Saturday, March 12, 2016

Is God in Our Genes?

Does our DNA compel us to seek a higher power? 
Believe it or not, some scientists say yes.



A provocative study asks whether religion is a product of evolution. Inside a quest for the roots of faith.  
It’s not hard to see the divinity behind the water temples that dot the rice terraces of Bali. It’s there in the white-clad high priest presiding in the temple at the summit of a dormant volcano. It’s there in the 23 priests serving along with him, selected for their jobs when they were still children by a bevy of virgin priestesses. 
It’s there in the rituals the priests perform to protect the island’s water, which in turn is needed to nurture the island’s rice. 
If the divine is easy to spot, what’s harder to make out is the banal. But it’s there too—in the meetings the priests convene to schedule their planting dates and combat the problem of crop pests; in the plans they draw up to maintain aqueducts and police conduits; in the irrigation proposals they consider and approve, the dam proposals they reject or amend. “The religion has a temple at every node in the irrigation system,” says David Sloan Wilson, professor of biology and anthropology at Binghamton University in Binghamton, N.Y. “The priests make decisions and enforce the code of both religion and irrigation.” 
Ask true believers of any faith to describe the most important thing that drives their devotion, and they’ll tell you it’s not a thing at all but a sense—a feeling of a higher power far beyond us. Western religions can get a bit more doctrinaire: God has handed us laws and lore, and it’s for us to learn and practice what they teach. For a hell-raising species like ours, however—with too much intelligence for our own good and too little discipline to know what to do with it—there have always been other, more utilitarian reasons to get religion. Chief among them is survival. Across the eons, the structure that religion provides our lives helps preserve both mind and body. But that, in turn, has raised a provocative question, one that’s increasingly debated in the worlds of science and religion: Which came first, God or the need for God? In other words, did humans create religion from cues sent from above, or did evolution instill in us a sense of the divine so that we would gather into the communities essential to keeping the species going? 
Just as a hurricane spins off tornadoes, this debate creates its own whirlwind of questions: If some people are more spiritual than others, is it nature or nurture that has made them so? If science has nothing to do with spirituality and it all flows from God, why do some people hear the divine word easily while others remain spiritually tone-deaf? Do such ivied-hall debates about environment, heredity and anthropology have any place at all in more exalted conversations about the nature of God? 
Even among people who regard spiritual life as wishful hocus-pocus, there is a growing sense that humans may not be able to survive without it. It’s hard enough getting by in a fang-and-claw world in which killing, thieving and cheating pay such rich dividends. It’s harder still when there’s no moral cop walking the beat to blow the whistle when things get out of control. Best to have a deity on hand to rein in our worst impulses, bring out our best and, not incidentally, give us a sense that there’s someone awake in the cosmic house when the lights go out at night and we find ourselves wondering just why we’re here in the first place. If a God or even several gods can do all that, fine. And if we sometimes misuse the idea of our gods—and millenniums of holy wars prove that we do—the benefits of being a spiritual species will surely outweigh the bloodshed. 
Far from being an evolutionary luxury then, the need for God may be a crucial trait stamped deeper and deeper into our genome with every passing generation. Humans who developed a spiritual sense thrived and bequeathed that trait to their offspring. Those who didn’t risked dying out in chaos and killing. The evolutionary equation is a simple but powerful one. 
Nowhere has that idea received a more intriguing going-over than in the recently published book The God Gene: How Faith Is Hardwired into Our Genes (Doubleday, 2004; 256 pages), by molecular biologist Dean Hamer. 
Chief of gene structure at the National Cancer Institute, Hamer not only claims that human spirituality is an adaptive trait, but he also says he has located one of the genes responsible, a gene that just happens to also code for production of the neurotransmitters that regulate our moods. Our most profound feelings of spirituality, according to a literal reading of Hamer’s work, may be due to little more than an occasional shot of intoxicating brain chemicals governed by our DNA. “I’m a believer that every thought we think and every feeling we feel is the result of activity in the brain,” Hamer says. 
“I think we follow the basic law of nature, which is that we’re a bunch of chemical reactions running around in a bag.” 
Even for the casually religious, such seeming reductionism can rankle. The very meaning of faith, after all, is to hold fast to something without all the tidy cause and effect that science finds so necessary. Try parsing things the way geneticists do, and you risk parsing them into dust. “God is not something that can be demonstrated logically or rigorously,” says Neil Gillman, a professor of Jewish philosophy at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City. “[The idea of a God gene] goes against all my personal theological convictions.” John Polkinghorne, a physicist who is also Canon Theologian at England’s Liverpool Cathedral, agrees: “You can’t cut [faith] down to the lowest common denominator of genetic survival. It shows the poverty of reductionist thinking.” 
