6
Ancient Imagination and Legends, or Ancient
Facts?
As I have previously observed, there were
things in antiquity that should not have existed according to
current ideas. But my collector’s zeal is by no means exhausted
with the finds already accumulated.
Why? Because the mythology of the Eskimos also says
that the first tribes were brought to the North by “gods” with
brazen wings! The oldest American Indian sagas mention a
thunderbird who introduced fire and fruit to them. The Mayan
legend, the Popol Vuh, tells us that the “gods” were able to
recognize everything: the universe, the four cardinal points of the
compass, and even the round shape of the earth.
What are the Eskimos doing talking about metal
birds? Why do the Indians mention a thunderbird? How are the
ancestors of the Mayas supposed to have known that the earth is
round?
The Mayas were intelligent; they had a highly
developed culture. They left behind not only a fabulous calendar
but also incredible calculations. They knew the Venusian year of
584 days and estimated the duration of the terrestrial year at
365.2420 days. (The exact calculation today: 365.2422!) The Mayas
left behind them calculations to last for 64,000,000 years. Later
inscriptions dealt in units which probably approach 400,000,000
years. The famous Venusian formula could quite plausibly have been
calculated by an electronic brain. At any rate, it is difficult to
believe that it originated from a jungle people. The Venusian
formula of the Mayas runs as follows:
The Tzolkin has 260 days, the terrestrial year 365
days, and the Venusian year 584 days. These figures conceal the
possibility of an astonishing division sum. 365 is divisible by 73
five times, and 584 eight times. So the incredible formula takes
this form:
![004](vond_9781101076125_oeb_004_r1.gif)
In other words, all the cycles coincide after
37,960 days. Mayan mythology claimed that then the “gods” would
come to the great resting place.
The religious legends of the pre-Inca peoples say
that the stars were inhabited and that the “gods” came down to them
from the constellation of the Pleiades. Sumerian, Assyrian,
Babylonian, and Egyptian cuneiform inscriptions constantly present
the same picture: “gods” came from the stars and went back to them;
they traveled through the heavens in fireships or boats, possessed
terrifying weapons, and promised immortality to individual
men.
It was, of course, perfectly natural for the
ancient peoples to seek their gods in the sky and also to give
their imagination full rein when describing the magnificence of
these incomprehensible apparitions. Yet even if all that is
accepted, there are still too many anomalies left.
For example, how did the chronicler of the
Mahabharata know that a weapon capable of punishing a country with
a twelve years’ drought could exist? And powerful enough to kill
the unborn in their mothers’ wombs? This ancient Indian epic, the
Mahabharata, is more comprehensive than the Bible, and even at a
conservative estimate its original core is at least 5,000 years
old. It is well worth reading this epic in the light of present-day
knowledge.
We shall not be very surprised when we learn in the
Ramayana that Vimanas, i.e., flying machines, navigated at great
heights with the aid of quicksilver and a great propulsive wind.
The Vimanas could cover vast distances and could travel forward,
upward and downward. Enviably maneuverable space vehicles!
This quotation comes from the translation by N.
Dutt, 1891: “At Rama’s behest the magnificent chariot rose up to a
mountain of cloud with a tremendous din....” We cannot help
noticing that not only is a flying object mentioned again but also
that the chronicler talks of a tremendous din.
Here is another passage from the Mahabharata:
“Bhima flew with his Vimana on an enormous ray which was as
brilliant as the sun and made a noise like the thunder of a storm”
(C. Roy, 1889).
Even imagination needs something to start it off.
How can the chronicler give descriptions that presuppose at least
some idea of rockets and the knowledge that such a vehicle can ride
on a ray and cause a terrifying thunder?
In the Samsaptakabadha a distinction is made
between chariots that fly and those that cannot fly. The first book
of the Mahabharata reveals the intimate history of the unmarried
Kunti, who not only received a visit from the sun god but also had
a son by him, a son who is supposed to have been as radiant as the
sun itself. As Kunti was afraid—even in those days—of falling into
disgrace, she laid the child in a little basket and put it in a
river. Adhirata, a worthy man of the Suta caste, fished basket and
child out of the water, and brought up the infant.
