How Did Man Arrive on Earth?
How did humankind come to inhabit a blue marble spinning in black space?
Were we put here by a Creator? Did we evolve from simpler forms of life? Could we have migrated here from another planet or arrived on a comet? In this month's four-page center section we explore the varied chronicles of those earliest days as recorded in the major cultures and faiths. While there is little agreement about our origins, there is much to muse over and meditate about.
Were we put here by a Creator? Did we evolve from simpler forms of life? Could we have migrated here from another planet or arrived on a comet? In this month's four-page center section we explore the varied chronicles of those earliest days as recorded in the major cultures and faiths. While there is little agreement about our origins, there is much to muse over and meditate about.
INTRODUCTION
Every
culture on Earth has pondered the question, "How did we get here?"
Profound, divine answers have been formulated through the ages. Several,
drawn from the world's oldest and newest cultures and religions, are
summarized or retold on this and the next two pages. Today we seem to be
on the verge of completely losing our sense of divine origin and
purpose as more and more people accept the verdict of Darwinian
science--that we are the chance result of billions of years of evolution
from single-celled creatures, to sea-born creatures, to reptiles,
birds, mammals, to apes and finally to man.
We
need not accept at face value this Godless judgment on our origins.
Hinduism and other religions hold that there is more to existence than
this mere physical reality, and that a transcendent intelligence inheres
and instructs the development of this universe, including the observed
processes of evolution. This page introduces their poignant quotations
from legends and ancient texts.
On
the fourth page, we briefly present the likelihood of intelligent life
elsewhere in our galaxy, and explore the intriguing possibility that man
did not originate on Earth at all, but came here from another planet.
WHAT THE RELIGIONS TEACH
The
Australian Aborigines are likely the oldest tribe on our planet, with a
known continuity of cultural history going back over 50,000 years. They
speak of the "Dreamtime" of the distant past when the Gods walked on
the Earth and created people, sacred places, animals and the ways of
human society. They believe a jivaor guruwari,a "seed
power," is deposited in the Earth, "a symbolic footprint of the
metaphysical beings whose actions created our world," states Australian
author Robert Lawlor. "We have been here since the time before time
began," explains an Aboriginal elder. "We have come directly out of the
Dreamtime of the great Creative Ancestors. We have lived and kept the
Earth as it was on the First Day. All other peoples of the world came
from us." "
Hinduismhas several creation accounts, of which the central is found in the Rig Veda[see
next page] of the Cosmic Man, Purusha, who was sacrificed by the Gods
to create man. The Purusha is a divine emanation of God, and can be
understood in at least one sense as the individuation of consciousness,
the personal aspect of God. It is this individuated consciousness that
is offered and divided by the Gods to create all of the physical
universe, men, animals and plants. Three-fourths of the Purusha remains
"ascended high" and only "one fourth took birth again down here," as the
hymn explains, meaning what we see is only one-fourth of reality, the
remaining being in divine form. Further elaborations of the creation are
told in the Puranas, Dharma Shastrasand other Hindu scriptures. Manu Dharma ShastraI.11-119,
for example, describes the creation of heaven and earth, of the soul,
and of individual creatures. Manu, son of the first being, performed tapas,very
difficult austerities, to create ten great sages who then created seven
other Manus, who are progenitors of the human race in each age.
Sikhismfollows Hindu traditions of origins. The Chinese[see next page] have, in the story of the first man, Pangu, a close parallel to the Hindu Purusha.
Buddhataught that this world will come to an end, but that in time a new world will evolve again. Certain karmaswill
cause souls to again seek life in the body, others will follow and
become more and more attached to the body, developing passion,
selfishness and other evils. The Buddhist scripture Saddharma Pundarikamentions
that there are so many worlds beyond this one that no one "should be
able to imagine, weigh, count or determine their number."
The Jainshold
that the world, souls and time are uncreated, unbeginning and unending.
The world exists through its own being and is divided into heaven,
earth and hell.
Christiansand Jewsbelieve
in the making of man by God on the sixth day of creation (some 4,000
years ago) out of clay and in His own image, as told in the Book of Genesis[see next page]. The Muslimsbelieve,
similarly, that Allah created Adam, the first man in Paradise, then the
first woman, Hawa (Eve). There they lived a perfect life in a perfect
universe, far vaster than ours. They were cast to Earth when they
committed the first disobedience of God, after a jealous Satan tricked
them. Their children are the ancestors of mankind. The Zoroastrianreligion of Persia also holds to the creation story of Adam and Eve.
There are mystical traditions within Christianity, Islam and Judaism whose teachings go beyond Genesis.For example, the Sufimaster
Shaykh Muhammad Nazim al-Haqqani taught, "Do you think there was only
one Adam? No. There was not one Adam. In fact, there have been 124,000
Adams. Allah is not stingy; He is generous. His creation is endless."