Is Hamer really guilty of such simplification? Could claims for a so-called God gene be merely the thin end of a secular wedge, one that risks prying spirituality away from God altogether? Or, assuming the gene exists at all, could it somehow be embraced by both science and religion, in the same way some evolutionists and creationists—at least the less radicalized ones—accept the idea of a divinely created universe in which evolving life is simply part of the larger plan? Hamer, for one, hopes so. “My findings are agnostic on the existence of God,” he says. “If there’s a God, there’s a God. Just knowing what brain chemicals are involved in acknowledging that is not going to change the fact.” 
Whatever the merits of Hamer’s work, he is clearly the heir of a millenniums-long search for the wellsprings of spirituality. People have been wrestling with the roots of faith since faith itself was first codified into Scripture. “[God has] set eternity in the hearts of men,” says the Book of Ecclesiastes, “yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.” 
To theologians in the 3rd century B.C., when Ecclesiastes is thought to have been written, that passage spoke to the idea that while all of us are divinely inspired to look for God, none of us are remotely capable of fully comprehending what we are seeking. Scientists in the 21st century may not disagree, provided that “hearts of men” is replaced with “genes of men.” The key for those researchers is finding those genes. 
Hamer began looking in 1998, when he was conducting a survey on smoking and addiction for the National Cancer Institute. As part of his study, he recruited more than 1,000 men and women, who agreed to take a standardized, 240-question personality test called the Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI). Among the traits the TCI measures is one known as self-transcendence, which consists of three other traits: self-forgetfulness, or the ability to get entirely lost in an experience; transpersonal identification, or a feeling of connectedness to a larger universe; and mysticism, or an openness to things not literally provable. Put them all together, and you come as close as science can to measuring what it feels like to be spiritual. 
consists of three other traits: self-forgetfulness, or the ability to get entirely lost in an experience; transpersonal identification, or a feeling of connectedness to a larger universe; and mysticism, or an openness to things not literally provable. Put them all together, and you come as close as science can to measuring what it feels like to be spiritual. 
Hamer decided to use the data he gathered in the smoking survey to conduct a little spirituality study on the side. First he ranked the participants along Cloninger’s self-transcendence scale, placing them on a continuum from least to most spiritually inclined. Then he went poking around in their genes to see if he could find the DNA responsible for the differences. Spelunking in the human genome is not easy, what with 35,000 genes consisting of 3.2 billion chemical bases. To narrow the field, Hamer confined his work to nine specific genes known to play major roles in the production of monoamines—brain chemicals, including serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine, that regulate such fundamental functions as mood and motor control. It’s monoamines that are carefully manipulated by Prozac and other antidepressants. It’s also monoamines that are not so carefully scrambled by ecstasy, LSD, peyote and other mind-altering drugs—some of which have long been used in religious rituals. 
Studying the nine candidate genes in DNA samples provided by his subjects, Hamer quickly hit the genetic jackpot. A variation in a gene known as vmat2—for vesicular monoamine transporter— seemed to be directly related to how the volunteers scored on the self-transcendence test. Those with the nucleic acid cytosine in one particular spot on the gene ranked high. Those with the nucleic acid adenine in the same spot ranked lower. “A single change in a single base in the middle of the gene seemed directly related to the ability to feel self-transcendence,” Hamer says. Merely having that feeling did not mean those people would take the next step and translate their transcendence into a belief in—or even a quest for—God. But they seemed likelier to do so than those who never got the feeling at all. 
Hamer is careful to point out that the gene he found is by no means the only one that affects spirituality. Even minor human traits can be governed by the interplay of many genes; something as complex as belief in God could involve hundreds or even thousands. “If someone comes to you and says, ‘We’ve found the gene for X,’” says John Burn, medical director of the Institute of Human Genetics at the University of Newcastle in England, “you can stop them before they get to the end of the sentence.” 
Hamer also stresses that while he may have located a genetic root for spirituality, that is not the same as a genetic root for religion. 
Spirituality is a feeling or a state of mind; religion is the way that state gets codified into law. Our genes don’t get directly involved in writing legislation. As Hamer puts it, perhaps understating a bit the emotional connection many have to their religions, “Spirituality is intensely personal; religion is institutional.” 
At least one faith, according to one of its best-known scholars, formalizes the idea of gene-based spirituality and even puts a pretty spin on it. Buddhists, says Robert Thurman, professor of Buddhist studies at Columbia University, have long entertained the idea that we inherit a spirituality gene from the person we were in a previous life. Smaller than an ordinary gene, it combines with two larger physical genes we inherit from our parents, and together they shape our physical and spiritual profile. Says Thurman: “The spiritual gene helps establish a general trust in the universe, a sense of openness and generosity.” Buddhists, he adds, would find Hamer’s possible discovery “amusing and fun.” 