Really a story that is hardly worth mentioning if
it were not so remarkably like the story of Moses! And, of course,
there is yet another reference to the fertilization of humans by
gods. Like Gilgamesh, Aryuna, the hero of the Mahabharata,
undertakes a long journey in order to seek the gods and ask them
for weapons. And when Aryuna has found the gods after many perils,
Indra, the lord of heaven, with his wife, Sachi, beside him, grants
him a very exclusive audience. The two do not meet the valiant
Aryuna just anywhere. They meet him in a heavenly war chariot and
even invite him to travel in the sky with them.
Certain numerical data in the Mahabharata are so
precise that one gets the impression that the author was writing
from first-hand knowledge. Full of repulsion, he describes a weapon
that could kill all warriors who wore metal on their bodies. If the
warriors learned about the effect of this weapon in time, they tore
off all the metal equipment they were wearing, jumped into a river,
and washed themselves and everything that they had come into
contact with very thoroughly. Not without reason, as the author
explains, for the weapon made the hair and nails fall out.
Everything living, he bemoaned, became pale and weak.
In the eighth book we meet Indra in his heavenly
jet chariot again. Out of the whole of mankind he has chosen
Yudhisthira as the only one who may enter heaven in his mortal
frame. Here, too, the parallel with the stories of Enoch and Elijah
cannot be overlooked.
In the same book, in what is perhaps the first
account of the dropping of an H-bomb, it says that Gurkha loosed a
single projectile on the triple city from a mighty Vimana. The
narrative uses words which linger in our memories from eyewitness
accounts of the detonation of the first hydrogen bomb at Bikini:
white-hot smoke, a thousand times brighter than the sun, rose up in
infinite brilliance and reduced the city to ashes. When Gurkha
landed again, his vehicle was like a flashing block of antimony.
And for the benefit of the philosophers I should mention that the
Mahabharata says that time is the seed of the universe.
The Tibetan books Tantyua and Kantyua also mention
prehistoric flying machines, which they call “pearls in the sky.”
Both books expressly emphasize that this knowledge is secret and
not for the masses. In the Samarangana Sutradhara whole chapters
are devoted to describing airships whose tails spout fire and
quicksilver.
The word “fire” in ancient texts cannot mean
burning fire, for altogether some forty different kinds of “fire,”
mainly connected with esoteric and magnetic phenomena, are
enumerated. It is hard to believe that the ancient peoples should
have known that it is possible to gain energy from heavy metals and
how to do so. However, we should not oversimplify and dismiss the
old Sanscrit texts as mere myths. The large number of passages from
old texts already quoted turns the suspicion that men encountered
flying “gods” in antiquity almost into a certainty. We are not
going to get any further with the old approach which scholars
unfortunately still cling to: “That doesn’t exist ... those are
mistakes in translation ... those are fanciful exaggerations by the
author or copyists.” We must use a new working hypothesis, one
developed from the technological knowledge of our age, to throw
light onto the thicket behind which our past lies concealed. Just
as the phenomenon of the spaceship in the remote past is
explicable, there is also a plausible explanation of the terrible
weapons which the gods made use of at least once in those days and
which are so frequently described. A passage from the Mahabharata
is bound to make us think:
It was as if the elements had been unleashed. The
sun spun round. Scorched by the incandescent heat of the weapon,
the world reeled in fever. Elephants were set on fire by the heat
and ran to and fro in a frenzy to seek protection from the terrible
violence. The water boiled, the animals died, the enemy was mown
down and the raging of the blaze made the trees collapse in rows as
in a forest fire. The elephants made a fearful trumpeting and sank
dead to the ground over a vast area. Horses and war chariots were
burnt up and the scene looked like the aftermath of a
conflagration. Thousands of chariots were destroyed, then deep
silence descended on the sea. The winds began to blow and the earth
grew bright. It was a terrible sight to see. The corpses of the
fallen were mutilated by the terrible heat so that they no longer
looked like human beings. Never before have we seen such a ghastly
weapon and never before have we heard of such a weapon (C. Roy,
1889).
