
LIFE’S
TRUE BEGINNINGS
By Lloyd Pye
F raming The PictureHow did
life begin on Earth? More intellectual and literal blood has been shed and
spilled attempting to answer this question than any other in any aspect of
science or religion. Why? Because the answer, if it could be determined beyond
doubt, would reveal to us the deepest meanings behind ourselves and all that we
see around us. More importantly, it would demolish once and for all the thorny
tangle of conscious and unconscious thought and belief that causes most of the
bloodshed. At
present there are only two socially acceptable explanations for how life has
come to be on Earth. Science insists it has developed by entirely natural means,
using only the materials at hand on the early planet, with no help from any
outside source, whether that source be divine or extraterrestrial. Religion
insists with equal fervour that life was brought into existence whole and
complete by a divine Creator called by different names by the world’s various
sects. Between these two diametrically opposed viewpoints there is no overlap,
no common ground where negotiation might be undertaken. Each considers its own
position to be totally correct and the other totally wrong, a certainty
bolstered by the fact that each can blow gaping holes in the logic/dogma of the
other. Science
is quick to point to the overwhelming technical proofs that life could not, and
indeed did not, appear whole and complete within the restricted time frame
outlined in the Biblical account. Of course, people of faith are immune to
arguments based on fact or logic. Faith requires that they accept the Biblical
account no matter how dissonant it might be with reality. Besides, they can show
that not a shred of tangible evidence exists to support the notion that any
species can transmute itself into another species given enough time and enough
positive genetic mutations, which is the bedrock of Charles Darwin’s theory of
incremental evolution, or "gradualism." In the
early 1800's Darwin visited the Galapagos Islands and noticed certain species
had developed distinct adaptations for dealing with various environmental niches
found there. Finch beaks were modified for eating fruit, insects, and seeds;
tortoise shells were notched and unnotched for high-bush browsing and low-bush
browsing. Every variation clearly remained part of the same root stock--finches
remained finches, tortoises remained tortoises--but those obvious modifications
in isolated body parts led Darwin to the logical assumption that entire bodies
could change in the same way over vastly more time. Voila! Gradualism was
conceived and, after gestating nearly three decades, was birthed in 1859 with
the publication of the landmark On The Origin Of Species. Since then Darwin and
his work have been topics of intense, usually acrimonious debate between science
and religion. The
irony of a two-party political system whose members spend the majority of their
time shooting holes in each other’s policies is that it becomes abundantly
clear to everyone beyond the fray that neither side knows what the hell it is
talking about. Yet those standing outside the science-religion fray do not grow
belligerent and say, "You’re both wrong. An idiot can see that. Find
another explanation." No! In this emotionally charged atmosphere nearly
everyone seems compelled to choose one side or the other, as if seeking a more
objective middle ground would somehow cause instant annihilation. Such is the
psychological toll wrought on all of us by the take-no-prisoners attitude of the
two sides battling for our hearts and minds regarding this issue. Facts
Will Be Facts Because
those of faith insist on being immune to arguments based on facts, they remove
themselves from serious discussions of how life might have actually come to be
on Earth. So if anyone reading this has a world view based on divine revelation,
stop here and move on to something else. You will not like (to say the least!)
what you are about to read. Nor, for that matter, will those who believe what
science postulates is beyond any valid doubt. As it turns out, and as was noted
above, neither side in this two-party system knows what the hell it is talking
about. To move
ahead, we must assign a name to those who believe life spontaneously sprang into
existence from a mass of inorganic chemicals floating about in the early
earth’s pre-biotic seas. let’s call them "Darwinists," a term
often used for that purpose. Darwinists have dealt themselves a difficult hand
to play because those pre-biotic seas had to exist at a certain degree of
coolness for the inorganic chemicals floating in them to bind together into
complex molecules. Anyone who has taken high school chemistry knows that one of
the best ways to break chemical bonds is to heat them. Given
that well-known reality, Darwinists quickly postulated that the first spark of
life would no doubt have ignited itself sometime after the continental threshold
was reached around 2.5 billion years ago. At that point land would have existed
as land and seas would have existed as seas, though not in nearly the same
shapes we know them today. But the water in those seas would have been cool
enough to allow the chemical chain reactions required by "spontaneous
animation." So among Darwinists there arose a broad consensus that the
spontaneous animation of life had to have occurred (again, because they do not
allow for the possibility of outside intervention, divine or extraterrestrial),
and it had to have occurred no earlier than the continental threshold of 2.5
billion years ago. These
assumptions were believed and taught world-wide with a fervour that leaves
religious fundamentalists green with envy. Furthermore, they were taught as
facts because that is what science inevitably does. It reaches a consensus about
a set of assumptions in a field it has not fully mastered, then those
assumptions are believed as dogma and taught as facts until the real facts
become known. Sometimes such consensus "facts" endure for a short time
(Isaac Newton’s assumption that the speed of light was a relative measure