The Buddhist theory has never been put to the scientific test, but other investigations into the biological roots of belief in God were being conducted long before Hamer’s efforts—often with intriguing results. In 1979, investigators at the University of Minnesota began their now famous twins study, tracking down 53 pairs of identical twins and 31 pairs of fraternal twins that had been separated at birth and raised apart. The scientists were looking for traits the members of each pair had in common, guessing that the characteristics shared more frequently by identical twins than by fraternal twins would be genetically based, since identical twins carry matching DNA, and those traits for which there was no disparity between the identicals and fraternals would be more environmentally influenced. 
As it turned out, the identical twins had plenty of remarkable things in common. In some cases, both suffered from migraine headaches, both had a fear of heights, both were nail biters. Some shared little eccentricities, like flushing the toilet both before and after using it. When quizzed on their religious values and spiritual feelings, the identical twins showed a similar overlap. In general, they were about twice as likely as fraternal twins to believe as much—or as little—about spirituality as their sibling did. Significantly, these numbers did not hold up when the twins were questioned about how faithfully they practiced any organized religion. Clearly, it seemed, the degree to which we observe rituals such as attending services is mostly the stuff of environment and culture. Whether we’re drawn to God in the first place is hardwired into our genes. “It completely contradicted my expectations,” says University of Minnesota psychologist Thomas Bouchard, one of the researchers involved in the work. Similar results were later found in larger twin studies in Virginia and Australia. 
Other researchers have taken the science in a different direction, looking not for the genes that code for spirituality but for how that spirituality plays out in the brain. Neuroscientist Andrew Newberg of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine has used several types of imaging systems to watch the brains of subjects as they meditate or pray. By measuring blood flow, he determines which regions are responsible for the feelings the volunteers experience. 
The deeper that people descend into meditation or prayer, Newberg found, the more active the frontal lobe and the limbic system become. 
The frontal lobe is the seat of concentration and attention; the limbic system is where powerful feelings, including rapture, are processed. More revealing is the fact that at the same time these regions flash to life, another important region—the parietal lobe at the back of the brain—goes dim. It’s this lobe that orients the individual in time and space. Take it off-line, and the boundaries of the self fall away, creating the feeling of being at one with the universe. Combine that with what’s going on in the other two lobes, and you can put together a profound religious experience. 
Even to some within the religious community, this does not come as news. “In India in Buddha’s time, there were philosophers who said there was no soul; the mind was just chemistry,” says Thurman. “The Buddha disagreed with their extreme materialism but also rejected the 'absolute soul’ theologians.” Michael Persinger, professor of behavioral neuroscience at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ont., puts the chemistry argument more bluntly. “God,” he says, “is an artifact of the brain.” 
Even if such spiritual deconstructionism is true, some scientists—to say nothing of most theologians—think it takes you only so far, particularly when it comes to trying to determine the very existence of God. Simply understanding the optics and wiring of the eyes, after all, doesn’t mean there’s no inherent magnificence in the Rembrandts they allow us to see. If human beings were indeed divinely assembled, why wouldn’t our list of parts include a genetic chip that would enable us to contemplate our maker? 
“Of course, concepts of God reside in the brain. They certainly don’t reside in the toe,” says Lindon Eaves, director of the Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. “The question is, To what is this wiring responsive? Why is it there?”
Says Paul Davies, professor of natural philosophy at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia: “I think a lot of people make the mistake of thinking that if you explain something, you explain it away. I don’t see that at all with religious experience.” 
Those religious believers who are comfortable with the idea that God genes are the work of God should have little trouble making the next leap: that not only are the genes there but they are central to our survival, one of the hinges upon which the very evolution of the human species turned. It’s an argument that’s not terribly hard to make. 
For one thing, God is a concept that appears in human cultures all over the globe, regardless of how geographically isolated they are. 
When tribes living in remote areas come up with a concept of God as readily as nations living shoulder to shoulder, it’s a fairly strong indication that the idea is preloaded in the genome rather than picked up on the fly. If that’s the case, it’s an equally strong indication that there are very good reasons it’s there. 
One of those reasons might be that, as the sole species—as far as we know—capable of contemplating its own death, we needed something larger than ourselves to make that knowledge tolerable. “Anticipation of our own demise is the price we pay for a highly developed frontal lobe,” says Persinger. “In many ways, [a God experience is] a brilliant adaptation. It’s a built-in pacifier.” 
But the most important survival role religion may serve is as the mortar that holds a group together. Worshipping God doesn’t have to be a collective thing; it can be done in isolation, disconnected from any organized religion. The overwhelming majority of people, however, congregate to pray, observing the same rituals and heeding the same creeds. Once that congregation is in place, it’s only a small step to using the common system of beliefs and practices as the basis for all the secular laws that keep the group functioning. 