The story goes on to say that those who escaped
washed themselves, their equipment, and their arms, because
everything was polluted by the death-dealing breath of the “gods.”
What does it say in the Epic of Gilgamesh? “Has the poisonous
breath of the heavenly beast smitten you?”
Alberto Tulli, formerly keeper of the Egyptian
Department in the Vatican Museum, found a fragment of a text from
the time of Thutmose III, who lived about 1500 B.C. It relates the
tradition that the scribes saw a ball of fire come down from heaven
and that its breath had an evil smell. Thutmose and his soldiers
watched this spectacle until the ball of fire rose in a southerly
direction and disappeared from view.
All the texts quoted date from millennia before our
era. The authors lived on different continents and belonged to
different cultures and religions. There were no special messengers
to spread the news in those days, and intercontinental journeys
were not an everyday occurrence. In spite of this, traditions
telling almost the same story come from the four corners of the
world and from innumerable sources. Did all their authors have the
same bee in their bonnet? Were they all haunted by the same
phenomenon? It is impossible and incredible that the chroniclers of
the Mahabharata, the Bible, the Epic of Gilgamesh, the texts of the
Eskimos, the American Indians, the Scandinavians, the Tibetans, and
many, many other sources should all tell the same stories—of flying
“gods,” strange heavenly vehicles, and the frightful catastrophes
connected with these apparitions—by chance and without any
foundation. They cannot all have had the same ideas all over the
world. The almost uniform texts can stem only from facts,
i.e., from prehistoric events. They related what was
actually there to see. Even if the reporter in the remote past may
have exaggerated his story with fanciful trimmings, much as
news-men do today, the fact, the actual incident, still remains at
the core of all exclusive accounts, as it does today. And that
incident obviously cannot have been invented in so many places in
different ages.
Let us make up an example:
A helicopter lands in the African bush for the
first time. None of the natives has ever seen such a machine. The
helicopter lands in a clearing with a sinister clatter; pilots in
battle dress, with crash helmets and machine guns, jump out of it.
The savage in his loincloth stands stupefied and uncomprehending in
the presence of this thing that has come down from heaven and the
unknown “gods” who came with it. After a time the helicopter takes
off again and disappears into the sky.
Once he is alone again, the savage has to work out
and interpret this apparition. He will tell others who were not
present what he saw: a bird, a heavenly vehicle, that made a
terrible noise and stank, and white-skinned creatures carrying
weapons that spat fire. The miraculous visit is fixed and handed
down for all time. When the father tells it to his son, the
heavenly bird obviously does not get any smaller, and the creatures
that got out of it become weirder, stronger, and more imposing.
These and many other embellishments will be added to the story. But
the premise for the glorious legend was the actual landing of the
helicopter. It did land in the clearing in the jungle and the
pilots did climb out of it. From that moment the event is
perpetuated in the mythology of the tribe.
Certain things cannot be made up. I should not be
ransacking our prehistory for space travelers and heavenly aircraft
if accounts of such apparitions appeared in only two or three
ancient books. But when in fact nearly all the texts of the
primitive peoples all over the globe tell the same story, I feel I
must try to explain the objective thrust concealed in their
pages.
“Son of man, thou dwellest in the midst of a
rebellious house, which have eyes to see, and see not; they have
ears to hear, and hear not ...” (Ezekiel 12:2).
