole. They might even require the notion of
Aliveness which, so far, we can’t quite get on a
silicon chip. That mathematics must reach outside
of itself for its own foundations has been
acknowledged since Kurt Godel’s famous
proof on the question; but we are now able to
describe such foundations more accurately and
moreobjectively. These are not subwively imagined
foundations. Mathematical Simplicity,
Efficiency, Order, Completeness, Perfection,
Beauty or even ‘Truth» cannot be just in the eye
of the beholder; indeed, Penrose finds that we
must appeal to «one universally employed»
non-algorithmic system by which judgment of
mathematical truth occurs and can be communicated
among mathematicians themsel~es.’~
Now we cannot help but notice that this «one
universally employed system» of pre-logical
judgment-forming criteria upon which mathematics
depends and from which it has emerged
is identical with the expressive attributes of
Maslow’s Pyramid of Needs. And we cannot
help but notice that they are all brokered or
arbitrated by the same invariant principle, the
intent-to-please. Should this surprise us? Not
really. Physicist b h r explained that «…much
as all living organisms are constructed in accordance
with the same laws of nature,
and.. . from approximately the same chemical
compounds, the various possibilities of logic
are probably based on fundamental forms that
are neither man-made nor even dependent on
man.» l5
In other words, Bohr is suggesting that the
pre-logical operations of our minds and
Nature’s operations have the same objective
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
foundations. Einstein went a bit farther and
termed this natural relationship one of «pre-established
harmony,» wherein the logic of our
minds tends to find a match in the underlying
logic of the universe around us. And Heisenberg
makes it plainer: «If nature leads us to
mathematical forms of great simplicity and
beauty … we cannot help thinking that they are
‘true,’ that they reveal a genuine feature of
reality.»16 Heisenberg spscifically agrees with
Einstein when he says: ‘7 believe, just like you,
that the simplicity of natural law has an objective
character, that it is not just the result of
thought economy.»:’
Of course we are now ready to suggest that
thereare many more attributes involved in this
relationship between mathematics and Reality
besides just Simplicity and Beauty. We know on
themathematical sideat least that mathematics
must necessarily haul a lot more than Simplicity
or Beauty along within it. This we have
just demonstrated, as does Penrose. We need
Maslow’s entire expressive pyramid, and the
invariant at its core.
And here we find a solution to the most
fundamental problem facing modem physics:
Why does mathematics work at all in physics?
Why do mathematics and physical reality
«match up» even if approximately? This problem
is a logical catastrophe of the highest
order-about like hot iron glowing the wrong
color, only worse. Current answers to this enigma
actually include terms like «miracle,»
«good fortune,» and «unanswerable.»
Could it be that the pre-logical structure underlying
mathematics is the same as the structure
underlying objective reality … mks and
all? And I do not mean just for «Simplicity.» I
mean for the entire pre-logical structure and the
invariant at its core.
By the late 1960s, Maslow was already thinking
along this very line, boldly claiming that
orthodox science was due for «a critique (a la
Giidel) … of the ground on which it rests, of its
unproved articles of faith, and of its taken-forgranted
definitions, axioms, and concept^.»‘^
Maslow then proceeded, in his terms, «to raise
the radical question: can all the sciences, all
knowledge be conceptualized as a resultant of
a loving or caring interrelationship between
knower and kn~wn?»‘~
Maslow said that it ‘looks probable» that
scientific «truth» itself, the way Reality is, «is
finally definable, only and altogether, by all the
judgment-forming attributes we have just
described.» In Maslow’s own words, «…truth
is ultimately beautiful, good, simple, comprehensive,
perfect, unifying, alive, unique, necessary,
final, just [or non-partial], orderly, effortless,
self-sufficient, and amusing.»20 Finally, he
suggested that «knowledge through love»
should be scientifically investigated in the
«strictest sense.»21
There is little room for escaping the conclusion
that the way Reality is, the way Nature
itself operates, is based on the same «fundamentaipre-
logical form» which underlies our
logic and our mathematics. Maslow was only
filling out what Bohr, Einstein, and Heisenberg
suggested; and what several others such as
physicist Charles Peirce have envisioned. As
penrose informs us, there is no way to get these
pre-logical attributes out of our mathematics;
and there appears, then, that there is no way to
get them out of Reality itself. The only thing
missing in Maslow’s offering is the integrator
of these attributes. the same invariant at the
core of LOV-which he indirectly proposed
and which can now be officially added.
This would, of course, explain why mathematics
works as a predictive rep&ntation,
however approximate, of our real world. As
Penrose observes: ‘There must.. .be some deep
underlying reason for the accord between
mathematics and physi~s.»H~e~ s uggests that
the answer will be extremely subtle, and that it
will involve not only consciousness but some
«non-algorithmic action» with a «role [in] the
physical world of very considerable import
a n ~ e . «H~e~ t hen concludes that the answer
must be «intimately bound up with the very
concept of mind.»24 Obviously we would expect
ii to center about the invariant principle at
our mind’s co-the intent-to-please.
Thus Love subtly makes its appearance at the
foundations upon which the whole of Science
stands. The reason mathematics works is that
it must somehow align with Nature’s fundamental
operations, what Science calls Nature’s
causality. Both must play off the same invariant
princip1e;and that principle is now coming into
clearer view: It must be the invariant principle
at the core of Love that is the heart of Nature’s
causality.
Causality takes us deeper than any identifiable
force or particle of Reality; it takes us into
how such fundamental processes of nature
operate. And there is nothing more fundamental
to Science. As Einstein observed, the concept of
causation is «the ultimate basic postulate of all
natural science.»25 And this remains true even
if we invent all of Science in our heads, or claim
there is no causality. This is as close to logcal
foundations as we can get.
Einstein in fact felt that the answer he was
seeking might be found in a new «Super-
«. . .can all the sciences,
all knowledge be
conceptualized as a
resultant of a loving
or caring interrelationship
between
knower and known?»
Causality takes us
deeper than any
identifiable force or
particle of Reality;
it takes us into how
such fundamental
processes of nature
operate. And there
is nothing more
fundamental to
Science.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
Nature’s causality
seems to be best
described as a kind
of synergetic superposition
of these
attributes integrated
by the same invariant
we find at the
core of Love.
Persuasion offers
itself to more than
individual forces
such as gravity; it
seems to apply to
how such forces
operate in the
Universe as a whole.
If suggests a general
direction, a guiding,
without dictatorial
control. Yet, nothing
can escape its
influence.
causality.»26 It would have to accommodate those
features of Reality’s operations which could not
quite fit into the old mold of Newtonian
mechanical Necessity, or entirely into the new
mold which attempted to credit everything to
Chance.. . and modem thinkers have found it
will have to accommodate a lot more.
It is indeed startling to find that even for our
most advanced physics, the concept of causality
is wide open for an infusion of the attributes
and the integrating invariant I have been
describing-essentially the non-algorithmic
foundations that Penrose’s work touches so
clearly. Nature’s fundamental operations cannot
be viewed as a couple of simplistic notions
like Chance and Necessity any more than the
foundations of our mathematics can be. Many
other physicists, as far back as Peirce, have
argued that something more subtle is needed
to integrate Chance and Necessity; and which
can also account for the Complexity, the Order,
the Efficiency, the Simplicity, the Wholeness,
the Individuality, the Aliveness, and so
on.. . that we actually find in experience, peaking
with the need to accommodate the creative
developmental thrust we experience with the
operations of life and, most notably, the human
mind and its seeking after Beauty, Goodness
and Truth. Peirce even proposed the solution:
the Supercausality of «evolutionary love.»»
Indeed our modern study of causality takes
us straight to the same answer. We find both
philosophers and modem physicists informing
us that a «wider and richer» schemeof causality
is needed-a «synthesis or integration of causal
factors» which «can be analyzed with the help
of logic; but cannot be reduced to logical
terms.»28 In a word, they are pre-logical; and it
seems they are the same set of irreducible attributes
we find at the foundation of our mathematics
and the needs-fulfilling operations of
our minds. Nature’s causality seems to be best
described as a kind of synergetic superposition
of these attributes integrated by the same invariant
we find at the core of Love.
And what would be the hallmark of this
causality that even a physicist could not miss?
Our answer is that Love operates only by Persuasion.
In fad, here we encounter theone word
which completely encapsules the new Supercausality
in language that the most advanced
physicist-as well as the child-can grasp:
Persuasion.
There is mounting evidence that Naturedoes
indeed operate by just such Persuasion. Our
foremost clue is that Persuasion can only
operate by interactive communication of information.
Physics now recognizes that all the
known forces arc «mediated» by «messenger
particles.» We can call it force, but it is essentially
interactive communications at work-just as
Persuasion requires. And it is not coincidence 1 that Einstein redefined our understanding of
gravity as exerting «its authority not with force
but with persuasionu-the persuasion of the
most efficient paths laid out by communicative
fields in space and time.29
Persuasion offers itself to more than individual
forces such as gravity; it seems to apply
to how such forces operate in the Universe as a
whole. It suggests a general direction, a guiding,
without dictatorial control. Yet, nothing
can escape its influence. Thus Persuasion explains
why one or more of the matrix of causal
factors must somehow embody an «ivmersible
productivity»; a «generative order,» a «creative
predisposition» or developmental thrust in
Reality’s operations30
But scientists also have a valid point about
regression and reversibility. Any scientific logical
foundation must not only account for
Nature’s creative advances but also allow for
both regression and for thereversibility we find
in our current mathematical laws of physics.
Technically these equations work going forward
or backward in time–although most of
Reality seems to go in only one direction.