One of the best examples of religion as social organizer, according to Binghamton University’s Wilson, is early Calvinism. John Calvin rose to prominence in 1536 when, as a theologian and religious reformer, he was recruited to help bring order to the fractious city of Geneva. Calvin, perhaps one of the greatest theological minds ever produced by European Christianity, was a lawyer by trade. Wilson speculates that it was Calvin’s pragmatic genius to understand that while civil laws alone might not be enough to bring the city’s deadbeats and other malefactors into line, divine law might be. 
One of the best examples of religion as social organizer, according to Binghamton University’s Wilson, is early Calvinism. John Calvin rose to prominence in 1536 when, as a theologian and religious reformer, he was recruited to help bring order to the fractious city of Geneva. Calvin, perhaps one of the greatest theological minds ever produced by European Christianity, was a lawyer by trade. Wilson speculates that it was Calvin’s pragmatic genius to understand that while civil laws alone might not be enough to bring the city’s deadbeats and other malefactors into line, divine law might be. 
The heirs to Calvinism today—Presbyterians, many Baptists and believers in the Reformed tradition in general—see the roots of their faith as something far more divine than merely good civic management. But even some theologians seem to think that a deep belief in the laws of God can coexist with the survival demands of an evolving society. “Calvin had a reverence for the Scriptures, which then became institutionalized,” says James Kay, professor of practical theology at the Princeton Theological Seminary. “The Bible is concerned about justice for the poor, equity and fairness, and all of those things were seen to in Calvin’s Geneva.” 
Other struggling cultures have similarly translated godly law into earthly order and in doing so helped ensure their survival. The earliest Christians established a rough institutional structure that allowed them to transmit their ideas within a generation of Christ’s death, and as a result succeeded in living through the Roman persecution; the Jews of the Diaspora moved as a cultural whole through the nations of Europe, finding niches wherever they could but maintaining their identity and kinship by observing the same rites. 
“All religions become a bit secular,” says Wilson. “In order to survive, you have to organize yourselves into a culture.” 
The downside to all this is that often religious groups gather not into congregations but into camps— and sometimes they’re armed camps. 
In a culture of Crusades, Holocausts and jihads, where in the world is the survival advantage of religious wars or terrorism? One facile explanation has always been herd culling—an adaptive way of keeping populations down so that resources aren’t depleted. But there’s little evolutionary upside to wiping out an entire population of breeding-age males, as countries trying to recover from wars repeatedly learn. Why then do we so often let the sweetness of religion curdle into combat? 
The simple answer might be that just because we’re given a gift, we don’t necessarily always use it wisely. Fire can either light your village or burn down the one next door, depending on your inclination. “Religions represent an attempt to harness innate spirituality for organizational purposes— not always good,” says Macquarie University’s Davies. And while spiritual contemplation is intuitive, says Washington University’s Cloninger, religion is dogmatic; dogma in the wrong hands has always been a risky thing. 
Still, for every place in the world that’s suffering from religious strife, there are many more where spirituality is doing its uplifting and civilizing work. A God who would equip us with the genes and the smarts to cooperate in such a clever way is a God who ought to be appealing even to religious purists. Nonetheless, sticking points do remain that prevent genetic theory from going down smoothly. One that’s particularly troublesome is the question of why Hamer’s God gene—or any of the others that may eventually be discovered—is distributed so unevenly among us. Why are some of us spiritual virtuosos, while others can’t play a note? Isn’t it one of the central tenets of religion that grace is available to everybody? At least a few scientists shrug at the question. “Some get religion, and some don’t,” says Virginia Commonwealth University’s Eaves. 
But this seeming inequity may be an important part of the spiritual journey. It would be easy for God simply to program us for reverence; it’s more meaningful when the door is opened but you’ve got to walk through on your own—however hard those steps may be for some. “I have never had a Big Bang conversion experience,” says the Jewish Theological Seminary’s Gillman. “My sense is that slowly and gradually, out of a rich experience of the world, one builds a faith.” 
Such experiences may ultimately be at least as important a part of our spiritual tool kit as the genes we’re born with. A poor genetic legacy but lucky spiritual circumstances might mean more than good genes and bad experiences. “Fortune includes the possibility of divine grace as well as environmental influences,” says Cloninger. 
No matter how the two factors balance out, scientists may eventually find that trying to identify the definitive cluster of genes that serves as our spiritual circuit board is simply impossible—like trying to draw a genetic schematic of love. Still, they’re likely to keep trying. “I am personally convinced that there is a scheme of things,” says Davies of Macquarie University, “that the universe is not just any ragbag of laws.” In the end, genes may prove to be a part of that scheme—but clearly one of very many. 
 By: TIME Magazine, Oct. 25, 2004 , Jeffrey Kluger