We know that all the Sumerian gods had their
counterparts in certain stars. There is supposed to have been a
statue to Marduk (Mars), the highest of the gods, that weighed 800
talents of pure gold. If we are to believe Herodotus, that is
equivalent to more than 48,000 pounds of gold. Ninurta (Sirius) was
judge of the universe and passed sentence on mortal men. There are
cuneiform tablets which were addressed to Mars, to Sirius, and to
the Pleiades. Time and again Sumerian hymns and prayers mention
divine weapons, the form and effect of which must have been
completely senseless to the people of those days. A panegyric to
Mars says that he made fire rain down and destroyed his enemies
with a brilliant lightning flash. Inanna is described as she
traverses the heavens, radiating a frightful blinding gleam and
annihilating the houses of the enemy. Drawings and even the model
of a home have been found resembling a prefabricated atomic bunker:
round and massive, with a single strangely framed aperture. From
the same period, about 3000 B.C., archaeologists have found a model
of a team with chariot and driver, as well as two sportsmen
wrestling, all of immaculate craftsmanship. The Sumerians, it has
been proved, were masters of applied art. Then why did they model a
clumsy bunker, when other excavations at Babylon or Uruk have
brought much subtler works to light? Quite recently a whole
Sumerian library of about 60,000 clay tablets was found in the town
of Nippur, 95 miles south of Baghdad. We now possess the oldest
account of the Flood, engraved on a tablet in six columns. Five
antediluvian cities are named on the tablets: Eridu, Badtibira,
Larak, Sitpar, and Shuruppak. Two of these cities have not yet been
discovered. On these tablets, the oldest deciphered to date, the
Noah of the Sumerians is called Ziusudra. He is supposed to have
lived in Shuruppak and also to have built his ark there. So we now
possess an even older description of the Flood than the one in the
Epic of Gilgamesh. No one knows whether new finds will not produce
still earlier accounts.
The men of the ancient cultures seem to have been
almost obsessed with the idea of immortality or rebirth. Servants
and slaves obviously lay down voluntarily in the tomb with their
masters. In the burial chamber of Shub-At, no less than seventy
skeletons lay next to each other in perfect order. Without the
least sign of violence, sitting or lying in their brilliantly
colored robes, they awaited the death which must have come swiftly
and painlessly—perhaps by poison. With unshakable conviction, they
looked forward to a new life beyond the grave with their masters.
But who put the idea of rebirth into the heads of these heathen
peoples?
The Egyptian pantheon is just as confusing. The
ancient texts of the people on the Nile also tell of mighty beings
who traversed the firmament in boats. A cuneiform text to the sun
god Ra runs: “Thou couplest under the stars and the moon, thou
drawest the ship of Aten in heaven and on earth like the tirelessly
revolving stars and the stars at the North Pole that do not
set.”
Here is an inscription from a pyramid: “Thou art he
who directs the sun ship of millions of years.”
Even if the old Egyptian mathematicians were very
advanced, it is odd that they should speak of millions of years in
connection with the stars and a heavenly ship. What does the
Mahabharata say? “Time is the seed of the universe.
In Memphis the god Ptah handed the king two models
with which to celebrate the anniversaries of his reign and
commanded him to celebrate the said anniversaries for six times a
hundred thousand years. When the god Ptah came to give the king the
models he appeared in a gleaming heavenly chariot and afterward
disappeared over the horizon in it. Today representations of the
winged sun and a soaring falcon carrying the sign of eternity and
eternal life can still be found on doors and temples at Idfu. There
is no known place in the world where such innumerable illustrations
of winged symbols of the gods are preserved as in Egypt.
Every tourist knows the Island of Elephantine with
the famous Nilometer at Aswan. The island is called Elephantine
even in the oldest texts, because it was supposed to resemble an
elephant. The texts were quite right—the island does look like an
elephant. But how did the ancient Egyptians know that? This shape
can be recognized only from an airplane at a great height, for
there is no hill offering a view of the island that would prompt
anyone to make the comparison.
A recently discovered inscription on a building at
Idfu says that the edifice is of supernatural origin. The ground
plan was drawn by the deified being Im-Hotep. Now this Im-Hotep was
a very mysterious and clever personality—the Einstein of his time.