Again, the accommodation offered by a per- suasivecausality is remarkable. But rather than
label it persuasive causality, let us give it a more
scientific footing that gives some indication of
its superimposed elements and the invariant at
itscore. I offer the new term delective causalitydelectiue
taken from the Latin words for «highly
pleasing» and «to allure.» You will get the idea
every time you go past a delicatessen when you
are hungry. Delective causality even sounds
better than «deterministic causality,» «indeterministic
causality» or «no causality at all. It
allows all the «alluring» irreducible attributes
we have been discussing to be accommodated
under one concept whose central thesis is
Persuasion.
Persuasion is actually an old idea whose time
has come, even to the halls of Science where it
should be welcome. It is intriguing to find
physicists themselves acknowledging the mild
error in the long-standing tradition of holding
causation to bea one-way concept, which tends
to ignore the interaction of the effect back
toward the cause. This interactive, interrelated
feature of Nature’s processes is a fact of physics
that we must re~ognizeV. iewing causality as a
one-way process is only an approximation of a
much more subtly interconnected, two-way, or
actually all-way operation by which Reality is
in constant interactive communication.
Our old concepts of causation typically considered
cause to be a matter of exerting extemal
forces on substance that was internally inert;
composed of tiny dead billiard balls. Prevailing
definitions of causality still retain much of this
internal deadness of the Newtonian era. But it
is only a useful approximation, one which runs
out in both quantum theory and in life. A more
«adequate picture is provided,» as one physicist
explains, «by a synthesis of self-determination
and [external] determination, in which external
causes are conceived as unchainers of inner
processes rather than as agents molding a
passive lump of clay … .»31 In order for such
«unchaining» communication to occur, information
must appeal to common elements of
internal structure, common «inbuilt patterns of
respon~e»~~-the» needs» or «attribute» structureof
the participants, whether humans, dogs,
trees, rocks, or electrons.
We also find something else occurring in
Reality’s two-way, interactive, more «participatory»
causality. As physicist Mario Bunge
explains: »Room is made for the may at the
expense of the must; novelty is seen to be pos-
~ i b l e . «T~h~e l anguage of may is, of course, the
language of Persuasion. And as to novelty,
there is a certain intrinsic freedom of response,
an inherent self-determination, in a «dipolar»
causality that relies upon communication of
information. Indeed we have a frecdom beginning
at physics’ foundation that seems strangely
reflective of a truth that will set us free in the
most fundamental manner suggested by Jesus.
Freedom is no longer tacked on at the end. Yet
this Freedom is not without guidance. Although
delective causality offers a freedom
which allows novelty, diversity, reversibility,
error, pain, and regression, the persuasive invariant
at its core is always present.
This is a causality that can accommodate
mind as well as matter, essentially linking the
two. The causal nexus of the mind can only be
termed one that operates by a k i d of interactive
influencing of energy-matter by Persuasion.
Thus mind is no longer separated from
matter; nor from physics, but intimately linked
to both, as Penrose suggests.
Surely the evidence mounts that we have
found the Supercausality that modern Science
is missing. Delective causality offers us a relational
Reality in which there are probably no
transactions of Nature on any scale which do
not have their interactive information components.
This means that even the remotest
ultimate entities of energy-matter must somehow
retain an «internal» capability of handling
—
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
the attributes of delective causality, however
subtly, with the invariant at its core. Many
physicists have already concluded that Reality
essentially has an informational basis; and not
a few have suggested a «mental component»
therein.» We are simply giving such thinking a
firmer shape, yet not so firm as Einstein might
have wished. Persuasion is not veiled determinism.
Persuasion must always retain at least an
element of Spontaneity-Chance. But an element
is not the same as a foundation. We see that
communication of information must alwavs
embody such an element of Spontaneity-
Chance in the response if not in the information
itself. This alone would account for the statistical
nature of all the laws of physics in general;
but this is not pure Chance operating any more
than it can be a matter of pure Necessity. It is
possible that current theory has already
reached this threshold where Spontaneitychance
of self-determination cannot be
further penetrated, where Nature’s freedom of
choice, as physicist Bohr once referred to it, is
protected. It is also possible that more subtle
information interactions are going on beneath
the quantum blanket, and may eventually be
made known. Either way, delective causality is
themoreexplanatory solution. And either way,
Einstein ends up being more right than wrong;
that is, «Chance» cannot be the logical foundation
of physics, but only an element thereof.
Delective causality also explains why, in
quantum physics, the individual observer
seems to play such a vital role, so vital that
many physicists suggest Reality is observercreated
and nothing but ethereal wa,..es of
potential until we look at it. Delective causality
tells us, on the other hand, that it is not so much
an observercreated Reality as an observer-Elated
Reality we are involved with. It is extremely
provocative in this regard that Einstein’s
principle of Relativity is not a law of physics, it
is a law about the laws of physics. Einstein’s
fundamental breakthrough holds that the laws
of nature will appear the same to each individual
observer. He held that this was the
result of the inherent rationality of the universe
and our harmony within it; and for physicists
it remains among the most fundamental tests
for «truthfulness» of any proposed «laws.» But
Einstein’s Relativity is kind of passive; all it
does is ask the observer for the time and space,
so to speak; whereas quantum theory holds
that reality itself becomes actively malleable to
the individual observer. We can now see, I suggest,
that the rationality of Nature which relates
to «truthfulness» artd the malleability of Nature
Indeed we have a
freedom beginning at
physics’foundation
that seems strangely
reflective of a truth
that will set us free
in the most fundamental
manner
suggested by Jesus.
Persuasion must
always retain at least
an element of Spontaneity-
Chance. But
an element is not
the same as a foundation.
–
SCIENTIFIC SWOSIUM I1
This problem of
emergent order.. .
seems destined to
require delective
causality, a causal
process with a
developmental thrust
toward not only the
more complex. . . but
toward that which is
capable of being most
pleased in the process.
We simply take survival
of the fittest
and augment it with
«flourishing of the
pleasingest»-thus
spanning all our
needs from biological
survival to the
highest cultural
expressions with
the same invariant:
the core of Love.
which relates to «usefulness» are irlcxtricably
linked. «Usefulness» has no meaning except
being «serviceable to our needs.» T h u s the malleability
of Reality that we seem to encounter in
quantum theory is only a further ex(-avation of
the «user-friendly» universe which Einstein’s
Relativity first detected-an excavation no
wise complete, for we have only clipped the
peak of the Intent To Please the individual
which apparently pervades even the physics of
the universe.
Science is, of course, more than physics. Our
solution must account for the inherent Becorn-.
ing in Reality, its incessant self-organization
which the current laws of physics do not address.
This problem of emergent order, running all
the way up through evolution of life and
humanity, seems destined to y u i r c delective
causality, a causal process with a devclopmental
thrust toward not only the more complex,
which allows richer autonomous relationships,
but toward that which is capable of being most
pleased in the process. Humanity thus becomes
the emergent product of Kealitfs delective
causal equation, and is no longer quite so «accidental.»
As Einstein’s fundamental principle
would require, our solution must be capable of
such massive accommodation, including
humanity and our mind itself as part of
Universe, and all that we do, are, and can become.
A scientific logical foundation could do
no less.
We can also close the long-standing gap between
biological and cultural evolution. We
simply take survival of the fittest and augment
it with «flourishing of the pleasingest»-thus
spanning all our needs from biological survival
to the highest cultural expressions with the
same invariant: the core of Love. Natural selestion
itself needs just such an interactive, persuasive
broker, one that can accommodate not
only survival, but the purposeful, judgmentforming
operations of our minds–evolution’s
true missing link. Evolution theory nwds this
motivational integrator, a striving that involves
a little more than raw survival of our selfish,
little genes for a few scconds of universe time.
And there is no greater motivator bridging
reproduction, survival, and the creative socialcultural
order, than the striving to be pleased;
«to be loved.» Surely, we cannot much longer
ignore our actual experience and attribute the
progressive nature of biological and cultural
evolution to some blind interplay of Chance
and Necessity which just accidentally happens
to evade entropy’s law of decay and waste.
While even Jesus tells us the Earth will pass
away, the ultimate «New Story of Science» will
have to do with something more than the wast~.
products generated.% It will have to do with
what generates them. As many others have
concluded, we need a logical foundation o:
growth to which entropy’s death, decay and
~vastea lp secondary rather than primary. I’his
would be the growth process of what Peircc
termed «evolutionary love,» the main business
of the universe with which we humans atv
intimately and eternally related- «at one and
the same impulse projecting creations into independency
and drawing them into harm
~ n y . «It~ s~ho uld not surprise us that the
fundamental language of this business of Ek.-
corning bears the hallmark of the Intent-To-
P!ease. What else would a Father have in mind
for His children? Is not «all the rest».., j?~st
rlc.tails?
When Peircc sketched this solution a cct~tury
ago, he said: «If thinkers will on1 y be
to lay aside their prejudices and apply thwnselves
to studying the evidences ~f this
doctrine, I shall be fully content to await the
final de~ision.»~~
As that time draws near, we are finding that
all of Science, from the physical to the political,
is, at its foundations, the Science of Love.
- C) 191 Charles E. ! Iar~sen All rights reserved,
NOTES AND REFERENCES
- jonathan Lear, 1.m and Its Place in Natun (New
York: Fanar, Straus & Giroux, 1990), p. 150. An
excellent discussion of the growing significance of
Love in science, from a modern psychologist’s
persphve of Freud’s work.
- Albert Einstein, ‘The World as I See It, translated by
- Hams (New York: The Philosophical Library,
1949), p. 2.
- Abraham H. Maslow, Therarther Reaches offluman
Nature (New York: The Viking Press, 1 Wl), pp.
318-319,331.
, Religions, Values, and Peak-Experiences
(New York: The Viking Press, 1970), pp. 91-95.
. .. . . — — , Toward a Psychology of Being (New –
York: D. Van Nostrandcompany IqhX! FP P: h.1
Frank G. Cable, The Third Force: The IJsychology of
dbraham Maslow (New York: Washington %pare
I’ress, 1970), p. 52.
