NATIONWIDE................1 (0.000%)
also national co-ordinator of a nationwide effort to bring to the attention of the federal government the ecological catastrophes in which we are presently involved. 133246 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX I ABOUT THE AUTHORS : GEORGE GRINNELL
 
 NATIVE....................14 (0.002%)
took a new post in his native Hungary. 7274 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
rites and symbols. Bancroft in the Native Races of America repeats Bourbourg's theory 77 .27240 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : THE MOON IN MESO-AMERICA
London. Bancroft, Hubert H. (1874-76), Native Races of the Pacific States of North America, 31149 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Phase," 155 Science, 1399-1401. ---- (1975), "Native Astronomy in Mesoamerica," 31349 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
in his exceptionally important study of "Native Copper, 37854 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
boundary are large quantities of broken native and irruptive rock. 54645 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 11: ASTROBLEMES OF THE EARTH -
284-6 Coe, Michael D. (1975), "Native Astronomy in Mesoamerica" in Archaeastronomy in Pre-Columbian America, 59317 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
Prof. George William Richmann (1711-1753), native of Sweden and member of the Imperial Academy of St. 88592 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : DANGERS OF ELECTROCUTION
in C., 124. 56. M. Coe, "Native Astronomy in Mesoamerica," 91934 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : Notes (Chapter 6: The Charisma of Moses)
to all Hebrews and was Moses' native tongue. 93727 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE NAME OF YAHWEH
relatives, and among a disastrously weakened native population. 103583 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
Land in Australia, there dwell a native people of the stone age, 107510 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 18: HOLY DREAMTIME IN WONGURI LAND -
all countries were published in their native languages and in Hebrew translation. 133576 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
all countries were published in their native languages and in Hebrew translation. 134486 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
 
 NATIVES...................6 (0.001%)
Culture of Southern India with the natives of Australia. 42436 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
Tiahuanacu is too high for the natives to reproduce themselves readily; 46662 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
always found the Americas peopled by natives... 61895 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
000 years ago. In Patagonia, whose natives are looked upon as exceedingly 'primitive', 65623 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
territory, the harder it was for natives to pronounce two consonants together without a vowel, 118451 KA: - - Chapter 18: ROME AND THE ETRUSCANS : ROME, MONARCHY, AND THE GODS
for spiritual truths of the aboriginal natives of this continent, 132367 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
 
 NATIVITY..................1 (0.000%)
On the Morning of Christ's Nativity," 131155 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
 
 NATIVOS...................1 (0.000%)
Natura Deorum, I: 10: 25, says: "nativos esse deos," 116175 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
 
 NATL......................3 (0.000%)
Geol. (1977), 14. 15. 43 Proc. Natl. 36349 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash : Notes (Chapter Seven: Fire and Ash)
1959), 349-55. 16. 45 Proc. Natl. 36351 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash : Notes (Chapter Seven: Fire and Ash)
Death in a Minoan Temple," 159 Natl. 36388 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash : Notes (Chapter Seven: Fire and Ash)
 
 NATRON....................1 (0.000%)
are surprisingly advanced. The Sterkfontein and Natron industries have been called Acheulian. 61298 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
 
 NATUFIAN..................1 (0.000%)
was the cause of the post-Natufian size crash? ( 33524 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
 
 NATURA....................12 (0.001%)
12. Cicero, M. T. (1933), De Natura Deorum, 31330 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Part 2, 332. Lucretius, De Rerum Natura, 31927 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
of such slow "catastrophic" processes implausible. Natura facit magnum saltum: 49445 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
the adage, Nature makes no leap (natura non facit saltum). 60797 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
subjects, in a poem, De Rerum Natura. 115482 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
uncertainty worthy of Heisenberg (De Rerum Natura II: 115488 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
all equidistant. Cicero, in his De Natura Deorum, 116174 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
are mentioned by Lucretius, 'De Rerum Natura' VI: 116532 KA: - - Chapter 12: MYSTERY RELIGIONS -
nature of the universe, De Rerum Natura, 124638 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 20: QUAIRO: RAISING THE KA -
nature of the universe, De Rerum Natura, 125042 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 23: BOLTS -
of the principle of indifferenza della natura. 136373 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
impulsu aeris cui innatat. 4. De natura deorum II, 137255 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
 
 NATURAE...................5 (0.001%)
of water and whirlwinds. "Nihil difficile naturae est, 32616 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - TITLEPAGE -
finem sui properat." Seneca De Quaestiones Naturae "Nothing is difficult for nature.32619 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - TITLEPAGE -
Divitiacus, claimed to have studied the naturae rationem which the Greeks called physiologia, 112814 KA: - - Chapter 1: AUGURY -
Cicero: "Religio est iuncta cum cognitione naturae," 118911 KA: - - Chapter 19: THE TIMAEUS -
thinking sub fide vel spe geometricantis naturae; 136381 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
 
 NATURAL...................996 (0.124%)
model of gradual incremental Evolution by natural selection to support. 156 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 1: Introduction to the series - - -
Primary Propositions of Conventional Science respecting natural and human history, 296 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
gradual limited and calculable play of natural forces: 362 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
Sapiens. In the course of evolution, natural selection, 383 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
stress upon electromagnetic forces in all natural and vital events, 553 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
Primary Propositions of Conventional Science respecting natural and human history, 592 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