He was priest, scribe, doctor, architect, and philosopher rolled
into one. In this ancient world, the age of Im-Hotep, according to
archaeologists, the only tools the people could have used for
working stone were wooden wedges and copper, neither of which is
suitable for cutting up granite blocks. Yet the brilliant Im-Hotep
built the step pyramid of Sakkara for his king, who was called
Zoser. This 197-foot high edifice is built with a mastery that
Egyptian architects were never quite able to equal afterward. The
structure, surrounded by a wall 33 feet high and 1,750 feet long,
was called the House of Eternity by Im-Hotep. He had himself buried
in it, so that the gods could wake him on their return.
We know that all the pyramids were laid out
according to the positions of certain stars. Is not this knowledge
a bit embarrassing in view of the fact that we have very little
evidence of Egyptian astronomy? Sirius was one of the few stars
they took an interest in. But this very interest in Sirius seems
rather peculiar, because seen from Memphis, Sirius can be observed
only in the early dawn just above the horizon when the Nile floods
begin. To fill the measure of confusion to overflowing, there was
an accurate calendar in Egypt 4,221 years before our era! This
calendar was based on the rise of Sirius (1st Tout = July 19) and
gave annual cycles of more than 32,000 years.
Admittedly the old astronomers had plenty of time
to observe the sun, the moon, and the stars, year in, year out,
until they finally decided that all the stars stand in the same
place again after approximately 365 days. But surely it was quite
absurd to base the first calendar on Sirius when it would have been
easier to use the sun and the moon, besides leading to more
accurate results. Presumably the Sirius calendar is a built-up
system, a theory of probabilities, because it could never predict
the appearance of the star. If Sirius appeared on the horizon at
dawn at the same time as the Nile flood, it was pure coincidence. A
Nile flood did not happen every year, nor did every Nile flood take
place on the same day. In which case, why a Sirius calendar? Is
there an old tradition here, too? Was there a text or a promise
which was carefully guarded by the priesthood?
The tomb in which a gold necklace and the skeleton
of an entirely unknown animal were found probably belonged to King
Udimu. Where did the animal come from? How can we explain the fact
that the Egyptians had a decimal system already at the beginning of
the first dynasty? How did such a highly developed civilization
arise at such an early date? Where do objects of copper and bronze
originate as early as the beginning of the Egyptian culture? Who
gave them their incredible knowledge of mathematics and a
ready-made writing?
Before we deal with some monumental buildings which
raise innumerable questions, let us take another brief glance at
the old texts.
Where did the narrators of The Thousand and One
Nights get their staggering wealth of ideas? How did anyone
come to describe a lamp from which a magician spoke when the owner
wished?
What daring imagination invented the “Open,
Sesame!” incident in the tale of Ali Baba and the forty
thieves?
Of course, such ideas no longer astonish us today,
for the television set shows us talking pictures at the turn of a
switch. And as the doors of most large department stores open by
photocells, even the “Open, Sesame!” incident no longer conceals
any special mystery. Nevertheless the imaginative power of the old
storytellers was so incredible that the books of contemporary
writers of science fiction seem banal in comparison. So it must be
that the ancient storytellers had a store of things already seen,
known, and experienced ready at hand to spark off their
imagination!
In the legendary and sagalike world of intangible
cultures which as yet offer to us no fixed points of reference, we
are on still shakier ground, and things become even more confusing.
Naturally the Icelandic and Old Norwegian traditions also mention
“gods” who travel in the sky. The goddess Frigg has a maidservant
called Gna. The goddess sends her handmaid to different worlds on a
steed which rises in the air above land and sea. The steed is
called “Hoof-thrower,” and once, says the saga, Gna met some
strange creatures high in the air. In the Alwislied
different names are given to the earth, the sun, the moon, and the
universe depending on whether they are seen from the point of view
of men, “gods,” giants, or dwarfs. How on earth could people in the
dim past arrive at different perceptions of one and the same thing,
when the horizon was very limited?
Although the scholar Snorri Sturluson did not write
down the Nordic and Old Germanic legends, sagas, and songs until
about A.D. 1200, they are known to be some thousands of years old.