4 .\.I3. French, ed., l~instein: A Cm:rrar? I;>lu.~ti
(Cambridge, Mass: I larvard Univtmrty i’rer,.;.
197P), p. 67.
5 Quoted from Ileinz K. Pagels, i’erfec,t Symmetry
(New York: Simon and Schusttr, 1985),. p. 362.
- Albert Einstein, ldeffi and Opinions, tr3nslatcd by
Sonja Bargn~ann (New York, Bonanza Books,
1954), F. 39.
- Ibid., p. 227.
- Ibid., p. 40.
- lbid., p. 3.34.
- Ibid., p. 324.
- 7’he Cojpel According to Thomas (San Francisco:
flarpr & Row, 1984), translated by A. GuilMAY
17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
laumont, et al, p. 5.
- Roger Penrose, The Empemr’s New Mind (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1989), p. vi.
- bid., p. 105.
- Bid., p. 417.
- Werner Heisenberg, Physics and Beyond: Encounters
and Gmwrsations (New York, Harper &
ROW, i9n1, p. 138.
- bid., p. 68.
- Ibid.
- Abraham H. Maslow, The Psychology of Science: A
Reconnaissance (Chicago: Henry Regnery Company,
19661, p. 1.
- bid., p. 10S.
- bid., p. 123.
- bid., p. 110.
- The Empew’s New Mind, p. 430.
- Ibid.
- bid., p. 431.
- Idms and Opinions, p. 261.
- Abraham Pais, Subtle Is the Lal… » : The Science
and the Lifc of Albert Einstein (New York: Oxford
University Press, 19821, p. 465. Einstein was looking
for a more deterministic Supercausality when
he made this suggestion; however, in his later
years he offered that an indeterministic solution
would be acceptable to him so long as it reflected
reality’s actual manner of operations. Reference
letter from Pauli to Born in Karl R. Popper, The
Open Universe (Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and
Littlefield, 19821, footnote, p. 2.
- Charles S. Peirce, «Evolutionarv Love,» The
(New York, Dover Publications, 1955), pp. 361-
- In preceding articles, ‘The Dochine of Necessity
Examined,» p. 335, Peirce specifically leaves
room for «another kind of causation, such as
seems to be operative in the mind ….» His full
attempt at definition includes other articles in this
collection such as ‘The Law of Mind,» pp. 339-
353, and other writings as well.
- Mario Bunge, Cnusality and Modern Science (New
York, Dover Publications, 1979), pp. 166,239.
- Nigel Calder, Einstein’s Uniwrse (New York: The
V i g Press, 1979), p. 36.
- Causality and Modem Sdence, p. l7l.
Also see: David Bohm and F. David Peat, Science,
Order, and Creativity (New York: Bantam Books,
1987), and Paul Davies, TheCosmic Blueprint (New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1988).
- Gzusality and Modern Science, p. 197.
- J.L. Mackie, The Cement of the Uniame: A Study of
Causation (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1974), p.
280.
- Gzusality and Modem Science, p. 197.
- See, for example, Freeman Dyson, Infinite In All
Directions (New York: Harper & Row, 1988). Espe
dally, p. 292-299.
- This reference is to: Robert M. Augros and George
- Standu, The New Story of Science (New York:
Bantam Books, 1986); which gives an excellent
summary of the «paradigm shift» toward the
speech’s thesis now occurring in science.
- «Evolutionary Love,» Philosophical Writings of
Peirce, v. 362.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
By
David N. Elders
A 20-year student @The
Urantia Book, Elders
earned a bachelor’s degree.
He has seroed as president
of The Fellowship for o m
five years. His aDocation is
coaching young people in
baseball and ice hockey, mtd
he has been seroing on the
Town Youth Commission in
Darien, Connecticut.
God looks from an
infinite distance into
a Grand Universe
mirror which is
framed by time and
space. In it he sees a
refledion of himself,
a refledion though
not infinite and absolute,
yet still reflective
of the essence
of his existence.
PERSONALITY AND WILL:
Increasing Mastery of the Inner
and Outer Worlds
At some unimaginable level of reality, God is
alone in the universe. There is none other beside
him. But inherent IN God is the potential
for the manifestation of differential forms of his
existence. By the simple choosing of his unfettered
and absolutely free will, God gives life to
an infinity of unified, yet diverse, expressions
of his being: potential and actual, personal and
nonpersonal, finite and infinite, material, mindal,
and spiritual. This is not a linear occurrence.
This process is an inherent part of God
and simply is … always.
One consequence of this eternal process of
God’s self-existence is the qualification of a
segment of God’s infinity into an expression
bounded by time and space, limited to the experience
of his material, mindal, and spiritual
realities, and unified by personality.. .a fourdimensional
expression of God in the finite,
that is, «in finity.» Called by some, «Supreme,»
it all takes place in a space called the Grand
Universe.
What is this place called theGrand Universe?
What is its purpose? Who knows that they live
here? In whom does its value reside? Which
thoughts are thought here? What matters here?
These are some of the questions of the four
dimensions.
God looks from an infinite distance into a
Grand Universe mirmr which is framed by
time and space. In it he sees a reflection of
himself, a reflection though not infinite and
absolute, yet still reflective of theessence of his
existence. As he moves closer to the mirmr, he
knows in it the fullness of those aspects of his
being which can be expressed in such a mirmr.
Closer yet, he chooses to experience those
aspects of his being which have been selected
to interact for a time in such a space. Closer still
to the mirmr God sees himself as many sons,
per-sons.. .a reflection of himself through each
of whom he is expressed uniquely and from
each of whose unique perspective he is known
as God. At the end of time and throughout this
space, each son recognizes his Father and once
again, as always, God is alone … and yet …
accompanied by an infinite number of sons
who are a part of his personal presence and
who share his will, the very same will which
gives these sons their lives.
God is personality. » (*28) ‘Tersonality is the
exclusive gift of [NOT FROM1 the Universal
Father.» (77) Could it be that even though each
one of us is not God, that God is-LITERALLY–
each one of us? I AM Dave; I AM Steve; 1
AM Berkeley; I AM Melissa; I AM Marta.
«Mortal man is more than figuratively made
in the image of God. From a physical
standpoint this statement is hardly true, but
with reference to certain universe potentialities
it is an actual fact. In the human race, something
of the same drama of evolutionary attainment
is being unfolded as takes place, on a vastly
larger scale, in the universe of universes. Man,
a volitional personality, becomes creative in
liaison with an Adjuster, an impersonal entity,
in the presenceof the finite potentialities of the
Supreme, and the result is the flowering of an
immortal soul. In the universes the Creator
personalities of time and space function in
liaison with the impersonal spirit of the
Paradise Trinity and become thereby creative
of a new power potential of Deity reality.»
(‘1281) Is the willful choice we make to do
God’s will a literal part of that same will which
separated the evolutionary finite from God’s
infinity and will cause the final actualization of
its potentials?
«Man attains divine union by progressive
reciprocal spiritual communion, by personality
intercourse with the personal God, by increasingly
attaining the divine nature through
wholehearted and intelligent conformity to the
divine will. Such a sublime relationship can
only exist between personalities.» (*31) Does
not divine union with God imply the final
mastery of those aspects of the divine nature
which we experience in time and space?
«The progressing personality leaves a trail of
actualized reality as it passes through the ascending
levels of the universes. Be they mind,
spirit, or energy, the growing creations of time
and space are modified by the pmgression of
personality through their domains. When man
acts, the Supreme reacts, and this transaction
I constitutes the fact of pmgression.» (‘1286)
Does not true mastery of the inner and outer
1 worlds take place as each per-son-ality allows
the gifts of God to be realized in self-consciousMAY
17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
ness, that is, as the growth of the soul?
«The Supreme is God-in-time; his is the
secret of creature growth in time; his also is the
conquest of the incomplete present and the
consummation of the perfecting future. And
the final fruits of all finite growth are: power
controlled through mind by spirit by virtue of
the unifying and creative presence of personality.
The culminating consequence of all
this growth is the Supreme Being.» (‘l280)
When God looks in his mirror, does he actually
see evolution in time, or is the self he sees
reflected in the already-complete Supreme?
«Man, the civilized, will someday achieve
the relative mastery of the physical forces of his
planet; the love of God in his heart will be
effectively outpoured as love for his fellow
men, while the values of human existence will
be nearing the limits of mortal capacity.»
(q306) Is it not through the choosing of a
relatively free-will personality that this
mastery takes place &d the true potentials
gifted by the Father have therefore and thereby
been fully actualized in human experience?
* * *
One day in time a birth takes place. A new
child is born to finite, material parents. Soon the
child, vaguely aware that she’s not the creatures
around her, sees her reflection in a mirror.
Her immature vision stops at the mirror’s edge
and she sees her body and believes that’s who
she is. As she grows kll and strong, she moves
closer to the mirror to see herself more deeply.
Though her eyes see the image reflected, her
thoughts and feelings tell her more about her
self, and she comes to believe that what she
thinks and feels is who she is. But a quiet voice
within her adjusts her vision so that she can
lookdeeper still into the mirror of her mind. She
doesn’t know it yet, but she seeks the Father in
whose image she is made. She seeks the existence
of her source and the source of her existence.
She seeks God. And as her knowing
sharpens and her inward sight focuses, she
moves closer still to the mirror and in finality
finds God’s face looking at her and she recognizes
it as her own. She is one of the sons God
sees reflected in his Grand Universe mirror in
finity.
Even now, as always, in response to existential
choice the vaults of God’s reality though
not asleep, awaken to mirror God’s reflection.
The Supreme, the living mirror which reflects
the selves of God in finity, the universal grand
in which is shown the strains of conscious self
and sonship, begins its soul-filled symphony of
light. Toward God, Supremacy reflects the
finished fusion of a multiplicity of sons. Toward
sons, Supremacy reflects a single face, the personality
of God. Each son can see this fact of
God as a reflection of her own; and God can see
each face he sees as a reflection of his own.