Sufi mystics also hold that there are many inhabited worlds in the
universe. The JewishKabbalahtradition teaches of man's
descent from the highest spiritual world through a series of planes
ending with his reincarnation in a physical body.
The Shintoteaching
is that the Japanese people are descendants of the Gods Izanagi and
Izanami, who were ordered to "Make, consolidate and give birth to this
drifting land [of Japan]." This they did and then produced the many
Gods, fire, water and men. Among the Gods, the most important was
Amaterasu, the Sun God, whose descendent was Jimmu, the first emperor of
Japan.
The African Dogontribe
teaches that the primal Cosmic Egg was shaken by seven huge stirrings
of the universe. It divided into two birth sacs, each containing a set
of androgenous twins who were fathered by the Supreme Being, Amma. From
one set of twins was born the Earth, from the other, mankind.
Theosophyholds
that there are countless universes, each the home of numerous solar
systems with planets where beings are evolving. Human history is
recounted in terms of seven succeeding "root races." The first,
descended from residents of the moon, dwelt on a continent named the
imperishable Sacred Land. The second, known as the Hyerborean, inhabited
a vast territory in the vicinity of the North Pole. Since neither of
those races had physical bodies, they reproduced by spiritual means. The
third root race lived and died in Lemuria; the fourth in Atlantis--both
now at the ocean bottom. The fifth and present root race is the Aryan;
the sixth and seventh have yet to appear. When they do, humanity will
have run its course on Earth and will move to another planet to begin
the cycle again.
Both the Mayans[see next page] and the ancient Babylonianstaught
that the Gods created man to honor them. "I will create a savage, 'man'
shall be his name," declared the victorious God Marduk in Enuma Elish."Verily
a savage man I will create. He shall be charged with the service of the
Gods that they might be at ease! Let one of the [lesser] Gods be handed
over. He alone shall perish that mankind may be fashioned."
Sidebar: Could We Have Come From Another Planet?
The
scientists who developed the Greenbank Equation at left make a
convincing case for the existence of intelligent life elsewhere in our
universe. Sentient life throughout the cosmos provokes the question,
"Could man have originated elsewhere and migrated here, either
physically or spiritually?" Most religious traditions that address this
question speak of the migration as purely spiritual, but at least one
claims the journey was physical. Below are some of mankind's reflections
about how we came to be here.
Signs of a Common Heritage
In examining the creation stories of the world's faiths, one thing strikes a Hindu: nearly every account of creation has some parallel within Hindu mythology. Anthropologists explain all these parallels in a psychological fashion--water symbolizes the womb, etc. But perhaps all cultures are harkening back to the experiences of a common ancestry.
In examining the creation stories of the world's faiths, one thing strikes a Hindu: nearly every account of creation has some parallel within Hindu mythology. Anthropologists explain all these parallels in a psychological fashion--water symbolizes the womb, etc. But perhaps all cultures are harkening back to the experiences of a common ancestry.
The
American Indians of California, for example, tell of how God sent an
animal down through the waters to bring up the Earth, in the same way
that the Boar incarnation of Lord Vishnu rescued the Earth from beneath
the waters.
The Chinese Pangu is amazingly akin to the sacrificed original man in the Purusha Sukta.
In many cultures, man was originally immortal, and only at a certain
time did he start to die--just as Yama in Hinduism was the first man to
die, and then became the Lord of death. Another common element is the
breath of God being infused into man, bringing him to life.
Did We Come from the Sky?
The authoritative Larousse World Mythologybook states, "There is an almost universal belief in a visit by the first men to the sky, and consequently in the existence of a path between the Earth and the world above that was ultimately destroyed by human wrongdoing." There are common elements in the creation stories which indicate we had a different kind of existence before living in these physical bodies. One example is androgyny; the original people in the creation stories are often both male and female. Another is the absolute harmony of existence in an earlier time when people lived in peace and freely communicated with the animals and plants. A third is the initial absence of death, a fact of life which comes later, as previously described.
The authoritative Larousse World Mythologybook states, "There is an almost universal belief in a visit by the first men to the sky, and consequently in the existence of a path between the Earth and the world above that was ultimately destroyed by human wrongdoing." There are common elements in the creation stories which indicate we had a different kind of existence before living in these physical bodies. One example is androgyny; the original people in the creation stories are often both male and female. Another is the absolute harmony of existence in an earlier time when people lived in peace and freely communicated with the animals and plants. A third is the initial absence of death, a fact of life which comes later, as previously described.
Hindu scriptures often speak of the many lokasor planes of existence and dvipaor islands. They talk of beings coming from other lokasto this loka,possibly even of spaceships in which they could travel. These lokas,however, are more commonly interpreted as other dimensions of existence rather than physical planets.