In these writings the symbol of the world is often described as a
disc or a ball—remarkably enough—and Thor, the leader of the gods,
is always shown with a hammer, the destroyer. Herbert Kuhn supports
the view that the word “hammer” means “stone,” dates from the Stone
Age, and was transferred to bronze and iron hammers only later.
Consequently Thor and his hammer symbol must have been very ancient
and probably do go back to the Stone Age. Moreover, the word “Thor”
in the Indian (Sanscrit) legends is “Tanayitnu”; this could be more
or less rendered as “the Thunderer.” The Nordic Thor, god of gods,
is the lord of the Germanic Wannen, who makes the skies
unsafe.
When arguing about the entirely new aspects that I
introduce into investigation of the past, the objection might be
made that it is not possible to compile everything in the ancient
traditions that points to heavenly apparitions into a sequence of
proofs of prehistoric space travel. But that is not what I am
doing. I am simply referring to passages in very ancient texts that
have no place in the working hypothesis in use up to the present. I
am drilling away at those admittedly awkward spots in which
scribes, translators, and copyists could have had no idea of the
sciences and their products. I also would be quite prepared to
consider the translations wrong and the copies not accurate enough
if these same false, fancifully embellished traditions were not
accepted in their entirety as soon as they can be fitted into the
framework of some religion or other. It is unworthy of a scientific
investigator to deny something when it upsets his working
hypothesis and accept it when it supports his theory. Imagine the
shape my theory would take and the strength it would gain if new
translations made with a “space outlook” existed!
To help us patiently forge the chain of our thesis
a little further, scrolls with fragments of apocalyptic and
liturgical texts were recently found near the Dead Sea. Once again,
in the Apocryphical Books of Abraham and Moses, we hear about a
heavenly chariot with wheels, which spits fire, whereas similar
references are lacking in the Ethiopian and Slavic Book of
Enoch.
“Behind the being I saw a chariot which had wheels
of fire, and every wheel was full of eyes all around, and on the
wheels was a throne and this was covered with fire that flowed
around it” (Apocryphal Book of Abraham 18:11-12).
According to Gershom Scholem’s explanation, the
throne and chariot symbolism of the Jewish mystics corresponded
roughly to that of the Hellenistic and early Christian mystics when
they talk about pleroma (abundance of light). That is a
respectable explanation, but can it be accepted as scientifically
proved? May we simply ask what would be the case if some people had
really seen the fiery chariot that is described over and over
again? A secret script was used very frequently in the Qumran
scrolls; among the documents in the fourth cave different kinds of
characters alternate in one and the same astrological work. An
astronomical observation bears the title: “Words of the judicious
one which he has addressed to all sons of the dawn.”
But what is the crushing and convincing objection
to the possibility that real fiery chariots were described in the
ancient texts? Surely not the vague and stupid assertion that fiery
chariots cannot have existed in antiquity! Such an answer would be
unworthy of the men I am trying to force to face new alternatives
with my questions. Lastly, it is by no means so long ago that
reputable scholars said that no stones (meteors) could fall from
the sky, because there were no stones in the sky. Even
nineteenth-century mathematicians came to the conclusion—convincing
in their day—that a railway train would not be able to travel
faster than 21 miles an hour because if it did the air would be
forced out of it and the passengers would suffocate. Less than a
hundred years ago it was “proved” that an object heavier than air
would never be able to fly.
A review in a reputable newspaper classed Walter
Sullivan’s book We Are Not Alone as science fiction and said
that even in the most distant future it would be quite impossible
to reach, say, Epsilon Eridani or Tau Ceti; even the effect of a
shift in time or deep-freezing the astronauts could never overcome
the barriers of the inconceivable distances.
It is a good thing that there were always enough
bold visionaries oblivious to contemporary criticism in the past.
Without them there would be no worldwide railway network today,
with trains traveling at 124 miles an hour and more. (N.B.:
Passengers die at more than 21 miles per hour!) Without them there
would be no jet aircraft today, because they would certainly fall
to the ground. (Things that are heavier than air cannot fly!) And
there would be no moon rockets. (Man cannot leave his own planet!)