Supremacy is the looking glass in which potential
actuals are fused into an infinite visage by
the unity of will-the will of God above and the
wills of God below.
And the existential unified diversity of God’s
eternal selfexistence is, as always, one. At some
unimaginable level of reality, God is alone in
the universe.. .and yet. .. .
When God looks in
his mirror, does he
actually see
evolution in time,
or is the self he sees
refleded in the
already-complete
Supreme?
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
by
Brendan O’Regan
O’Regan’s work with the
Institute of Noetic Sciences
has involaed him for over
12 years in the duafion of
bminlmind function and
extraordinary human
capmMties.
[Editor’s Note: Brendm,
O’Regan died of cancer at
age 47 during the summer
of 1992. The organizers of
Scientific Symposium 11 are
grateful to share this aiav
of his life’s work.]
The science that we
have at any given
time tends to edit
realityfor us and say
this is real, or that’s
not real ….
New Models of Mind.
Order, & Chaos
Good morning, everyone!
Well, this is a s p e d moment. One of thegoals in
preparing thesymposium w s tofinda scientist who
wasn’t necessarily a reader of theThe Urantia Book
who would come speak to our group about his field.
W v e been veryfortunate to actually meet this goal.
Brendan O’Regan, from the Institute of Noetic
Sciences, is here with us this morning. The Institute
was fonned in 1973, by Astronaut Edgar Mitchell,
who was the sixth man on the moon. Brendan is the
vie president for mearch at the lnstitute and he has
been with them since 1975. He’s been on the leading
edge of science for 20 years. We are very fortunate
that he’s here with us today.
Right now he works with granting funds for
research programs in mechanisms of healing,
altruism and exceptional human abilities and
causality. He previously worW at the Stanford
Research Institute on a project called the Changing
Images of Man, in which they were looking at how
science drives the type of person in society. Previous
to that, he worM with Buckminster Fuller. He was
involved with a project on Fuller’s book: Synergetic~~:
e o m e tofj ~ h i n k i ni~n w, hich he k sin
charge of keeping track of new Mopments in
scienceand how that would affect the contents of the
book.
Right now, he’sinvolved in a Survey of Remission
Research and an eight-part series on the healing
mind that will be televised on PBS and BBC, and
this is an international program. It’s going to have
information from, 1 think sewn to ten different
countries. Maybe he will go into that a little.
In his presentation this morning, Brendan will
focus on kleas that suggest new ways of thinking
about mind and the physical world and the conelation
of the two. He will be showing us new concepts
of how order and physics change our own concept of
reality. So it is indeed my pleasure to introduce to
you,from Sun Francisco, Brendan O’Regan. * * *
Thank you. Let me just get a few things in
order here. I’m not going to cover all of this, but
it’s a very interesting experience for me to be
invited to talk to a group such as you. In essence,
what I have been doing under the guise
of working for different organizations and
people for the last 20 years is really asking those
sort of simple questions: Who are we? Why are
we here? and, What is reality anyway? In attempting
to do that, of course, wealways want
to try and avoid the pitfall of what I call the
curmudgeon’s definition of theology, which in
theology is the effort to explain theunknowable
in terms of the not-worth-knowing. We want to
avoid the not-worth-knowing, but it’s a curious
thing that a society driven by a particular view
of science, a particular view of reality, has very
often tried to strip the meaning out of things.
We end up with a view of things in terms of the
not-worth-knowing sometimes.
The science that we have at any given time
tends to edit reality for us and say this is real,
or that’s not real, as though they have some
kind of inner track. The fad is that, in every
society and in every culture, there have always
been groups of people operating with an expanded
view of the human being. I fist encountered
The Urantia Book over 20 years ago,
and if ever I saw an expanded point of view
about the human being, it certainly is in there.
The question is, can we expand to take it all in?
I couldn’t, but I can only take it in small doses.
Yet, you know, if you have a wide-angle lens
and you are forced to work with something a
little less wide angle, you can refer back quietly
in the dark of night sometimes to what the
wider angle view says and ask, ‘Well, is there
any confirmation of this?»
Now you have among you people who have,
in a much more detailed way, looked at that
question. I haven’t been consciously doing that,
shall we say, but what I have been doing sometimes
is referring back to this wider view. It’s a
curious process. If you begin to ask about an
expanded view of the human being, or you
begin to ask questions about who we are, you
find that society is selling us short on a certain
level of who we are. Then very curious things
start developing in the society.
I’ll give you an example: Melissa mentioned
about the pro*, «Changing Images of Man,»
at Stanford Research Institute which I was
working on during 1971-72. We were asked to
look at how did we get this view of the person that
says the National Science Foundation should 1 fund this kind of research and not that kind of
research, or that NIMH views health this way,
not that way. Of course, at that time, the
dominant view of the person was behaviorism,
the whole idea that the mind was irrelevant, it’s
a black box. There was input, there was output.
You concentrated on fixing the environment
1 and everything else would magically rearrange
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
itself, which, of course, it didn’t do. At that time
we began to look at what would happen if an
expanded view of the person came into science, if
the mind re-entered, and consciousness reentered?
What would we have happening both
in science and in the culture? We proposed that
kind of view 20 years ago, with a lot of people
saying you can’t be serious, you know, is this
really there? The argument then still remains
part of the argument today, about the reality of
paranormal powers, the reality of telepathy, the
reality of psychic kinesis and these kinds of
things.
I happened to be at Stanford Research Institute
at the very time when the notorious, or
nefarious, Uri Geller showed up there. It’s interesting.
If you tak to a p u p of scientists
almost anywhere in the world today, they will
say, «Oh, he was discredited, wasn’t he?» It’s
pretty sure that a certain editing of that story
took place, through a very aggressive campaign
by skeptics who perceive themselves as
the keepers of the truth and protectorsof reality.
They say, ‘Well, oh, that was all dismissed.»
Well, not really. It wasn’t. It was driven underground.
The big irony for me is that, while I was at
Stanford Research Institute, I was on one side
of the equation. A few years later, I was working
at Noetic Sciences, which funded the work on
Uri at Stanford Research Institute, so I was on
the other side of the equation. The great irony
for us was that here was a program at a rnapr
research institute which we began with private
money, but which rapidly b&e inac&sible
to us because it was taken over by the military
and became a classified program. The reason
that you don’t know what went on there, and
the &son why the skeptics could successfully
edit reality for you, was because the real information
was kept classified. That remains the
case, though we may be at a kind of an interesting
time now, because initial classification of
information is for 20 years. Well, it’s 20 years
now. Maybe some of this stuff will start to
trickle out, or maybe adventurous people will
file Freedom of Information Act kits in the
right way, and start to pull out some of that
information.
But, let’s have a look at some of it that one can
say. One of the reasons it’s one of the great
ironies, I suppose, is that the evidence anddata
for the best experiments suggesting an expanded
capacity for the human being has to
remain classified, because the verification of it
really comes from surveillance satellites. Well,
at that time, the cold war was in full swing. The
Soviet Union was the great enemy, and of
course, the great need was to know where their
missile bases were, what they did in them, and
so forth. A primary effort of the remote viewing
work at Stanford at that time (remote viewing
is a nice term for clairvoyancc+you are seeing
at a distance beyond shielded perception) was
to describe missile bases in the Soviet Union.
Where were they, and could that be done by
remote viewing? I remember participating in
the documentation of one of these experiments.
(I had not signed anything about being in a
classified domain so I am not violating anyone’s
agreements here by saying this.) I was not
really an official participant. I was an excessively
interested kind of nuisance who kept showing
up and saying, «What’s happening? How
do I find out more about it?» I didn’t really
understand why, Ididn’t really know the whole
military base behind it that was emerging at the
time.
One of the things that happened was very
interesting. We did an experiment where one of
the subjects who was not Uri Geller would
randomly pickcoordinates on the map. Vially,
somebody would sort of stick a pin in the
globe, and you would come up with certain
degrees of longitude and latitude, down to
minutes and seconds of arc. On this particular
occasion, the subject was to describe the location
that happened to be in the Bay Area and it
happened to be an area that I thought I knew.
He proceeded to describe the section of the bay
between the Golden Gate Bridge, between the
city and Marin County. I thought, «Oh well, this
isn’t going to count as an experiment, because
we all know this area.» Then he proceeded to
describe some features, and I said, «Well that’s
not there. nere is no runway by the Golden
Gate Bridge. That’s crazy. This is not there, and
that is not there.» I’d been driving past this
thing for years and had never actually gone
down into the Navy base area. And there is a
runway next to the Golden Gate Bridge.
So I began to think, ‘Well, maybe there is
something to this.» Then another curious thing
happned at a later experiment that I was not
present for. He described a Soviet missile
facility and produced a map-+ little drawing
of, well, the silos are here, and the buildings are
here, and so forth. This was, in due course, sent
off to Washington. They came back and confirmed
that «this part’s right and that part’s
right, but this part’s wrong. There are no buildings
in this part of the site.» He said, «Oh yes,
there are. Wait till you get your next satellite
pictures.» The following week, the next fly-by
took place, and there were the buildings. They
had been put up rather quickly. That kind of
If you begin to ask
about an expanded
view ofthe human
being, or you begin
to ask questions
about who we are,
you find that society
is selling us short on
a certain level of who
we are. Then ve y
curious things start
developing in the
society.
The reason that you
don’t know what
went on there, and
the reason why the
skeptics could successfully
edit reality
for you, was because
the real information
was kept classified.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
You do what you can
to set up experiments
and take the most
rigorous approach
that you can.
There is a period of
time in which the
substance of the
material is interfered
with in some way,
so that it no longer
has the rigidity that
it had….
thing went on for a number of years and did
suggest that there were expanded capacities
that people could use. It still goes on, but
nobody admits it.
So we have this very interesting problem.