lasted only 200 years), while others endure like barnacles on the underside of
our awareness (the universe doggedly expands beyond every finite measure given
for it). In the
same way Newton’s fluctuating speed of light was overturned by Albert
Einstein's theory of relativity, the continental threshold origin of life was
blown out of the water, so to speak, by discoveries in the 1970's that indicated
life’s origins were much older than anticipated. So old, in fact, it went back
nearly to the point of coalition, 4.5 billion years ago, when the Sun had
ignited and the protoplanets had taken the general shapes and positions they
maintain today. Ultimately, 4.0 billion years became the new starting point for
life on Earth, based on fossilised stromatolites discovered in Australia that
dated to 3.6 billion years old. For
Darwinists that meant going from the frying pan into the fire, literally,
because at 4.0 billion years ago the proto-Earth was nothing but a seething
cauldron of lava, cooling lava, and steam, about as far from an incubator for
incipient life as could be imagined. In short, right out of the gate, at the
first crack of the bat, Charles Darwin was, as they say in the south, a blowed-up
peckerwood. Limbo Of
The Lost The
fossilised stromatolites discovered in Australia had been produced by the dead
bodies of billions of prokaryotic bacteria, the very first life forms known to
exist on the planet. They are also by far the simplest, with no nucleus to
contain their DNA. Yet in relative terms prokaryotes are not simple at all. They
are dozens of times larger than a typical virus, with hundreds of strands of DNA
instead of the five to ten of the simplest viruses. So it is clear that
prokaryotes are extremely sophisticated creatures relative to what one would
assume to be the very first self-animated life form, which can plausibly be
imagined as even smaller than the smallest virus. (By the way, viruses do not
figure into this scenario because they are not technically "alive" in
the classic sense. To be fully alive means having the ability to take
nourishment from the immediate environment, turn that nourishment into energy,
expel waste, and reproduce indefinitely. Viruses need a living host to flourish,
though they can and do reproduce themselves when ensconced in a suitable host.
So it seems safe to assume hosts precede viruses in every case.) Needless
to say, the discovery of fossilised prokaryotes at 3.6 billion years ago left
scientists reeling. However, because so many of their pet theories had been
overturned in the past, they knew how to react without panic or stridency. They
made a collective decision to just whistle in the dark and move on as if nothing
had changed. And nothing did. No textbooks were rewritten to accommodate the new
discovery. Teachers continued to teach the spontaneous animation theory as they
had been doing for decades. The stromatolites were consigned to the eerie limbo
where all OOPARTS (out-of-place artifacts) dwell, while scientists edgily
anticipated the next bombshell. They
didn’t have to wait long. In the late 1980's a biologist named Carl Woese
discovered that not only did life appear on Earth in the form of prokaryotes at
around 4.0 billion years ago, there was more than one kind! Woese found that
what had always been considered a single creature was in fact two distinct types
he named archaea and true bacteria. This unexpected, astounding discovery made
one thing clear beyond any shadow of doubt: Life could not possibly have evolved
on Earth. For it to appear as early as it did in the fossil record, and to
consist of two distinct and relatively sophisticated types of bacteria, meant
spontaneous animation flatly did not occur. This
discovery has been met with the same resounding silence as the stromatolite
discovery. No textbooks have been rewritten to accommodate it. No teachers have
changed what they are teaching. If you can find a high school biology teacher
that religious fundamentalists have not yet terrorised into silence, go to their
classroom and you will find them blithely teaching that spontaneous animation is
how life came to be on Earth. Mention the words "stromatolite" or
"prokaryote" and you will get frowns of confusion from teacher and
students alike. For all intents and purposes this is unknown information,
withheld from those who most need to know about it because it does not fit the
currently accepted paradigm built around Charles Darwin’s besieged theory of
gradualism. Outside
Intervention The
ongoing, relentless assaults on gradualism by religious fundamentalists is the
principle reason scientists can’t afford to disseminate these truths through
teaching. If fundamentalists would keep their opinions and theories inside
churches, where they belong, scientists would be far more able (if not inclined)
to acknowledge where reality does not coincide with their own theories. But
because fundamentalists stand so closely behind them, loudly banging on the
doors of their own bailiwick, schools, scientists have no choice but to keep
them at bay by any means possible, which includes propping up an explanation for
life's origins that has been bankrupt for more than two decades. Another
reason scientists resist disseminating the truth is that it would so profoundly
change the financial landscape for many of them. Consider the millions and
billions of tax dollars and foundation grants that are spent each year trying to
answer one question: Does life exist beyond Earth? The reality of two types of
prokaryotes appearing suddenly, virtually overnight, at around 4.0 billion years
ago provides overwhelming testimony that the answer is "Yes!" Clearly
life could not have spontaneously animated from inorganic chemicals in seas
comprised of seething lava rather than relatively cool water. So billions of
dollars of funding would vanish if scientists ever openly conceded that life
must have come to Earth from somewhere else because it obviously could not have
originated here. A third
reason scientists avoid disseminating this knowledge is that spontaneous
animation is a fundamental tenet of their corollary theory of human evolution.