There are so many, many things that would not exist but for the
visionaries!
A number of scholars would like to stick to the
so-called realities. In so doing they are too ready and willing to
forget that what is reality today may have been the Utopian dream
of a visionary yesterday. We owe a considerable number of all the
epoch-making discoveries that our age thinks of as realities to
lucky chances, not to steady systematic research. And some of them
stand to the credit of the “serious visionaries” who overcame
restricting prejudice with their bold speculations. For example,
Heinrich Schliemann accepted Homer’s Odyssey as more than stories
and fables and discovered Troy as a result.
We still know too little about our past to be able
to make a definite judgment about it. New finds may solve
unprecedented mysteries; the reading of ancient narratives is
capable of turning whole worlds of realities upside down.
Incidentally, it is obvious to me that more old books were
destroyed than are preserved. There is supposed to have been a book
in South America that contained all the wisdom of antiquity; it is
reputed to have been destroyed by the sixty-third Inca ruler,
Pachacuti IV. In the library of Alexandria 500,000 volumes
belonging to the learned Ptolemy Soter contained all the traditions
of mankind; the library was partly destroyed by the Romans, and the
rest was burned on the orders of Caliph Omar centuries later. An
incredible thought that invaluable and irreplaceable manuscripts
were used to heat the public baths of Alexandria!
What became of the library of the temple at
Jerusalem? What became of the library of Pergamon, which is
supposed to have housed 200,000 works? When the Chinese Emperor
Chi-Huang ordered the destruction of a mass of historical,
astronomical, and philosophical books for political reasons in 214
B.C., what treasures and secrets went with them? How many texts did
the converted Paul cause to be destroyed at Ephesus? And we cannot
even imagine the enormous wealth of literature about all branches
of knowledge that has been lost to us owing to religious
fanaticism. How many thousands of irretrievable writings did monks
and missionaries burn in South America in their blind religious
zeal?
That happened hundreds and thousands of years ago.
Has mankind learned anything as a result? Only half a century ago
Hitler had books burned in the public squares, and as recently as
1966 the same thing happened in China during Mao’s kindergarten
revolution. Thank heavens that today books do not exist in single
copies, as in the past.
The texts and fragments still available transmit a
great deal of knowledge from the remote past. In all ages the sages
of a nation knew that the future would always bring wars and
revolutions, blood and fire. Did this knowledge perhaps lead these
sages to hide secrets and traditions from the mob in the colossal
buildings of their period or to preserve them from possible
destruction in a safe place? Have they “hidden” information or
accounts in pyramids, temples, and statues, or bequeathed them in
the form of ciphers so that they would withstand the ravages of
time? We certainly ought to test the idea, for farsighted
contemporaries of our own day have acted in this way—for the
future.
In 1965 Americans buried in the soil of New York
two time capsules so constituted that they could withstand the very
worst that this earth could offer in the way of calamities for
5,000 years. These time capsules contained news that we want to
transmit to posterity, so that some day those who strive to
illuminate the darkness surrounding the past of their forefathers
will know how we lived. The capsules are made of a metal that is
harder than steel; they can survive even an atomic explosion. In
addition to daily news, the capsules contain photographs of cities,
ships, automobiles, aircraft, and rockets; they house samples of
metals and plastics, of fabrics, threads, and cloths; they hand
down to posterity objects in everyday use such as coins, tools, and
toilet articles; books about mathematics, medicine, physics,
biology, and astronautics are preserved on microfilm. In order to
complete this service for some remote and unknown future race, the
capsules also contain a “key,” a book with the help of which all
the written material can be translated into the languages of the
future.