Constructing Reality Pt.3 - Fibonacci and the Golden Spiral


If we want to understand the mystery behind reality, we have to take a look at its patterns. The language of nature gives us a rash of information on how the whole universe moves and grows. The same pattern can be noticed in blooming plants, evolving populations, crowd behavior, artistic and architectural expressions, and even in the movement of whole galaxies. Referring to the pattern that is all around us, Leonardo da Vinci spoke: “Learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else.”
The human mind has a natural sense for artistic harmony, always feeling drawn to a very special kind of proportion. If we have to choose the most harmonic of the rectangles below, we intuitively choose the one based on the golden ratio Phi Φ, a mathematic term for two quantities, of which the ratio of the small part (a) to the large part (b) is the same ratio as the large part (b) to the whole (a+b). However, Phi is an infinite number, beginning with 1,618033…, which means that all visual images can only approach the golden ratio, but never fully reach it.





The golden ratio rectangle is the visual version of a specific numeric pattern. This pattern has been known for thousands of years, first mentioned as mātrāmeru in the Sanskrit treatise Chandahshastra by the indian mathematician Pingala around 400 b.c. Even though it has also been known in ancient Greece, the pattern is named after the italien mathematician Leonardo da Pisa, better known as Fibonacci. The Fibonacci sequence describes an infinite series of numbers, in which the sum of two consecutive numbers results in the proximately next number. Demonstrated and easier understood: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144… The connection between the golden ratio and the Fibonacci sequence becomes clear when we continue to construct the golden ratio rectangle, or the Fibonacci squares, into a possible infinity. But again, since Phi is an infinite number, the Fibonacci numbers can only approach but never reach it.




While the Fibonacci sequence and the Fibonacci squares seem to be abstract geometry, the next step will make us comprehend the link to nature and mother earth. The so called Golden Spiral, also known as the Fibonacci Spiral, is the consequent result of the previously created basic pattern. The Golden Spiral is the model for a huge amount of natural designs and developments that exist in our dimension. While the typical Fibonacci Spiral expands its widths in 90 degree sections, another spiral we often find in nature expands its widths in 180 degree sections. Both spirals are golden.




We can see Fibonacci in many plants on our Earth. By following the Golden Spiral, leaves are provided an optimal light saturation and blossoms a promising seed dispersal, as imposingly seen in the Sun Flower. The same double spiral can be seen in the petals of the lotus flower, which is the best example of the nearly perfect Fibonacci creation. We also see the golden 180°spiral in animals, for example in snail and nautilus shells or in the curling of animal tails. Fibonacci does not only appear as the spiral in animals, but also in connection to reproductive dynamics, for example in bees and rabbits, where every generation increases its population by 1,6.