As with life in general, scientists insist that humanity is a product of the
same protracted series of gradual genetic mutations that they feel produced
every living thing on Earth. And, again, all this has been done by natural
processes within the confines of the planet, with no outside intervention of any
kind, divine or extraterrestrial. So, if spontaneous animation goes out the
window, then the dreaded spectre of outside intervention comes slithering in to
take its place, and that idea is so anathema to scientists they would rather
deal with the myriad embarrassments caused by their blowed-up icon and his
clearly bankrupt theory. So What
Is The Answer? Life
came to Earth from somewhere else--period. It came to Earth whole and complete,
in large volume, and in two forms that were invulnerable to the most hostile
environments imaginable. Given those proven, undeniable realities, it is time to
make the frightening mental leap that few if any scientists or theologians have
been willing or able to make: Life was seeded here! There...its on the
table...life was seeded here.... The Earth hasn’t split open. Lightening bolts
have not rained down. Time marches on. It seems safe to discuss the idea
further. If life
was actually seeded here, how might that have happened? By accident....or
(hushed whisper) deliberately? Well, the idea of accidental seeding has been
explored in considerable detail by a surprising number of non-mainstream
thinkers and even by a few credentialed scientists (British astronomer Fred
Hoyle being perhaps the most notable). The "accidental seeding" theory
is called panspermia, and the idea behind it is that bacterial life came to
Earth on comets or asteroids arriving from planets where it had existed before
they exploded and sent pieces hurtling through space to collide some millennia
later with our just-forming planet. A
variation of this theory is called directed panspermia, which replaces comets
and asteroids with capsules launched by alien civilisations to traverse space
for millennia and deliberately home in on our just-forming planet. However, the
idea of conscious direction from any source beyond the confines of Earth is as
abhorrent to science as ever, so directed panspermia has received little better
than polite derision from the establishment. But for as blatantly as undirected
panspermia defies the scientific tenet that all of life begins and ends within
the confines of Earth, it is marginally acceptable as an alternative
possibility. There have even been serious, ongoing attempts to try to determine
if the raw materials for life might be found in comets. The
point to note here is that no one wants to step up to the plate and suggest the
obvious, which is that some entity or entities from somewhere beyond our solar
system came here when it was barely formed and for whatever reason decided to
seed it with two kinds of prokaryotes, the hardiest forms of bacteria we are
aware of and, for all we know, are creatures purposefully designed to be capable
of flourishing in absolutely any environment in the universe. (Understand that
prokaryotes exist today just as they did 4.0 billion years ago...unchanged,
indestructible, microscopic terminators with the unique ability to turn any hell
into a heaven. But more about that in a moment.) If we
take the suggested leap and accept the notion of directed-at-the-scene
panspermia, we are then confronted with a plethora of follow-up questions. Were
all of the planets seeded, or just Earth? Why Earth? Why when it was a seething
cauldron? Why not a couple billion years later, when it was cooled off? Good
questions all, and many more like them can be construed. But they all lead away
from the fundamental issue of why anyone or (to be fair) anything would want to
bring life here in the first place, whether to the proto-Earth or to any other
protoplanet? And this brings us to the kicker, a question few of us are
comfortable contemplating: Is Earth being deliberately terraformed? Welcome
To The Ant Farm The
concept of terraforming does indeed conjure up images from the recent movie
"Antz." Nevertheless, for all we know that is exactly what we
humans--and all other life forms, for that matter--are, players on a stage that
seems immense to us, but (visualise the camera pulling back at the end of "Antz")
in reality is just a tiny orb swirling through the vastness of a seemingly
infinite universe. An unsettling and even unlikely scenario, but one that has to
be addressed. Well, so what? What if we are just bit players in a cosmic movie
that has been filming for 4.0 billion years? As long as we are left alone to do
our work and live our lives in relative peace, where is the harm in it? Is this
fantastic notion really possible? Is it even remotely plausible? Consider the
facts as we know them to be, not what we are misled into believing by those we
trust to correctly inform us. The simple truth is that life came to our planet
when it (Earth) had no business hosting anything but a galactic-level
marshmallow roast. The life forms that were brought, the two prokaryotes, just
happen to be the simplest and most durable creatures we are aware of. And, most
important of all, they have the unique ability to produce oxygen as a result of
their metabolic processes. Why
oxygen? Why is that important? Because without an oxygen-based atmosphere life
as we currently know it is impossible. Of course, anaerobic organisms live
perfectly well without it, but they would not make good neighbors or dinner
companions. No, oxygen is essential for complex life as we know it, and quite
possibly is necessary for higher life forms everywhere. If that is the case, if
oxygen is the key ingredient for life throughout the universe, then from a
terraformer’s perspective bringing a load of prokaryotes to this solar system
4.0 billion years ago begins to make a lot of sense. Let’s
put ourselves in their shoes (or whatever they wear) for a moment. They are a
few million or even a few billion years into their life cycle as a species.