When reality is being edited by the power
structure in an interesting way, you have to
wonder about it.
Another version of this happened when I left
Stanford after that project. I moved to England
where I lectured foia year. I don’t know if many
of you know of the physicist, David Bohm, who
is really one of the people proposing the idea
that there is a certain kind of order, a nucleic
order in reality, which is sort of a holographic
concept that space and time are folded together
in a way where properties of the whole system
are contained in even the tiniest part. That’s
really an extrapolation metaphorically in physics
from the idea of a hologram.
You are probably all pretty familiar at this
point, that you can take a hologram, and let’s
say it’s a 2 x 2 square photograph which contains
these interference patterns on it. When
you put a laser light through it, the image pops
out. You can cut out a tiny little piece of the
hologram, put the laser light through that tiny
piece and the whole image comes back out. I
thought if anybody could make sense of all this
stuff with Uri Geller, surely David Bohm could.
I arranged for the two of them to meet each
other in London. Part of it, 1 suppose, was that
I was thinking maybe I imagined all this back
at Stanford. Maybe we should just get a whole
other group in another part of the world to start
over, do it again, and see if it would still happen.
(You do what you can to set up experiments
and take the most rigomus approach
that you can.)
So we set upa situation where John Halstead,
who was then head of the Physics Department
of Birkback College, one of the divisions of the
University of London, would arrange for this
experiment. David Bohm designed it, and Arthur
Koestler came in to watch. Arthur Clarke
happened to be in town, the man who wrote
2001, and he came by. We tried to keep it from
becoming a sort of celebrity dog-and-pony
show.
The following sequence of events occurred
and ought to have been in a journal, but thereby
hangs <he story I’m going to tell you. One of the
interesting problems, of course, with someone
like Uri Geller, is everyone was determined that
he was faking it-that with sleight of hand
when you weren’t looking, he was taking the
objed, bending it, and bringing it back out.
That’s what the James Randi’s of the world will
insist takes place. They all refer to it as «metal
bending.» Well, of course, anyone who has seen
the phenomenon first hand-up close, where
it’s happening in your own hand-knows that
it’s not metal bending at all. It’s metal softening.
There is a period of time in which the substance
of the material is interfered with in some
way, so that it no longer has the rigidity that it
had, and during that time either the weight of
the end of a spoon, or residual stresses and
strains in the object, can cause it to appear to
move by itself. It’s soft for about 30 seconds. I
have held this kind of material. During that
period, it’s not hot; it’s very slippery. It feels sort
of spongy. You almost feel like you are putting
your fingers through it in a strange kind of way.
So David Bohm thought, well, if we are really
interfering at the core afiangement of matter
some way by this, maybe something will
change that we don’t normally observe. Normally
the inertial mass and the gravitational
mass of an object are the same. He decided to
see if, under the conditions of this bizarre interference,
the two were different.
He handed Uri a key, which was a master key
to Birkback College, and he asked him to work
on it. It was not the kind of thing Uri was likely
to have in his pocket. This key had been
weighed by the head of the physicsdepartment
(whom you’d think could weigh a key) to 4 or
5 decimal places on a very fancy pan balance.
Let’s say, for description, that it weighed 12
grams; not very heavy. Uri got the key and did
his thing, and was, I think, puzzled that Bohm
wasn’t &lly paying attention to how he did it.
If Uri was doing something really paranormal,
mass and gravitational mass of the object
would diverge; but if he was just faking it, it
would be the same. So there was a control built
in that didn’t depend on us observing how Uri
did it. (That was a built-in thing I don’t think
you find skeptics thinking of.) But anyway, so
the key induecourse was now like this [indicating
its modified shape], and was put back on
the balance and it weighed 11 grams. (I’m
rounding off the numbers.) There was this kind
of puzzlement-you know, was there a piece of
it missing? No, it was all there, but it didn’t
weigh the same. They said, «Oh,» and they
weighed it again every 10 minutes. I tell you
that we weighed that thing for 2 hours, every
10 minutes, and put it back, put it back. They
said, «Well, this is impossible. It must have been
a mistake.. . it was probably 11 grams all along.»
You know.. . it just couldn’t be. So everyone went
home.
The key remained in the lab, locked up in a
box. Many phone calls flying back and forth.
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
What do you think? What do I think? You
know, everybody was talking on this business.
They all came back in the next morning and-
12 grams! Oh, probably was never 11 grams,
you know.
Now we tried to write this up and we wrote
down the detailed description of the experiment.
The head of the physics department at
Birkback normally would have entry to the
better journals and certainly to Nature and
Scienceand so forth. He knew John Maddox, the
editor of Nature, personally. There was a
physicist from Cambridge, Bowman Housted,
and myself as the co-authors. The paper was
sent in and we got a phone call saying we can’t
print this, this didn’t happen! You can’t say that
this happened. You can only say that you had
a difficulty observing these phenomena. You
can write a piece about the difficulties of doing
work in the area of paranormal research, but
you cannot publish this data. So that’s what got
published in Nature. Nature, you know?
Now there are far worse things than this that
happened. For example, John Halstead had the
Cavendish Labs in Cambridge make a disk, a
little flat disk of silicon carbide-+ very tough
substance. It’s about the same toughness as a
diamond. This was sealed in a glass tube. You
could hold it in your hand, but you couldn’t get
at it without breaking the glass. Again, this is
one of these situations where Geller was
brought in without preparation. He didn’t
know what he was going to be handed. They
worked on it, and he was trying tobend it. Well,
that was an interesting idea, because of course,
a substance like that wouldn’t bend, anyway. I
mean, that’s not a property that it has.
Well, what ended up happening was that it
looked like a bite was taken out of it. I mean,
that area from the 6 o’clock to the 3 o’clock
position of the circle was just missing. That piece
was not rattling around inside the tube, it was
just gone. I looked at John, and John looked at
me and said, ‘Well we can’t even call John
Maddox about this.» So at a certain level, then,
I began to sort of think, «What am I getting into
here? If I do observe more and more things that
become more and more outside the realm of
what I’m supposed to we.. . .» Well of course,
we know what you call people like thatthey’re
crazy! You become the bearer of the
unacceptable to a degree where you are considered
to have lost it.
I very much rather carefully backpedalled
from all this research asa result, because I could
see what was going to happen here. Needless
to say, it’s very interesting. David Bohm has
never said a word about this. You won’t find
any writing about it. John Halstead did write
about it. He’s written several books and discredited
himself in the process. People shake
their heads and say, «Well, you know, poor
John. Not the same, you know.» It’s all very
subtle, or maybe not so subtle on some occasions,
but one wonders what we are doing to
ourselves in our culture by this process.
I began to look later, then, at safer things.
There were all kinds of other things that wedid.
I began to look at the phenomena around other
kinds of mind-people with multiple personality
for exampl-nd this was an area that
I really went into because of talking to other
doctors. Every couple of years I attend the
American Psychiatric Association meetings,
just to keep in touch with what’s going on.
Around 1984, I attended the meetings and
ran into people like Dr. Frank Putnam at the
National Institute of Mental Health, Bennett
Braun at Rush Presbyterian Hospital in Chicago,
and Richard Kluft from the University of
Pennsylvania. These were all people who had
patients who were multiple personalities. I
began to hear some rather wild things that were
true of these people: that they were allergic to
a drug in one personality and not in another,
that they had diabetes in one personality and
not in another, that they needed eyeglass
prescriptions in one personality and not in
another. (Here is another entry point into the
study of what we call the plasticity of the mind.
There is an ability to modulate and control. It
was a big rage at the beginning of the 1970’s
when biofeedback happened and we found we
could alter brain waves and could alter blood
pressure mentally by giving people feedback.
We thought a whole new era had arrived which
would develop an expanded human being, but
that’s been edited out, too. In fact, in many
generations it’s forgotten, but it’s still sort of big
news. I have people coming in to me at Noetics,
not knowing how long I have been around this
stuff, and saying, «Have you heard about this
extraordinary thing? We can aLl modify our
own brain waves.» And I say, ‘Yes, I did it 20
years ago.»)
In these cases of multiples, some other things
go on that pose even more difficult problems. I
thought I was making it simpler by keeping
away from this other stuff. Little did I realize I
was actually going to make it more difficult.
What began to happen was that I had to take a
completely different view of the human mind.
It was a completely different situation. Unfortunately,
there was a deeply sad part to this.
Multiples by and large are all a phenomenon as
a result of extreme physical abuse. They have
You can write a piece
about the dificulties
of doing work in the
area of paranormal
research, but you
cannot publish this
data.
If I do observe more
and more things that
become more and
more outside the
realm of what I’m
supposed to see.. .
well of course, we
know what you call
people like thatyou’re
crazy!
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
How do you process
this reality wherein
a parent, who is
supposed to be the
loving one, turns
into a monster and
starts doing these
kinds of things?
The interesting thing
is that you say:
«Well, what are we
dealing with? Are we
dealing with a mind
breaking into pieces
of itself, or are we
dealing with a mind
that does that and
then attracts other
things, other bodies
of knowledge?’I
all been abused physically and sexually over
many years. These are people who have
developed the mental resources to escape an
appalling reality. That’s really what’s going on.
They can’t be there. Most of the time this is
happening because of aberrations by parents
with children. How do you process this reality
wherein a parent, who is supposed to be the
loving one, turns into a monster and starts
doing these kinds of things?
I made a very deliberate choice in the reports
that I wrote about this for the Institute, which
are available from us. I decided that I would not
write about that at all, because I did not want
to even bring out into the culture an awareness
of that sort of thing. Some of these people were
really quite amazing, because they would have
abilities in one personality that they didn’t have
in the others. One very famous case which you
can read about is in a book called Tk Minds of
Billy Milligan. I don’t know if any of you have
seen that book, but it’s available in paperback.