When it comes to humans, our whole body shows golden proportions, from our face, to our limbs and hands and even where we probably don’t expect it – our DNA molecules. DNA molecules spin according to the rules of the Golden Spiral, for a cycle of the double helix measures exactly 34 angstroms in length and 21 angstroms in width. Fibonacci is not only around us, but also inside of us.

Truth is that no visual construct that can be perceived with our senses could fully reach the exact golden ratio proportion, because we create our reality based on boundaries and not on infinite ideas. Yet, the approach to rediscover our own perfect harmony is a part of all of us, when we strive for enlightenment and peace.

Reblogged: The Lucid Movement

Thursday, March 10, 2016

The Nine Unknown Men

Ancient Secrets Of The Nine Unknown Men: Guardians Of Forbidden Knowledge Hidden From Humanity

The story of the Nine Unknown Men goes back to the time of the Emperor Asoka, who reigned in India from 273 B.C. Emperor Asoka was a remarkable individual. In his book “Outline of World History,” H.G. Wells wrote:
“Among the tens of thousands of names of monarchs accumulated of the files of history, the name Asoka shines almost alone, like a star.”
Asoka who respected all religions and promoted peace according to God’s wishes. All living beings should enjoy security, peace, happiness and live in freedom. He preached vegetarianism, abolished alcohol and the slaughter of animals. Asoka was a wise man and realized that man’s intelligence, scientific and technological breakthroughs were often put to evil uses.
Therefore, during his reign natural science past and present was vowed to secrecy. This led to the creation of the Nine Unknown Men, world’s most powerful society founded by Emperor Asoka. There is little information about the Nine Unknown Men and very few have met any of these brilliant scientists.
The Nine Unknown Men avoided social contacts and their society was concealed from the public eye. They were never engaged in any religious or political disputes. Their aim was not to allow methods of destruction to fall into the hands of unqualified people and to pursue knowledge which would benefit mankind.
Although, the Nine Unknown Men made contact with the outside world on rare occasions, many researchers are convinced that the society did actually exist.

According to the French occult author Louis Jacolliot, Asoka’s scientists experimented with techniques that were supposed to be unknown 2,000 years ago! The society of the Nine studied the liberation of energy, sterilization by radiation and psychological warfare, all subjects that our modern civilization have “discovered” just recently.
The Nine Unknown Men achieved their goal and conducted their scientific researchers in secrecy for thousands of years.
It was first in 1927 that the world learned about their existence through a book written by Talbot Mundy, who for 25 years was a member of the British police force in India.
In his book, Mundy wrote that Asoka’s society employed a synthetic language. Mundy also revealed that each of the nine members possessed a book that was constantly rewritten, updated and contained detailed accounts of a certain scientific subject.
According to a very old legend, in times of drought temples and religious relief organizations received large quantities of gold from a secret source.
Each of The Nine Unknown Men is said to be entrusted with the task of improving and guarding a single book of knowledge. The subject matter of each book deals with a completely different branch of some potentially destructive knowledge.
Subject of each book that these Nine Men protect:
  1. Propaganda and Psychological warfare – As the name suggests, this book consists knowledge about influencing the behavior or the opinions of large group of people. Considered to be the most dangerous among all other sciences, this book consists of knowledge that can help one in moulding mass opinions. It goes without saying that the person in possession of this book could lead the whole world by shaping opinions according to his own wish.
  2. Physiology – We all know that Physiology is the study of biochemical and physical functions of the living organisms. It is said that this book about Physiology consists the knowledge of performing death due to a reversal of nerve impulse or the so called “touch of death”. It is said that Judo, the form of martial arts, has been formed due to a leak from this book.
  3. Microbiology – We all consider Ganges to be very pure. If you have been a keen student of Biology in school then you must know that it is because of a micro organism called Bacteriophages. Have you ever asked this question to yourself that why is this microbe not found in other rivers like Amazon or Nile? Why only Ganges? According to myths, this microbe was created and released into Ganges at the base of Himalayas by none other than The Nine Unknown Men using the secrets of this very book.
  4. Alchemy – Alchemy that also includes the transformation of metals in this case. If you would do a little research on the internet over an extended period of natural disasters for a long period of time, you would find some rumors of religious organizations and temples getting gold from unknown source. The mystery will become more interesting when you will notice that so much quantity of gold could not even be accounted for when you notice the number of gold mines in India.
  5. Communication – Communication technology like wireless communications and even ways to communicate with aliens is believed to be held secret under this book.
  6. Gravitation – Vimana or the flying machine. Was it really the Wright Brothers who invented a flying machine? Indian myths have been talking about Vimana for a very long time. Imagination finds its inspiration somewhere, so can you ever deny completely about the truth of Vimana? The Vaiminaka sastra is said to have necessary instructions for building a Vimana, and that could be directly related to this book of The Nine Unknown Men.
  7. Cosmology – This book is believed to provide the secret knowledge of travelling at very high speeds throughout the space time fabric that also includes time travel and even trips between different universes.
  8. Light – This book talks about using light as a potential weapon by directing and concentrating it in a particular direction. This also talks about the knowledge of increasing and decreasing the speed of light at will.
  9. Sociology – The subject matter of this book tells about the working of societies and prediction of their downfall. It includes all the rules that concern the evolution of societies and predicting the destination that they are headed towards.
There are many notable figures that according to allegations have had contact with The Nine Unknown Men. One figure that has been mentioned many places with an allegation of being in contact with The Nine Unknown Men is Pope Sylvester II (c. 946 – 12 May 1003). He was supposed to have built a robotic brazen head that could answer his questions with a Yes or No. This robot was much ahead of technology that time, and it would have been impossible for someone to build such a machine at that time without any knowledge that was kept secret. He was also said to be in possession of many other such things that solidify his connection, and most of them were destroyed after death. 