gradual limited and calculable play of natural forces: 732 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
Sapiens. In the course of evolution, natural selection, 765 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
a score of global catastrophes in natural history, 946 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
and unknowledgeable. In a suddenly new natural environment and atmospheric state and in a minor genetic change from the hominid, 1017 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
stress upon electromagnetic forces in all natural and vital events, 1087 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
evolution by definition must occur in natural history." 1129 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 4: PROSPECTIVE CHANGES IN THE Q-C TEST - - -
cellular necessity Celsius Celt, Celtic cementation, natural Cenozoic Era Cenozoic volcanism Central Australia central fire centrifugal force Cepola fish ceramic cerebral cortex cerebral hemispheres ceremonial ritual object Ceres, 2121 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
tree chromosphere chronology chronology, historical chronology, natural history chronometry, 2192 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) natural force natural history natural law natural rights natural scientist natural selection naturalism nature Nature, 4235 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
and Space Administration (NASA) natural force natural history natural law natural rights natural scientist natural selection naturalism nature Nature, 4236 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
Administration (NASA) natural force natural history natural law natural rights natural scientist natural selection naturalism nature Nature, 4237 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
natural force natural history natural law natural rights natural scientist natural selection naturalism nature Nature, 4238 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
natural history natural law natural rights natural scientist natural selection naturalism nature Nature, 4239 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
natural law natural rights natural scientist natural selection naturalism nature Nature, 4240 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
tide reductionism reef refining, metal refining, natural refraction refrigeration, 4993 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
refining, metal refining, natural refraction refrigeration, natural Rehoboam Reich, 4995 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
exponential rates reproductive system reptile reservoir, natural Reshetov, 5017 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
of Quantavolution and Catastrophe in the Natural and Human Sciences, 6084 COSMIC HERETICS: - - - TITLE-PAGE -
687 would be the destruction by natural disaster of the army of the Assyrian emperor Sennacherib while besieging Jerusalem.6776 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
the shock it gave to conventional natural science and history, 6779 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
time of Exodus, there was heavy natural turbulence; 6789 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
of Israel.") V. knew also that natural laws must rest upon evidence, 6799 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
at least now respectable statements about natural events (this one to give a flavor of the substance of the case), 6901 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
he perceived as building between the natural and human scientists might be damaged. (6975 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
Normal Newell, of the New York Natural History Museum; 7003 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
were sent to potential opponents among natural scientists, 7011 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
and alerted by word of mouth, natural scientists nevertheless played deaf and dumb, 7141 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
Deg no new voice from a natural scientist comes forth amidst the many letters of a type to warm the cockles of an editor's heart. 7144 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
no scientific journal dealing with the natural sciences reviewed it. 7419 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
Nor do we understand why the natural sciences are excluded. 7510 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
what can be done in the natural sciences in the next century are absent. 7518 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
He is one of the few natural scientists who has lent sympathy to Velikovsky in recent years. 7697 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
would be a very costly affair. Natural forces are not easy to set up in a natural state. 7725 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
easy to set up in a natural state. 7726 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
question, partly because he, like other natural scientists, 7747 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
of Velikovsky's work in the natural and historical sciences, 8700 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
Talk to Bimson re opinion of natural disasters at Megiddo Dolby re ice ages Moore re poetry Lowery re linguistics Sieff re... 8995 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
of the world, both in the natural sciences (all fields) and in the humanities (all fields) and including human nature and behavior, 9050 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
the quantavolutionary modes of change in natural and life history is often frustrated when he searches for information about a writer, 9075 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
quantavolution and history, both social and natural. 9143 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
collective amnesia from the trauma of natural disaster. 9812 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
not occur with every generation; therefore natural and human history required exposition in the light of catastrophism. 9815 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
bringing to the surface memories of natural catastrophe. 9842 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
neither more not less created by natural catastrophe than human nature in its other behaviors, 9858 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
accredited V., the fact that ancient natural catastrophes have played a large role in human and natural history. 9888 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
a large role in human and natural history. 9889 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
and cultural world; his theory of natural selection was simple, 10401 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
published the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, 10415 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