A group of engineers from Westinghouse Electric had
the idea of presenting the time capsules to posterity. John
Harrington invented the ingenious decoding system for generations
yet unknown. Lunatics? Visionaries? I find the realization of this
project beneficial and reassuring. It’s nice to know that there are
men today who think 5,000 years ahead! The archaeologists of some
remote future age will not find things any easier than we did. For
after an atomic conflagration none of the world’s libraries will be
of any use, and all the achievements that make us so proud will not
be worth twopence—because they have disappeared, because they have
been destroyed, because they have been atomized. An atomic
conflagration which ravages the earth is not required to justify
the New Yorkers’ imaginative action. A shifting of the earth’s axis
by a few degrees would cause inundations on an unprecedented and
irresistible scale—in any case they would swallow up every single
written word. Who is arrogant enough to assert that the sages of
old could not have conceived the same sort of idea as the
farsighted New Yorkers?
Undoubtedly the strategists of an A-bomb and H-bomb
war will not direct their weapons against Zulu villages and
harmless Eskimos. They will use them against the centers of
civilization. In other words, the radioactive chaos will fall on
the advanced, most highly developed peoples. Savages and primitive
peoples far away from the centers of civilization will be left.
They will not be able to transmit our culture or even give an
account of it, because they have never taken part in it. Even
intelligent men and visionaries who tried to preserve an
underground library will not have been able to help the future a
great deal. “Normal” libraries will be destroyed in any case, and
the surviving primitive peoples will know nothing of the hidden
secret libraries. Whole regions of the globe will become burning
deserts, because radiation lasting for centuries will not allow any
plants to grow. The survivors will presumably be mutated, and after
2,000 years nothing will be left of the annihilated cities. The
unbridled power of nature will eat its way through the ruins; iron
and steel will rust and crumble into dust.
And everything will begin again! Man may embark on
his adventure a second or even a third time. Perhaps once again he
will take so long to reemerge as a civilized being that the secrets
of old traditions and texts will be closed to him. Five thousand
years after the catastrophe, archaeologists could claim that
twentieth-century man was not yet familiar with iron, because,
understandably enough, they would not find any, no matter how hard
they dug. Along the Russian frontiers they would find miles of
concrete tank traps, and they would explain that such finds
undoubtedly indicated astronomical lines. If they were to find
cassettes with tapes, they would not know what to do with them;
they would not even be able to distinguish between played and
unplayed tapes. And perhaps those tapes might hold the solution to
many, many puzzles! Texts which spoke of gigantic cities with
houses several hundred feet high would be pooh-poohed, because such
cities could not have existed. Scholars would take the London Tube
tunnels for a geometrical curiosity or an astonishingly
well-conceived drainage system. And they might keep on coming
across reports which described how men flew from continent to
continent with giant birds and referred to extraordinary
fire-spitting ships which disappeared into the sky. That would also
be dismissed as mythology, because such great birds and
fire-spitting ships could not have existed.
Things would be made very difficult for the
translators in the year 7000. The facts about a world war in the
twentieth century that they would discover from fragmentary texts
would sound quite incredible. But when the speeches of Marx and
Lenin fell into their hands, they would at last be able to make two
high priests of this incomprehensible age the center of a religion.
What a piece of luck!
People would be able to explain a great deal,
provided sufficient clues were still in existence. Five thousand
years is a long time. It is pure caprice on nature’s part that she
allows dressed blocks of stone to survive for 5,000 years. She does
not deal so carefully with the thickest iron girders.
In the courtyard of a temple in Delhi there exists,
as I have already mentioned, a column made of welded iron parts
that has been exposed to weathering for more than 4,000 years
without showing a trace of rust. In addition it is unaffected by
sulphur or phosphorus. Here we have an unknown alloy from antiquity
staring us in the face. Perhaps the column was cast by a group of
farsighted engineers who did not have the resources for a colossal
building but wanted to bequeath to posterity a visible,
time-defying monument to their culture.
It is an embarrassing story: in advanced cultures
of the past we find buildings that we cannot copy today with the
most modern technical means. These stone masses are there; they
cannot be argued away. Because that which ought not to exist cannot
exist, there is a frantic search for “rational” explanations. Let
us take off our blinkers and join the search....