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258 The <strong>Secret</strong> <strong>History</strong> of the World<br />

So, suppose none of this was needed? Suppose a civilization existed that did not<br />

need cities, agriculture, wheels or writing? That is not to say that they did not<br />

produce goods en masse, nor that they did not produce food for large groups, or<br />

that they did not travel over vast distances or record their exploits. But, suppose<br />

they did not do it in the way we would expect? Suppose the STONES DID IT<br />

ALL?<br />

What do I mean?<br />

It may very well be that the “worship” of the ancients was not worship in the<br />

terms we understand it; it was a technology based on cosmic energy, having<br />

something to do with the stars as markers of periods of time in which cosmic rays<br />

could be collected, and utilizing stones in interaction with the human body,<br />

possibly very large women, to produce whatever the tribe needed. For those of you<br />

who are science fiction fans, simply think of a modified function of The Navigator<br />

in the book and movie Dune. It ought not to be lost on the reader that one of the<br />

titles of the goddess Isis, as well as other divine beings, is “The Navigator”.<br />

Another point about the goddess image of Isis is the odd construction on her<br />

head that is called the “throne”. The term “seated” is regularly used in conjunction<br />

with goddess images, and in archaic times, kingship was bestowed by marriage to<br />

the representative of the goddess.<br />

Worship of the moon is recorded in the oldest literatures of Egypt, Babylonia,<br />

India, and China—and is still practiced today in various parts of the world,<br />

particularly among certain African and Native American groups. The experts will<br />

tell us that Moon worship is founded on the belief that the phases of the moon and<br />

the growth and decline of plant, animal, and human life are related. In some<br />

societies food was laid out at night to absorb the rays of the moon, which were<br />

thought to have power to cure disease and prolong life. Among the Baganda of<br />

central Africa it was customary for a mother to bathe her newborn child by the<br />

light of the first full moon. The moon has also been associated with wisdom and<br />

justice, as in the worship of the Egyptian god Thoth and the Mesopotamian god<br />

Sin. The moon has also been the basis for many amorous legends and some<br />

superstitions (madmen were once considered to be moonstruck, hence the term<br />

lunatic). This is just the short version because entire libraries could be filled with<br />

books on the mythology of the Moon and related subjects.<br />

The interesting points are that the rays of the moon were anciently thought to<br />

have the power to cure disease and prolong life and confer wisdom. These are<br />

motifs of both the Holy Grail and the Philosopher’s Stone. And this brings us to<br />

another most interesting idea of Morris Jessup.<br />

Morris Jessup and Gravitational Nodes<br />

The reader familiar with Jessup’s work will know that he died under very<br />

mysterious circumstances, and his death was the platform upon which the<br />

“legend” of the “Philadelphia Experiment“ was founded. This story is about <strong>Secret</strong><br />

Government experiments in radar invisibility that resulted in Time<br />

Travel/manipulation. It is too much to go into here and now, and not totally<br />

relevant to our subject, but we will say that, after much research and tracking of<br />

clues, we have concluded that Jessup was most likely murdered—but that it wasn’t

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