him about his own theory of natural selection. 10417 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
with an environment, both human and natural. 10478 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
over the self, others, and the natural world. 10490 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
have been catastrophized other than by natural disaster and could a catastrophe strike into the hominids en masse. 10664 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
believe that the very principle of natural selection could and did cope with the possible influences of catastrophes or cosmic radiation escalations. 10701 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
word "cope" as "the principle of natural selection could and did cope with the possible influences of catastrophes and cosmic radiation escalations." 10743 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
manifestations of divinity, that they are natural, 10867 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
basically similar: they ritualized celestial and natural phenomena in human terms; 10966 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
for they argue with themselves in Natural Law, 11101 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
mishaps, not associating the ashes with natural catastrophes or the deluge that he believes overcame Tyrrhenian civilization. 11549 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
involved in archaeological investigations of past natural fire history. 11573 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
20 feet of ash fall. A natural forest can easily meet or exceed the 200 ton biomass figure quoted by Kelly and Danchille. 11586 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
seen "red ashes of wood" in natural fires, 11617 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
work he has been doing on natural fires and the origin of cereals in Anatolia, 11655 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
there are so many theories explaining natural history is that each man can barely cope with possible effects of his one favorable type of motion and change.11705 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
destruction of the town, 1) A natural catastrophe, 12233 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
I do not think that a natural catastrophe destroyed the town and left the tablets intact. 12234 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
The nations are in turmoil; the natural forces of the Earth -- volcanic, 12239 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
exposition. I discovered surprisingly that most natural scientists are not skeptical about some major guiding concepts, 12279 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
Science: a) the Ice Ages b) Natural Selection c) Continental Drift d) "In the Beginning," "12287 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
major features and dynamic of the natural and biological sciences, 12390 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
two substantive reasons: Velikovsky established his natural history by assertions of fact; 12550 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
myth is to be explained by natural causes. 12560 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
can't determine what happened in natural history by natural processes nowadays."12593 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
what happened in natural history by natural processes nowadays." 12593 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
of V.'s own reading of natural and astronomical history, 12884 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
vision lulls us into somnolence about natural forces, 13354 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
are catastrophes: cultural quantavolutions coincide with natural quantavolutions. 13592 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
these may have been due to natural causes rather than the agency of man remains scanty." (13600 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
and social turmoil are expectable in natural disasters and are a concomitant and effect of them. 13606 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
1450 to -687 periods suffered grand natural disasters, 13653 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
would seriously damage his model of natural history and at the worst render the model only an intriguing metaphor. 13692 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
chemical turbulence that is inherent in natural catastrophes that begin with disorders in the sky. 13720 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
I read your report of the Natural Museum with interest. 14440 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
today has a format often resembling natural science, 15493 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
and protohistory as frequented by stupendous natural catastrophes that call into question the stability of the solar system over long time periods, 15501 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
that puzzle historians both human and natural. 15504 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
in history, some in legend, some natural history. 15515 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
Egyptian sources refer to the same natural catastrophe. 15951 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
the curators of the Museum of Natural History in New York, 16834 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
not occupied with ancient history or natural history. 18002 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
behave humanly by the effects of natural forces so immense that factors such as sex, 18174 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
did not give them a broad natural inclined plane for the progression of history;18250 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
aid of history). So they needed natural change to back up social change -- Engels waxing polemical on this need --but the change must not overturn catastrophically the works of revolutionary men.18256 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
science and sociology section of the Natural Science Foundation. 18275 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
a regular feature for the magazine Natural History, 18360 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
by the New York Museum of Natural History with a popular circulation reaching a million readers. 18361 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
tre was the silly mechanism of natural selection, 18449 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
and difficulties in publishing through the natural channels of the trade book and textbook publishers and university presses. 18800 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
deeper problems of human culture and natural history, 18822 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
of ancient catastrophists of religion and natural history but disdaining the multitude of their descendants who were equally impressed by ancient catastrophism; 18989 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