THE KEY PROGRAM

The Key Program appeared many years ago as the only key to open the locked global accounts.

The Philippines with rich of natural resources like minerals and gold, We are blessed with many bank accounts as well. Yes we have them , some accounts are so huge that the quadrillion amount is often mentioned. Being kept secret, their existence is unknown to many Filipinos, but in reality, numerous large bank accounts exists whose value is many times more than enough to cover our international debts and make our country the richest in the world . The accounts are ours, they belong to us, created since the early times of Dr. Jose Rizal and up to the time of the late Ferdinand Marcos. Accounts of money and gold in staggering value were created and are scattered around the world.
 

It is said that most of the latest accounts were put up by the late President Marcos and indicated that the beneficiaries are the Pilipino People. The evidence for this purpose are Marcos’ Letters of Instructions’ which states that 70% of the value is for our country’s welfare, to uplift the lives of the Filipinos and for projects that will raise standard of living at par or higher than most rich and developed countries.

Printed on top of the paper is the word "KEY PROGRAM". . Symbols and codes were printed on it. The words : Spiritual & material laws, foundations, Umbrella Code, Seven instruments, PIJAO, JO-VE-RIZ-AL and others can be found written among the symbols. Also on the left side is a website which reads: A search for this website reveals additional information about the key program and the you tube video confirms its central importance by calling it – " a scroll with writings on both sides." Nothing was said about the origin of the program or who has the original copy of it.

The accounts are represented by documents like Gold Bullion Certificates (GBC) and other bank documents said to be entrusted to people whom the President has chosen for its safekeeping.

GUESS WHO? A note written on the top of paper further says the person who understands the program is the one who can open the accounts, which means he knows how to use it to open the locked accounts. And he is in the Philippines? Aba sino ba kasi siya? Kilala nyo?

He is said to be strictly following a process to be able to correctly use the Key Program. There is also some rumors that there is a mysterious man entrusted to open the account, that he is the keeper of something like the Great Grand Master Key, the people say he could be one of the offspring of Marcos, that his identity is super secret.

Tanong, bakit may mga accounts pero di natin magagamit? Bakit may Key Program pero di naman din maiintindihan? Naalala ko na ang mga banko ay nag.rereject ng mga widrawal attemp at sasabihin sayo na, "there is still one signature missing." Hindi kaya yung nawawalang lagda ay sa taong nagmamay-ari ng KEY PROGRAM? Di kaya ang Key Program ay ang Great Grand Master Key?

 
 


The Secret Society of Hashshashin (The Stoned Terrorists)

  During the late 11th century, an order of Nizari Ismailies was formed in Persia and Syria by a man called Hassan-i Sabbah. These were the ...