1 spent time interviewing Cornelia Wilbur, who
is one of the therapists called in. She also was
the therapist for the woman described in the
book, Sybil, which was a movie that %lly Field
was in. I also interviewed David Cowl, who
was a therapist for Billy Milligan.
Billy was a very interesting man. He is still
an interesting man, though I think he’s back in
jail. The curious thing is that male multiples
frequently are criminals in one form or another.
I believe many of the serial killers in our prisons
are multiples who become other people, do not
know what they are doing, carry no memory of
it, and have an activity that they carry out in a
covert way. The female multiples, by the way,
tend not to be involved in the criminal activity.
It’s a very interesting difference.
In Billy’s case, he had a personality (which I
intend no pun on my own name here) called
«Ragan.» (I always hate it when my name is
mispronounced that way). Anyway, Ragan (in
his case) came from a functional name of a
property. Ragan was «rage again.» Ragan had
superhuman strength. Billy was born and
raised in Lancaster, Ohio, so he had a certain
kind of cultural background. Ragan spoke
fluent Serbo-Croatian, a language from a completely
other part of the world, which he had
not heard of. He had another personality
named Arthur. Arthur spoke with an English
accent, and believed that he was a doctor who
grew up in England. Arthur had another ability
which was that he could read and write fluent
Arabic, which is all rather peculiar.
I came up to David Cowl and I said, «Is this
really true about Billy?» He said, «Yes, but I
don’t want to talk about it. I have trouble
enough getting these cases taken seriously on a
psychiatric level, because the psychiatric
profession doesn’t really want this diagnosis to
be real at all.»
This isa big argument right now in what they
call the DSM 3 which is The Diagnostics and
Statistical Manual that defies psychiatric diagnoses.
It’s being rewritten at the moment by
David Spiegel at Stanford and FrankPutnam at
NIMH. A multiple is most likely to be misdiagnosed,
on average seven times, and on average
be classified as a schizophrenic or a borderline
case or a temporal-lobe epilepsy case or various
other kinds of things. The interesting thing is
that you say: ‘Well, what are we dealing with?
Are we dealing with a mind breaking into
pieces of itself, or are we dealing with a mind
that does that and then attracts other things,
other bodies of knowledge?» Now that gets
into a very peculiar business which is sort of
akin to what we’ve all become rather familiar
with in the culture of the phenomena of channeling,
where people disassociate. This is the
common denominator. There is a dissociative
state, a trance state, a removal from the present
input, the present perception, and a person
then saying, «I am available.» You know …
«Anybody out there? I am available.» Then
they begin to manifest phenomena. Thecurious
thing is that we don’t really know how to conceptualize
this at all in the Western modelof the
mind that is with us now.
It so happened that at the same time I was
doing that work, I was also visiting Brazil and
looking at healing practices. I don’t know if any
of you have been there or know about that
culture, but it is one of the most fascinating
mixes of races and ideas and metaphysical systems.
That is one example of an entire culture
driven by an expanded view of the person.
They, of course, have these kinds of situations
down there, but they conceptualize it quite
differently. The Candobe and Ambonda
religions are Afro-Brazilian religions that came
in with the slaves that were brought from West
Africa, and which then ultimately blended
with the Amazonian Indians. It’s a very curious
mix. They have the whole thing figured out in
a different way. They say it’s all «externalized
spirits.» If you are behaving properly, you have
incorporated good spirits; if you’re behaving
badly, you have incorporated bad spirits.
I remember at the University of Sao Paulo, a
woman anthropologist telling me about a case
she investigated. This was a fascinating story
because if you think about what would happen
to the same person in this country or this culMAY
17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
t w , versus what happened down there, and
you put the two across from each other, you
realize that we both are rational-both end up
in a result that you would call healing. In this
case, there was a woman who was normally a
quiet, conservative mother of two in a poor
suburb of Sao Paolo, a huge city, bigger than
Manhattan. She would be found on the street,
in a completely different personality, comrnitting
petty crimes and selling her body. She was
taken to the mental hospital many times where
she had been given shock treatments. She’d
been given drugs, she’d been given this and
that. Multiples don’t respond to any of these
treatments the same as any other person. You
don’t know which personality you are giving
thedrug to, and whetherthey areallergic tothe
drug or not.
The family realized this was about the
seventh or eighth time that this had happened.
They went to the hospital and they pleaded
with them. They said, «Let us take her to the
Ambonda center,» which was the Afro-
Brazilian religion that is predominant in the
Sao Paolo ar&. Each of these centers is run by
what they call either a Midisanto or Pidisanto,
Mother of the Saint. That is a person who can
incorporatebring in-a spirit of great power.
That’s how they are chosen. They have that
ability.
So the woman was brought in, in a strait
jacket, and was laid in front of the Midisanto,
who said, «Well, take off the strait jacket.» But
they said, «Oh, no, she’s going to be violent.»
She said, «No, no, do it when I say.» The
Midisanto entered her form of prayer and
called in her spirit, and simultaneously the
woman lying struggling in the strait jacket just
went completely limp, lying there quite peacefully.
The Midisanto studied her for a while,
and said, «Ah, there are seven different spirits
fighting for control of this soul.» They called in
seven trained transmediums, who happened to
be all women, who lie on the floor like spokes
of a wheel with their heads to the center. One
spirit is cast into each one, and this huge argument
erupts. They all start shouting at each
other, «Who the hell are you? How did you get
in here? This is my body!» An enormous sort of
fragmentation, but it’s the first time that all of
them can speak together.
Now if it was in this country, hypnosis would
be used to draw them out oneat a time. It would
be videotaped and the record would be stored.
The person would be gradually shown them
and the amnestic barrier between the personalities
would be slowly broken down.
That’s what we do here. That’s what fusion of
I a multiple involves in the United States. Down
there they get into a slightly more expanded
process and they have seven people working,
and they all do it together. There was a negotiation
in which the Midisanto said, «Look, you
have a choice. The destiny of this soul is not
your destiny. You either help it or leave. What
do you want to do?» They negotiated a truce.
They all wanted to stay and they all wanted to
see if they could help out, but they all wanted
to come back and talk again in a month in case
it wasn’t working. The whole thing continued
and they were all reincorporated back into the
woman, who then reached consciousness and
said, «What happened?» She had no memory
of what was going on.
It’s interesting.. . take the same phenomena
in different cultures and look at it through different
lenses and what do you get? You get very
different outcomes sometimes. Of course, for a
multiple, fusion is a terrifying process because
it’s a kind of dying. It’s a kind of saying goodbye
to a part of you. The interesting thing about
them is that they will havepersonalitiesthat are
there for a particular purpose, to take the pain,
for example.
I remember one case where a woman that I
had met, one of the most extraordinary ones
that I ever encountered, had one personality
that was completely anesthetic, could feel no
pain at all. She had to have some way to deal
with that. Now what does that say if the mind,
by a decision, can switch on and off throughout
the whole body, the sensation of pain? That’s
quite amazing. I think we need to understand
that, not in the way-the sad way-that it arrives
in these people’s lives, but in a more
constructive kind of way.
Now there are other pieces to this. You could
say, «Well, how does this ultimately lead us into
thinking about reality in the physical sense as
well?» There really are some completely new
ways of thinking about mind and about information-
not just in the person, but in time and
space itself-that are beginning to correspond
here, which is very, very interesting.
I think I’m partly looking at these phenomena
through another lens, as it were, when I am
looking at the phenomenon of spontaneous
remission of cancer. We have the largest
database in the world of medically reported
cases of remissions from cancer and other
major diseases, and these are cases where it
could be lung cancer, breast cancer, melanoma,
genito-urinary. The whole spectrum is represented.
Normally, in a majority of people, these
things progress to their demise, but in these
cases something changes it, and a disease that
. . .take the same
phenomena in
different cultures
and look at it through
different lenses and
what do you get?
You get very
different outcomes
sometimes.
Now what does that
say if the mind, by a
decision, can switch
on and off
throughout the whole
body, the sensation of
pain? That’s quite
amazing.
SClENTmC SYMPOSIUM I1
. . .in these cases
something changes it
and a disense that is
normally irreversible
becomes reversible. A
plasticity of some
kind is present.
The w u mis
supposed to mean
nothingness, the
absence 4 matter.
Well, it may be the
absence of matter,
but it isn’t the
absence of energy.
Even down at the
level of what they
call absolute zero
temperature, there is
still movement.
is normally irreversible becomes reversible. A
plasticity of some kind is present. When we are
looking at this, we are saying, ‘Wait a minute,
we have left out a whole chapter.» You ask
yourself, what is it about these things that is in
common with how the physicists arebeginning
to view reality?
Now, it is very popular to talk about the Tao
of physics and holographic theories, and so on,
but when you come right down to it, you have
to ask about concepts of order and the rearrangement
of order in the body. That’s what’s
going on when a tumor is reabsorbed, reversed,
removed. The order in the process, or the disorder
in process, the loss in growth control that
is a cancer, is that something comes in and says
‘No!» to it. These are sort of discontinuities.
These are forms of looking at order that are
quite different. In chaos theory, which is
peculiarly named, you have the recognition of
a new kind of order in a process that previously
looked disorded. It ends up d ybei ng a physics
of information, and it’s a physics of information
that is at the level of the molecule and at
the level of the body, and, 1 think, at the level of
the mind in a strange kind of way. Some of that
is beginning to @very, very interesting now.
Our whole concept of energy, I think, isabout
to go through a big plt of change. One of the
things that is now beginning to happen is a
reexamination of the idea of the vacuum. One
of the things that got banished at the end of the
last century was the idea that there was the
ether, the all-permeating form of energy. That
may be resurfacing in a new form, and what is
interesting about it is that they have begun to
look at the vacuum itself. The vacuum is supposed
to mean nothingness, the absence of matter.