contradiction in short-term dating of natural history and the huge defensive effort accumulated pro long-term dating.19681 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
quantavolution as a heuristic model of natural and human history is useful for many scientific and human needs involving past time, 19846 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
divide properly the actual ages of natural and human history. 19855 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
the gradualist and incremental aspects of natural history and offending as few people as possible.19982 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
of sharp breaks and movements in natural and cultural history under the flag of Cuvier. 19992 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
Later, Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History hosted a conclave of biologists called by Eldredge, 20011 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
has competition," and that competition or natural selection "will rarely be the sole cause, 20022 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
wanting to steal jobs from the natural scientists. 20216 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
right to challenge the divine and natural order of the heavens and proposed severe penalties for such. 20793 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
1966. Sundry of the quantitatively directed natural scientist have told me and others that they believe Velikovsky to be unimportant and irrelevant because of his qualitative, 20837 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
than a useful temporary rendition. Some natural laws can be made to appear ridiculously simple and indeed they may be such. 20861 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
quantity) by inventing gradual evolution by natural selection. 20946 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
INTRODUCTION TO QUANTAVOLUTION IN HUMAN AND NATURAL HISTORY by ALFRED DE GRAZIA Metron Publications Princeton London Bombay 1981 by ALFRED DE GRAZIA No reproduction in any form of this book, 21150 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - TITLEPAGE -
disbelief, hear it being attributed to natural bodies as a great honour and perfection that they are impassable, 21174 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - TITLEPAGE -
in association with a set of natural catastrophes. 21417 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - FOREWORD -
of what might have happened in natural and human history. 21422 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - FOREWORD -
that is, the potential quantavolutionist of natural history and human origins. 21479 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION -
originated recently and was wracked by natural disasters. 21489 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : THE UNIFORMITIARIAN RESISTANCE
catastrophe to explain important episodes of natural history. 21568 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : THE UNIFORMITIARIAN RESISTANCE
fairly consistent and defensible reconstruction of natural history and human history. 21587 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : QUANTAVOLUTION BY CATASTROPHE
Only then could the model of natural and human history be integrated. 21622 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : QUANTAVOLUTION BY CATASTROPHE
into nine periods, each characterized by natural outbursts but containing tranquil passages as well. 21630 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : QUANTAVOLUTION BY CATASTROPHE
scenario, following evidence from mechanics, geology, natural and human history. 21899 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 01: COSMIC INSTABILITY : "ONE OR TWO CENTURIES" OF "ETERNAL ORDER"
atmosphere of a star. A complicated natural system of sheaths surrounds bodies in space. 22135 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : ELECTRICAL FORCES
These would be times when the natural and human fires would be the living light, 22405 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : PANDEMONIUM AND DARKNESS
scientific philosophy agrees. The teachers of natural science to the young repeat interminably,22593 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : REVOLUTIONARY INTEGRATION OF THE COSMOS
the first time do what only natural forces once do -- bring the curtain of catastrophe crashing down upon the end of an epoch.22623 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : REVOLUTIONARY INTEGRATION OF THE COSMOS
can and have been engendered by natural and human forces. 23135 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE RADIO-HALO PROBLEM
to be matched with human or natural objects of known age, 23308 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : TREE-RING TIME
are used to discuss magnetized rock: natural remnant magnetism and thermal remnant magnetism. 23373 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : MAGNETISM
years in all. The discovery of natural mutation introduced a dynamic of change, 23418 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
have termed it here, helical - mode. Natural scientists are becoming "helicalists". 23454 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
tests that mix human evidence with natural evidence, 23511 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : 58 TESTS IN DISPUTE
say this: Consider all the great natural forces that operate today. 23516 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : 58 TESTS IN DISPUTE
produced materials such as water and natural gas are found in an abundance under high pressures that long-term effects should have erased 69 .23555 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : 58 TESTS IN DISPUTE
can only come into effect when natural and human material is laid down; 23678 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE DISSOLUTION OF TIME
precious store of amber also indicates natural disaster, 23749 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : OF MAMMONTHS AND AMBER
by scholars to explain the widespread natural disasters of the 8th and 7th centuries, 23784 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : SCHAEFFER AND VELIKOVSKY
the history of the biosphere. A natural catastrophe may not require as rare a combination of events as is believed even by non-uniformitarians. 23801 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : SCHAEFFER AND VELIKOVSKY
000, the human race and its natural environment passed through eight phases. 24064 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR -
said to have begun in general natural destruction, 24068 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR -
was cast down, it was by natural forces; 24209 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : THE NUMBER OF CATASTROPHES
around 14,000 years ago. Many natural disasters seem to have been concentrated around that time, 24249 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : WHY 14,000 YEARS?