His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of ISKCON, addressed this question in his commentary of Srimad Bhagavatam:"According
to Vedic understanding, the entire universe is regarded as an ocean of
space. In that ocean there are innumerable planets, and each planet is
called a dvipa,or island. The various planets are divided into fourteen lokas.As
Priyavrata drove his chariot behind the sun, he created seven different
types of oceans and planetary systems, known as Bhuloka." Srila
Prabhupada also stated that according to the Vedic tradition there are
400,000 species in the universe with humanlike form, many of them
advanced beyond us.
Other parts of Hindu scripture refer to travel to other worlds. The Rig Vedahymns on death speak of man's soul traveling to the sun and the moon, then returning to Earth.
Certainly
the most dramatic example of a people who believe they came from
another planet is the Tana Toraja tribe in the Celebes Highlands of
Java, Indonesia. They declare their ancestors came from the Pleiades on
space ships. In fact, they continue to build their homes to look like
those ships today. This tribe had no contact with the outside world
until this century, and had no way of knowing that space travel was even
possible.
On a purely
materialistic basis, scientists have made the case for at least the very
first elementary life coming to Earth from outer space, probably
arriving frozen solid inside a meteor. This hypothesis is called panspermia,meaning
the migration of living spores from planet to planet throughout space.
There is a class of meteors called carbonaceous chondrites with organic
compounds in them and microscopic particles resembling, but not
identical to, fossil algae of the kind that live in water.
There
is another school among the scientists which includes Nobel Laureate
Francis Crick, co-discover of the DNA molecule. Crick advocated a theory
of "directed panspermia"--the possibility that an older civilization
sent a mission to start life on our newly evolving planet. A single
capsule of several elementary organisms would, he claimed, suffice to
bring life to Earth. "This might suggest," Crick said, "that we have
cousins on planets which are not too distant."
In
modern times the concept of coming from other planets is advocated by
the Theosophists. The first two of their postulated seven root races had
nonphysical bodies. They teach that when the last root race has
appeared, humanity will have run its course of evolution on earth and
will move to another planet to begin the cycle again.
We
can now see that there is hope for a more secure future when we put
together in our inner mind all the information that we have gathered on
these four pages. A future that maybe, yes, maybe there is telepathic
communication going on, more than we know. A future that yes, maybe,
just maybe there are beings from outer space, physically, astrally and
in refined bodies of the soul eager and willing to populate--or if we
are not careful in our nuclear age, repopulate--the little spinning
planet we have come to know as home. The wise look to the past to know
the future. We do hope that by looking at our beginnings we have helped
in some way the peoples of the world to forge a fulfilling future.
Maybe, just maybe, all the answers are not to be found in our
intellects. Some may exist in the old creation stories, or be projected
to us from inner and outerspace.
Sidebar: SETI - The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence --
The Green Bank Formula: How Scientists Conclude There is Intelligent Life Elsewhere in Our Galaxy.
N = n fp ne fl fi fc L
The Green
Bank Formula shown above is a way to statistically guess the possible
number of intelligent civilizations in our galaxy, the Milky Way. It is
not the result of a UFO conference, but rather sober calculations made
when US scientists first set out to detect life elsewhere in the galaxy
by listening for coded radio signals from them. The explanation of the
equation given below is from the book Cosmosby astrophysicist Carl Sagan.
Who could we talk to "out there" with our present level of technology? The answer, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica,
is that with our present most powerful radio telescope we could send
and receive intelligible signals "a rather astonishing 1,000 light
years. Within that range are over ten million stars."
nis the number of stars in our Milky Way galaxy, estimated at 400 billion stars.
fpis the number of planets. One in three stars may have a solar system, averaging perhaps ten planets each, for a total of 1,300 billion planets.Since 1995 more than six
neis
the number of planets that can support life. Since life exists on Earth
in a wide range of temperature and environment, this is guessed at two
per system. That gives a total of 300 billion planets on which life might evolve.
flis
the number of such planets which might actually develop some form of
life. It is estimated by Sagan (based on the range of scientific
opinion) at one in three. That means there could be a 100 billion inhabited worlds.
fiis
the likelihood of intelligent life developing. Such a development might
be rare, or it might be inevitable. Sagan uses the conservative figure
of one in ten. We could have in our galaxy an estimated ten billion worlds with intelligent life.
fcis
the number of those planets with intelligent life which develop a
technological civilization capable of interstellar communication. This
is estimated at one in ten, for a total of one billion technically advancedcivilizationsin the galaxy.
Lis
the final factor. Does an advanced civilization destroy itself, as we
on Earth seem inclined to do, or does it endure for millions of years?
If even one percent survive, states Sagan, "The number of such advanced living civilizationsis in the millions.
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