Well, it may be the absence of matter, but it
isn’t the absence of energy. Even down at the
level of what they call absolute zero temperature,
there is still movement. There is still energy
present, which is now called the zero point
energy of the vacuum. The interesting thing is
that when the physicists start calculating how
much is there, it turns out to be enormous. It is
as though we live in this dimensional interface
where &onnous forces are exactly poised and
canceling out. If you just slightly push that off
balance, an amazing amount of energy can be
released.
The curious thing is that Sakarov (the famous
Soviet physicist, who you have all heard of
because of his political problems), who is really
the father of the Soviet hydrogen bomb project,
in 1951, wrote a paper that is ignored most of
the time, except by a few people, in which he
said, «What if gravity itself is not the product
of huge masses, planets, moons, earths having
fields that affect each other at a distance? What
if it is in fact coming from fluctuations in the
zero point energy of the vacuum itself, that it’s
down at that level that gravityis created?» That
physics is now beginning to be pulled off the
shelf, dusted off, and people are beginning to
realize that it’s a very viable way of thinking.
There are a series of papers that have appeared
now in physical review letters. Ironically,
the author of them is the same man who did
the work on Uri Geller and the whole psychickinesis
work at Stanford all those years ago.
Those of us who internalized all that information
20 years ago, haven’t forgotten what we
saw. We’re simply saying, is there a way to
make sense of this in some new way? Can it
comeout into another form? The irony with this
is that it may mean that new forms of energy
devices are possible, involving the creation of
fluctuations in the zero point energy of the
vacuum.
Some of this is what’s going on with the
so-called cold-fusion research, which is not
cold fusion-neuer was fusion. They misnamed
it, and, of course, got into the whole editorial
censorship of th; scientific community for
making a mistake on naming a phenomenon.
There is a phenomenon. I was at a conference
on all this-at Stanford, a day-long meeting in
which everybody called each other every name
in the book. It’s amazing how the ad hominem
attacks, you know, and I said, «Look, can we
get back to the phenomenon here?» There really
are these bursts of energy that come out in
these experiments, but they can’t predict when
they’re corning.
Well, if I had more time, I could give you a
whole story about why I think that is, but this
sort of thing is going to-shift our view. he other
side of the coin is that there is another whole
body of information that, again, we edit outwe
say it’s not real-and that’s the whole area
of the better research on extraterrestrial contact
and UFO research. If you say to yourself, ‘Well
all right, maybe these people are deluded, but
let’s lookat thebest cases.» Let’s lookat theones
that the National Security Agency says it
doesn’t follow, doesn’t research. How is it that
Freedom of Information suits have revealed 280
documents in National Security Agency in an area
that they don’t follow? You go into the CIA, you
go into NASA, you go into DOD, I mean.. . you
know!
I have here with me a book that has not come
out in this country. It just came out in England,
which really pushes the limits altogether here.
It’s called Alien Liaisons, the Ultimate Secret. It’s
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
looking at the whole idea that in fact we actually
have in our possession crash examples of
these technologies, and we are actually using
some of this technology now. You say, ‘Well,
what’s really going on in Nevada, and how did
the Stealth Bomber, the invisible aircraft, suddenly
get into our hands, anyway?» There’s all
sorts of interesting stuff there.
What is going on in that research, according
to the anecdotal stuff that comes out of it, is
microcontrol of gravity. It is the same thing: it’s
the zero point of energy of the vacuum. We are
beginning to get a conceptual basis that would
lead to a logical extrapolation for creating the
kinds of phenomena that you would say are a
part of a very advanced civilization.
Now I have spoken at some length with the
man who has decided tocome out and blow the
whistle on some of that research. And I said to
him, and I will end with this, «Bob, my guess is
that we have brains and brain-mind link-ups
that were designed to operate in stable gravity.
And my guess is that if you were working on a
device that could change the local gravitational
field, it would distort your perception in a
strange way, would it not?» There was a sort of
a pause, and he said, «How did you know
that?» I said, ‘7 don’t know it, I could just infer
from everything else I have learned over the
years that a technology that could in fact
manipulate gravity would change the spacetime
fabric in the region in which it was operating,
and that, if you turned up the power, it
would become invisible, because the light coming
from it would no longer travel in a straight
line. It would bend around in a circle.» He said,
«Yes, that’s what happens, and that’s why it’s
so hard to work on this technology. When you
switch it on, youcan’t seeit.» It also has an effect
on the brain. The irony about UFO research is
that you have people saying, «I thought I saw
this, or it did this and then it disappeared.» He
points out that in any technology that is based
on gravitational control, you are never seeing it
as it actually is. You are only seeing a distorted
picture of it. We all accept that what we see
coming from the heavens is as they were many
light years ago. We know that’s not a real time
image in the sky out there, so we accept that,
but we don’t deal with the fact that close in
manipulation of space, time and light would
actually affect our ability to perceive reality in
the first place. So what if where we’re heading
here is really a place that only the mind itself
can go? I think that’s the exciting part of the
next decade.
I Thank you very much.
So what if where
we’re heading here is
really a place that
only the mind itself
can go? I think that’s
the exciting part of
the next decade.
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
by
Marta Elders, Ph.D.
A student of The Urantia
Book for many yems,
Elders remmad P h.D .
in counseling psychology.
She is presently working at
Washington S q m
Institute in New York City;
Center for Hope in Darien,
~onn&icut; hnd with a
national program for
minority students.
. . .where our consciousness
is, where
our awareness is, has
a powerful impact on
what we actually see
and acknowledge in
front of us.
Psychology as a
of Religious Expe
Author’s Note: While this talk was spoken extempore,
it has been modified here to adjust to the
written word.
* * *
Hello. (The audience responded.)
I am going to try an exercise here in the
shifting of consciousness. First I greeted you
and you greeted me back in the initial hello.
And that is the way we frequently acknowledge
one another, without too much thought
beyond the fact that this is another person in
front of me. NOW this(demonstratingihehands
placed together in front of the chest with the
head briefly bowed in acknowledgment) is an
indication of acknowledging the God within, a
greeting frequently used in some gatherings.
This behavior is symbolically quite different
from the first hello. What I am looking at here,
and what this exercise briefly demonstrates, is
that where our consciousn&s is, where our
awareness is, has a powerful impact on what
we actually see and acknowledge in front of us.
I’m sure many of you are familiar with the
quote in The Urantia Book that it is our thoughts,
not our feelings, that lead us Godward. The
way we hold our thinking is where we truly
live. The way we hold our thinking is how we
can be with God.
I was asked to speak about psychology and
what is happening in the field. But as I began
my preparation I decided to focus on the
psychological insights that are offered in The
Urantia Book. It is noteworthy, however, that
there is an increasing spiritual awareness in
certain branches of psychology, particularly
transpersonal psychology. And for those of you
who are interested in pursuing thinkers who
have addressed religion, spirituality, spiritual
development, and consciousness from a
psychological viewpoint, I would suggest
reading Abraham Maslow, Carl Jung, Roberto
Assagioli, Ken Wilbur, Michael Washburn, and
George Kuhlewind.
But, I chose to talk about psychology from
The Urantia Book viewpoint. And I have struggled
for months trying to decide what I was
going to say here today, how I was going to say
it, and, in fact, I am still working on it. I took the
word psychology literally; that i s t h e knowing
of the soul, the psyche logos. And I believe
that the «knowing of the soul» is where certain
branches of psychology are heading. So what
Variety
insights are available from The Urantia Book in
this endeavor? What is the soul? How does one
know one’s soul? What is identity? What is self?
What is material self? What is ego? What is
material mind? How does mind function? How
do these constructs and realities come into existence,
interact, develop, and grow? In an attempt
toward further understanding and to
stimulate our soul awareness I am going to
briefly describe our development as I understand
it to be presented in The Urantia Book. As
I do this, I invite each of you to bring your own
lives present, to bring them present in your
consciousness, to bring your sense of self into
your awareness, who you think you are; and
then see how the words and descriptions work
in your life. Do the words fit with your experience?
What do they mean in your life?
Interestingly, words, in and of themselves, are
meaningless. They are but symbols. It is only
our experience that fills out the words and
gives some meaning to us. So hopefully as you
bring your own experience to the words there
may be enrichment, movement, change, and
whatever was there before may be a little different
after.
Each of us began as an embryo. As we
formed, a brain formed. Our material mind,
our use of the adjutant minds is dependent on
our brain capacity. The brain will be the
hardware and the seven adjutant mind-spirits,
which have been bestowed by the local
universe Mother Spirit, will be the software.
Whenever thebrainbegins to function, I believe
the lower adjutants have become operative.
The first five adjutants-intuition, understanding,
courage, knowledge, and counselare
considered animal, subhuman; the top two,
worship and wisdom, are considered moral or
human. After approximately nine months of
gestation, a baby is born. It is my belief that
sometimeafter birth but before attaining a year,
personality is bestowed. Once personality has
been bestowed on this living energy system, on
our vehicle, there is the potential for selfconsciousness.
We can become aware that we are.
I can know that I am. You can know that you
are. And as this self-conscious being we fonn
an identity. This identity that we construct, and
are most likely living out of, can be referred to
as a material self-identity and is usually how
we describe who we are. For example, a child
MAY 17-19,1991 OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
might identify himself or herself as a good girl,
a fast runner, superman, daddfs helper, a bad
eater, etc. This material identity is very much
determined and affected by our family, the
community that we live in, the culture that we
grow up in, what we see on TV, etc. This social
and cultural context forms the frame in which
we decide who we are. In our exploration,
developmentally, we now have been bestowed
with personality, have begun to construct a
material self-identity, and are functioning
mostly on the first five adjutant mind spirits.
In the process of becoming, of growing, we
usethe sixthadjutant, the spirit of worship,and
at some subsequent time the seventh, the spirit
of wisdom. With the use of the seventh adjutant,
we make a moral decision. You and I
choose something that is greater than the self;
we make a decision that is truly moral. At that
moment a Thought Adjuster is bestowed, a soul
is initiated, and psychic circle growth begins.