been a direct cause of grave natural and cultural destruction in the period between 1450 and 776 B. 24258 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : WHY 14,000 YEARS?
the chapters to come, many revolutionary natural events can be shown to have occurred during the periods following the Uranian and Lunarian ; 24279 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : WHY 14,000 YEARS?
observations are compatible with the postulated natural history - ancient knowledge of the physical traits of the planets; 25037 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : SUMMARY REFLECTIONS UPON THE CHANGING WORLD SYSTEM
population of bands, a reign of natural terror (massive traumas), 25483 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
onto other people and the threatening natural forces. 25509 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
between individuals-groups and divine or natural forces. 25530 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
both passages Saturn is the great natural god. 27170 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LEGENDARY CHAOS AND THE MOON
The correlation of human behavior with natural Moon behavior should be interpreted as mankind trying to think like the god, 27451 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : ELIADE'S "LUNAR PERSPECTIVE"
the three phases in its continuous natural cycle only stressed in the human mind the truth of the universal proposition of the cycles of the gods and of the human ages.27454 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : ELIADE'S "LUNAR PERSPECTIVE"
set of transferred representations of the natural behaviors and traits of the gods.27467 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : ELIADE'S "LUNAR PERSPECTIVE"
the full range of historical and natural sciences. 27889 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN -
King. The transition may have been "natural", 28076 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN : THE "GOLDEN AGE"
of Figure 33 suffered destruction by natural causes, 29498 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : GLOBAL RUINATION AND ITS PERPETRATOR
author dissenting) has argued that great natural dams holding back the Indus River waters upstream collapsed and flooded the many Indus towns 26 ; 29508 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : GLOBAL RUINATION AND ITS PERPETRATOR
it was not found in the natural state." 29628 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE DEVI AND THE MEXICAN BALLPLAYER
true uniformitarian fashion, never ventures that natural disasters were worse then, 29988 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : WORSHIP OF MARS
other nations and tribes report heavy natural disturbances throughout the period 776 to 687 B. 30034 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE WOUNDS OF PLANET MARS
pertinent to the controversy over the natural history of Venus. 30179 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : Notes (Chapter Ten: Venus and Mars)
The variables and hypotheticals of your natural history are so many that even the virtuosity of such astrophysicists as Bass and others whom you cite will be strained to beyond the breaking point. 30669 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
all can be recouped; if not, natural history will become a toy for everybody's amusement.30676 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
B. C. that has not suffered natural disaster in its history. 30683 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
world collapse the time-scales of natural history and simultaneously withdraw the intellectual need for long draughts of time to explain the world.30763 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN -
High energy forces make out of natural history a set of exponential curves resembling very old human theories that universal history runs in cycles. 30765 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN -
spiralling or helical history; that is, natural history may have a direction, 30770 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN -
cosmogonies were appearing, certainly in the natural philosophy of the Greeks, 30798 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN : SUN AND SCIENCE
267-79. Avery, T. E. (1975), Natural Resources Measurements, 31125 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Boston, New York. Douglas, Mary (1970), Natural Symbols, 31456 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
in the Relations of Scientific Thought, Natural Theology, 31581 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
196-203. ---- (1968), "Kalibangan: Death from Natural Causes," 32170 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
William (1717), Astronomical Principles of Religion, Natural and Revealed, 32493 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
of the most determining events in natural history is a logarithmic or exponential curve where, 32744 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
now. The several descriptive spheres of natural activity: 32750 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
is upon such abrupt, large-scale natural events that the quick leaping changes of quantavolution in the holosphere depend. 32759 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
large spans of assigned time in natural history are fictitious, 32761 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
if they occurred, little of the natural world changed during their passage. 32762 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
have had less success in dominating natural history --even allowing that they were riding on the crest of English world power, 32791 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
religion are using the relatively peaceful natural world of today to cover up ancient catastrophes, 32810 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
must read between the lines of natural science and politico-religious arguments, 32812 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
a quarter of all publications in natural history will treat of quantavolutions. 32822 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
in the ample time depots of natural history, 32836 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
and now presenting itself is both natural and young. 32878 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
ephemeral noises and sights that attend natural operations; 32936 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
regarded as a criterion of a natural force; 32940 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
readily in the several spheres of natural operations. 32946 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