Space and time mean nothing to them. Traversing the universe is like a drive
across Texas to us...a bit long but easily doable. So as they travel around they
make it a point to look for likely places to establish life, and 4.0 billion
years ago they spot a solar system (in this case ours) forming off their port
side. They pull a hard left and take it all in. At that point every protoplanet
is as much a seething cauldron as the proto-Earth, so they sprinkle prokaryotes
on all of them in the hope that one or more will allow them to flourish. What the
terraformers know is that if the prokaryotes ultimately prevail, then over time
trillions of them will produce enough oxygen to, first, turn all of the cooling
planet’s free iron into iron-oxide (rust). Once that is done...after, say, a
billion years (which, remember, means nothing to the terraformers)...oxygen
produced by the prokaryotes will be free to start saturating the waters of the
seas and the atmosphere above. When enough of that saturation occurs (say,
another billion years), the terraformers can begin to introduce increasingly
more complex life forms to the planet. This
might include, for example, eukaryotes, earth’s second life form, another
single-celled bacteria which clearly appeared (rather than evolved) just as
suddenly as the prokaryotes at (surprise!) around 2.0 billion years ago.
Eukaryotes are distinctive because they are the first life form with a nucleus,
which is a hallmark of all Earth life except prokaryotes. We humans are
eukaryotic creatures. But those second immigrants (which, like prokaryotes,
exist today just as they did when they arrived) were much larger than their
predecessors, more fragile, and more efficient at producing oxygen. After
establishing the first portion of their program, the terraformers wait patiently
while the protoplanet cools enough for "real" life forms to be
introduced. When the time is right, starting at around half a billion years ago,
higher life forms are introduced by means of what today is called the
"Cambrian Explosion." Thousands of highly complex forms appear
virtually overnight, males and females, predators and prey, looking like nothing
alive at present. This is what actually happened. The
terraformers continue to monitor their project. They notice Earth suffers
periodic catastrophes that eliminate 50% to 90% of all higher life forms. (Such
mass extinction events have in fact occurred five times, the last being the
Cretaceous extinction of 65 million years ago, which wiped out the dinosaurs).
They wait a few thousand years after each event while the planet regains its
biotic equilibrium, then they restock it with new plants and animals that can
make their way in the post-catastrophe environment. (This, too, is actually
borne out by the fossil record, which scientists try to explain away with a
specious addendum to Darwinism called "punctuated equilibrium.") For as
outrageous as the above scenario might seem at first glance, it does account for
the real, true, literal evidence much better than either Darwinism or
Creationism ever have...or ever will. This produces the bitterest irony of the
entire debate. With pillars of concrete evidence supporting outside intervention
as the modus for life’s origins on Earth, the concept is ignored to the point
of suppression in both scientific or religious circles. This is, of course,
understandable, because to discuss it openly might give it a credibility neither
side can afford at present. Both have their hands quite full maintaining the
battle against each other, so the last thing either side wants or needs is a
third wheel trying to crash their party. However, that third wheel has arrived
and is rolling their way. Please
visit Lloyd Pye's websites for further insight into his fascinating work. http://www.lloydpye.com/
is his main website and contains details of his projects books and essays. http://www.starchildproject.com
is another of Lloyd Pye's websites containing details of a skull which has been
found in Mexico which is alleged to be of alien origin. The pictures of the
skull on this site (and shown below) will convince everyone that the skull is
far from normal but only nuclear DNA tests will definitely prove it one way or
the other. These DNA tests are expensive and this is a prohibitive factor at the
moment, but it is hoped that funding will be made available in the near future.
This has the potential to put the question of alien visitation beyond question. |



The Starchild Project
By Lloyd Pye