Essentially at this point we have a child
developing along a material track that is establishing
a material self-identity, a personhood,
while simultaneously the soul, a quasi-spiritual
reality, is germinating. Our soul is in embryonic
form. This soul will be built and added to every
time a moral decision is made, every time a
supreme decision is made, every time truth is
touched, every time beauty is touched, every
time goodness is touched. There is this incredible
fabric being woven inside our beings,
that at some time will be our identity-this
incredibly beautiful, exquisite creation that
most of the time we don’t even perceive. So,
here we are in our lives making decisions in the
material world and creating our souls.
To me psychic circle growth, which appears
to be a stage process, is true human development,
is true maturation on this planet. As this
occurs the soul grows, there is increasing Adjuster
attunement, there is mind attainment,
and increasing personality status. Developmental
theorists have perceived aspects of this
growth and have contributed much to the
psychological literature. Lawrence Kohlberg
and Carol Gilligan have done work with moral
development. James Fowler has pursued faith
development. ErikErikson has done work with
ego development. I think each of these individuals
has seen, from a particular perspective,
the manifestations of this developmental
process.
Again here we are in our lives, living in and
from how we see ourselves, how we identify
ourselves, mostly living in our ego identities,
our material selves, as mother, father, teacher,
student, driver, shopper, etc. When we answer
the question «Who am I?» or ‘What am I
doing?» we will be pointed toward where we
live. We live in our thinking. When we greeted
one another before we noticed where we live.
That is the consciousness that we usually live
- In reality there seems to be two selves from
which we can liv-ne the material self and
the other the soul. Given that we usually live
from the material self, how might we switch to
living from our soul selves? How do we make
that move? How do I make that move? How do
you? Certainly we can talk about prayer, and
we can talk about worship, and we can talk
about being with God. But clearly, it is more
than talking about-it is really living there.
One of the struggles that I had in preparing
for this talk was that when I started I believed
that the ego self was not wanted, not desired. I
believed that I needed to transcend it, to let go
of it, to not be it. That’s not quite where I am
today. The sense that I have now is that this self
in its fullness is what needs to be committed to
God. The full self in its completeness, in its
richness, in its maturity, in its full psychic cimle
growth, in its full mind mastery, is what we
need to give our Father so that he can live
through us, so that his love can flow through
us in this incredible way. And yet, it remains
seemingly difficult to shift from this material
self to this soul identity. We are alerted to the
perimeter of conflict in The Urantia Book. There
we are warned about how hard the material
mind will hold on to us, how we cling to our
material self. Especially when we have done
well. Especially when our lives are good. Especially
when we have been successful. Why?
Because we like it, we like how we feel about
ourselves, we like how our life is working. We
are happy. We know how to get things done.
We know how to make our lives work Why
should we shift? In contrast, if we are in pain,
if our lives are not working if our lives are
falling apart, then we are m;ch more likely to
reach out and get help. But when it is good, it’s
hard to do that.
So what might it be like to enter that fringe
of conflict and move into our souls? To me that
is the place where we close our eyes and we
open our hearts. That’s the place where we take
that leap of faith. I think that this place is oftentimes
best described by our poets, by our artists,
by our musicians. They have reached in, or
taken that jump, and then tried to bring their
experience back to a material description.
There is a line in T.S. Eliot’s «Four Quartets,»
where he describes this shift into the soul as:
«where the darkness becomes the light, and the
stillness, the dance.» That’s exquisite. The still-
In reality there seems
to be two selves from
which we can liveone
the material self
and the other the
soul. Given that we
usually live from the
material self, how
might we switch to
living from our soul
selves?
. . .what might it be
like to enter that
fringe of conflict and
move into our souls?
SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM I1
This injunction
works both in terms
of our being w’th
andher person and
our being open to
truth when it is
presented to us. And
yet we hesitate. Why?
The sense that I have
is that it’s all in
place, the only thing
we sometimes do is
get in the way-get
in our own way.
ness, the dance, the shift, thedarkness, the light.
I think it is darkness that we go into initially,
that we literally do close our eyes and open our
eyes of faith. Jesus commented, «…you see not
with the eye of faith, and you hear not with the
understanding of the spirit,» which says to me
we need to see with theeyeof faith, that’s where
we need to see from. We need to hear with the
understanding of the spirit. When we are in a
situation, can we take our consciousness, and
can we lookto see with the eye of faith? Can we
listen to hear with the understanding of the
spirit? This injunction works both in terms of
our being with another person and our being
open to truth when it is presented to us. And
yet we hesitate. Why?
In The Urantia Book there is a statement that
there are, among others, two attitudes or states
that inhibit growth, one being ignorance and
the other being prejudice. When I think of those
attitudes in terms of my own thinking, they
seem to be most active when I have a closed
mind, a prejudicial mind, when I have prejudged
a situation, when I think1 know the way
things are, when I have the answers, when my
frame is closed and 1 am not looking to know
more. These attitudes will keep me far away
from that fringe of conflict, confident in my
own limited thinking, and not hungry for
growth.Theemotions of anxiety, fear, envy,and
palousy will help maintain this position. And
the wall will keep the inside from getting out
and the outside from getting in. And I will
remain isolated in my self, defended against the
very truth I need. One time Ganid inquired of
Jesus why he had not interacted with a certain
man, and Jesus replied: «Ganid, the man was
not hungry for truth. He was not dissatisfied
with himself. He was not ready to ask for help,
and the eyes of his mind were not open to
receive light for the soul.»
Take a moment to again bring your own life
up, your own presentation of yourself to yourself,
and let it just be there. What are your
inhibitors? What are your stumbling blocks?
Let yourself see what needs to be opened. Let
yourself see what your fears are; see what is
getting in your way, what you need to do to
move into your soul, to commit to your Father.
I mentioned that one of the insights I had
while preparing was this commitment of the
selfhood from its own fullness. This was beautifully
articulated when Jesus went up into the
hills following his baptism and the two minds
were made one. And I quote: ‘The results of this
momentous season of meditation demonstrated
conclusively that the divine mind has
triumphantly and spiritually dominated the
human intellect. The mind of man has become
the mind of Cod from this time on, and [this is
the part that caught my attention] though the
selfhood of the mind of man is ever present [the
selfhood, the being that had been developed,
the man], always does the spiritualized human
mind say, ‘not my will, but your be done.»‘ It is
as if our selfhood is almost embraced by our
larger divinity. Another quote also expresses
this: ‘The marks of human response to the
religious impulse embrace the qualities of
nobility and grandeur. The sincere religionist is
conscious of universe citizenship, and is aware
of making contact with sources of superhuman
power. He is thrilled and energized with the
assurance of belonging to a superior and ennobled
fellowship of the sons of God. [And
here’s where I’d like to highlight.] The consciousness
of self worth has become augmented
by the stimulus of the quest for the
highest universe objedives, supreme goals. The
self has surrendered to the intriguing drive of
an allencompassing motivation which imposes
self discipline, lessens emotion conflict,
and makes mortal life truly worth living.»
One wonders what else would promote this
shift into a more divine awareness. One possibility
from the Jesus Papers: ‘To become acquainted
with one’s brothers and sisters, to
know their problems, and to learn to love them
is the supreme experience of living.» That is
supremacy. Our souls are part of the Supreme.
Our interactions with one another can be a
Supreme experience, the experience of
Supremacy. And then there is this suggestion,
«Each race must become familiar with the
thought of all races. Each nation must know the
feelings of all nations. lgnorance breeds
suspicion, and suspicion is incompatible with
the essential attitude of sympathy and love.»
For a moment, suppose we were able to shift
our seat of identity from material self to the soul
and live from that place, at least attempt to live
from that place some of the time. Most likely
we would be quite mature and would have
realized much of the psychic circle growth. As
we made decisions we would probably check
them out with God first, using that as a grounding
point, a centering place. What else? What
else do we need to allow to happen? What is
needed? The sense that I have is that it’s all in
place, the only thing we sometimes do is get in
the way-get in our own way. In reality all we
have to do is fully commit to this, all we have
to do is wholeheartedly choose to do it. There
is a statement that «the great problem of
religious living consists in the task of unifylng
the soul powers of the personality by the
MAY 17-19.1991 OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLAHOMA
dominance of love.» So, it’s love. Where do we
get love? Where does it go? What do we do with
it?
«All true love is from God, and man receives
the divine affection as he himself bestows this
love upon his fellows.» That’s where it comes
from, that’s where it goes. It’s the flow. It’s the
flow of the universe. It’s the energy of the
universe. ‘Zove is dynamic, it can never be
captured. It is alive, free, thrilling, and always
moving. Man can never take the love of the
Father and imprison it within his heart.»
Doesn’t work ‘The Father’s love can become
real to mortal man only by passing through that
man’s personality as he in turn bestows this
love upon his fellows. The great circuit of love
is from theFather, through the sons, to brothers,
and hence to the Supreme. The love of the
Father appears in the mortal personality by the
ministry of the indwelling Adjuster. Such a
God-knowing son reveals this love to his
universe brethren and this fraternal affection is
the essence of the love of the Supreme.» It is
supremacy. It is the coming into existence of the
Supreme. It is the living of Supremacy. «Man
can discover the Father in his heart, but he will
have to search for the Supreme in the hearts of
all other men. And when all creatum perfectly
reveal the love of the Supreme, then will he
become a universe actuality to all creatures!’
And here we are, with our lives in front of us,
left with the question, thegreat challenge: ‘Will
you decide to personalize the experiencible
value meanings of the cosmos into your own
evolving selfhood?» And that, to me, is
psychology, the knowing of the soul, the creating
of the soul, as a variety of religious
experience.
«All true love is
from God, and man
receives the divine affection
as he himself
bestows this love
upon his fellows.»