Mt. St. Helens, effects of a natural force are likely to be experienced in all spheres, 32958 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
world that escaped heavy destruction from natural causes. 33020 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
i) No institution, behavioral pattern, and natural setting existing today, 33031 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
also discount the many evidences of natural destruction by fire and earthquake of the Mycenean centers 16 .33437 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
than the uniformitarian in describing the natural history of climatic change. 33562 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
of the conventional climatologists of the natural history of climate. 33566 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
explain climate by reducing chances of natural catastrophes to a near-zero constant, 33569 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
blown away with some of the natural landscaping. 33728 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
provide the circulating system for a natural instantaneous chemical factory. 33869 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
China and its cliffs degrade into natural terraces 19 . 33979 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
one another. We have discovered no natural law that says the two equators and sets of poles must be close together.34182 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 4 Magnetism and Axial Tilts -
is part and parcel of every natural transaction. 34889 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
protons for electrons that initiates all natural behavior, 34890 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
GI-81 to 110. 2. Pliny, Natural History, 35234 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity : Notes (Chapter Five: Electricity)
150. 7. G. P. Pliny, II Natural History (trans. 35706 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 6 Cosmic and Terrestrial Lightning : Notes (Chapter Six: Terrestrial and Cosmic Lightning)
Winter 1974-5, 33. 23. "The Natural History of Lightning," 35748 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 6 Cosmic and Terrestrial Lightning : Notes (Chapter Six: Terrestrial and Cosmic Lightning)
one may wonder how much of natural and human history would be erased under the same strict rules of appraisal.35913 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
ash, peat, various ashes, coal, oil, natural gas, 35937 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
instituting controlled forest fires to imitate natural fires which strengthen growth, 36103 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
investigator, detected three cultures and three natural destructions 25 . 36171 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
very eyes 34 . Reporting systems on natural phenomena have gradually become more complete, 36757 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone -
B. C., at a time when natural phenomena, 37125 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
in matching edible product and the natural "chemical apparatus" within the Bible.37355 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
contributed significantly to the processes of natural selection of mutation, 37526 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
and foods have fallen out in natural history, 37548 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
conquests at a time of grave natural disasters (the Mars-associated events between -776 and -487) 3 . 37661 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
to be far removed from their natural incidence as ores. 37869 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
costs half the prevailing price of natural crude oil. 38122 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
the biosphere that occurred with the natural production of oil. 38124 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
may be no inherent guarantee that natural oil is old. 38132 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
Dow Chemical Company's claim about natural dioxins mentioned in the previous chapter, 38152 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
and the other half comes from natural leaks and seepage. 38155 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
acceptance of it, the estimate of natural seepage is ridiculously high; 38164 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
Oil leaks are frequently sealed by natural asphalt. 38168 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
became coal; some became oil and natural gas. 38203 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
in form but standing for true natural history. 38928 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 11 Encounter and Collisions -
more grave problem, the hitherto unsuspected natural trend of the continental crust to lose its water holdings, 39301 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water -
basins may have been created by natural dams accreted gradually or thrown up abruptly by avalanche, 39310 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water -
in many places, emerging above their "natural " level, 39342 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water -
subterranean liquids and gases -water, oils, natural gas, 39344 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water -
In the century that followed, the natural and psychological sciences separated themselves from history and legend. 39482 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
the effects of the bursting of natural mud dams. 39490 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
ever fall. He appealed to a "natural" and "divine" order or process happening over long ages, 39607 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
by the bursting of barriers: a natural dam blocks and collects water and then collapses. 40203 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
the possibilities: hunters' overkill, ice flows, natural death, 40489 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
Yet who can deny Pliny, the natural historian, 41419 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes -
many ancient voices, if a better natural history is to be written. 41434 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes -
Holt, 1931), Chapter 3 15. II Natural History 86. 41557 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes : Notes (Chapter Sixteen: Earthquakes)
notable. On the base of a natural profile of soil, 41695 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
op. cit., 267. 14. Artifical and Natural Electricity. 42015 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism : Notes (Chapter Seventeen: Volcanism)
The Americas were heavily reconstituted by natural disaster. 42369 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
work as a great model of natural history, 42563 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
enclaves of the continents. It seemed natural to resort to risings; 42758 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
volume 3) a mistaken reading of natural history 4) a psychological denial of an undesired state 5) a practical fiction, 43014 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 19 Expansion and Contraction -
psychologist can appreciate more than a natural scientist: 43329 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
volcanic responses to heavy solar storms. Natural history may have witnessed, 43432 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
promptly with the word "order". The natural order is largely in the mind. 43626 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
argue against the absurd conception of natural history? 43646 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
marble mycorites and migmatites -and a natural history museum will present an orderly array of them.43724 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
to revolutionize the earth sciences and natural history. 43830 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins -
instead of the outside to control natural behavior around the world. 44409 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages -
Congo and others. In decoding the natural history of river beds, 44871 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels -
way of the most famous of natural monuments, 44996 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels -
So writes Stephen Jay Gould in Natural History Magazine 1 . 45294 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
Proto-Indian civilization was battered by natural disaster and the Indo-Europeans came down from the Plateau.)45381 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
trench. The convection cell is a natural heat machine. 45619 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
God separated the continents outside of natural agencies or that the Earth expanded in such a way that the viscous forces were not involved." 45920 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
some rocks of all ten periods. Natural history assumes that all areas have undergone similar weathering experiences during any given long period of time; 46245 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 25 Sediments -
world are all ten periods of natural history represented. 46257 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 25 Sediments -
C. B. Hanson, "inefficiency in the natural systems for recycling organic material." 46799 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
a laboratory in attempts to replicate natural conditions. 46801 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
fossil assemblages so commonly found in natural history. 46805 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
catastrophist: "In the American Museum of Natural History (New York) there is on display in the Late Mammals room (Room 3, 46814 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
Vertebrate Paleontology, the American Museum of Natural History: 46851 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
H. Tedford The American Museum of Natural History Dept. 46867 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
quotation from the American Museum of Natural History implies that a pool, 46886 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
out at the disastrous junctures of natural history whence the rocks and fossil seas, 47296 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
one or several catastrophes and a natural dissembling of the fossil record to tempt exaggerations of the expanses of time and the progress of evolution.47323 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
or less even mutation-rate, and Natural Selection as a cause in evolution, 47360 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
source of genesis and speciation, and "Natural Selection merely works on these;" 47366 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
changes at about the same time. Natural Selection may have assumed more importance when this process slowed down. 47376 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
scientifically explainable within the framework of natural causes and human nature, 47455 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
positive feature of a species in "natural selection," 47515 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
advantages afforded these handicapped species in natural selection. 47520 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
reduced salinity of seawater, competition and natural selection, 47623 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
almost none of the world's natural history museums have measured radioactive levels in specimens of their collections 26 .47739 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
go well beyond gradualism, uniformitarianism, and natural selection. 47759 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
more one studies the possibilities of natural disasters the more likely it appears that,47814 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
studied by the earth sciences. A natural catastrophe, 47929 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
of sounds in earth sciences: their natural origins and their effects on the biosphere. 47936 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
and the aurora can join other natural forces even today in suggesting the pandemonium of catastrophe. 48047 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
idea that the sound of great natural events were incorporated in the basic vocabulary of new-born humanity. 48112 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
to understand and possibly to reconstruct natural history. 48257 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
the idea of the constancy of natural events through long eras of time is put aside, 48258 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
of ancient humans in regard to natural phenomena would be a work of thousands of pages of agonies, 48335 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
a discussion of some relationships between natural events and the spectres that accompany them. 48339 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
itself, and what it conveys about natural events. 48342 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
to what ancient voices convey about natural events. 48345 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
on to their belief in a natural world that changes by gradual evolution rather than by quantavolution, 48346 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
the Egyptians suffered terribly from the natural catastrophe of the time of the Hebrew Exodus, 48754 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
to be no logical conflict between natural laws and historical events. 48847 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
to the affirmation or display of natural laws, 48849 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
are false or falsely interpreted. Either natural laws conform to validated historical behavior or the "laws" are not laws and require limitation or correction.48850 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
amounts to a model of recent natural history. 48873 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
it means a discrete and powerful natural force or body which may ('the known god') or may not ('a new god') be behaving in a characteristic (i. 48960 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
These thirteen event-complexes of primeval natural history constitute, 48963 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
if presently non-authoritative, model of natural history, 48964 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
traditional accounts of historical personages and natural events. 48980 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
the following principles of physics and natural history would be among the most likely to be inferred from the ancient empirical beliefs:48993 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
probably opening up many strata of natural history to quantavolutionary exoterrestrialism. 49147 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
origin of species by means of natural selection, 49419 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
exponential decline, as Darwin did, and natural history is stripped of its salient behavior. 49425 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
disintegration of an existing course of natural behavior. 49432 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
to support an evolutionist view of natural history. 49460 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
of change as a feature of natural history. 49491 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
peculiar to a given organism or natural process when the rate is affected by a disaster produced by a specified high-energy expression.49499 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
intensity, the quantavolutionist is describing known natural forces proceeding at abnormally high rates. 49503 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
are very high: all of the natural sciences have a stake in the game, 49767 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
once we dismiss the pretensions of natural selection (adaptation and survival of the fittest), 49820 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
sell out biostratigraphical chronology, on which natural history has depended almost entirely from the beginning of its modern phase 150 years ago, 49872 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
radioactive decay processes were the only natural ones known. 49909 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
transmutations. If this is the case, natural decay processes should effect at least 10 29 - 10 30 secondary transmutations in the earth's crust each year.49920 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
from exoterrestrial sources. That is why "natural" radioactivity is concentrated within the crust of the Earth.49927 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
chronologies that have been developed in natural history. 50113 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
of facts, allegations, and hypotheses about natural history; 50170 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
why should it be important in natural history? 50184 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
If it can be shown that natural forces could have provided all of natural history through the agency of hundreds of millions of years, 50184 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
forces could have provided all of natural history through the agency of hundreds of millions of years, 50185 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
who wish to correlate perfectly their natural philosophy about the empirical world with their beliefs in the words of their sacred scriptures.50194 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
everybody. We say that, properly understood, natural forces can have created the present world in a vastly compressed span of time.50209 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
of an animate divine intelligence into natural history. 50218 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
the systematic effort to validate the natural history of the Bible, 50221 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
actuality, what utility does mini-temporal natural history possess? 50231 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
not abolish historical time, it allows natural forces to play flexibly with time in history.50232 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
earliest records of mankind into the natural sciences, 50238 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
earlier advanced civilizations whose true long natural historiography was handed down in garbled form. 50290 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
would require the reconstruction of later natural history, 50383 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - EPILOGUE -
arc pulsed regularly responding to some natural rhythm between the forces leading to extinction and the forces promoting resurrection.52674 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 6: THE ELECTRICAL AXIS AND ITS GASEOUS RADIATION -
the biosphere. The mechanism usually termed "natural selection" operates rapidly, 54253 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 10: INSTABILITY OF SUPER URANUS -
geologists and paleontologists hoped to trace natural history backwards through the rocks and establish a long chain of rock-related fossils on the principle of super-position, 54896 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
perhaps only quite defensible concept of natural history. 54899 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
development of the living cell. Major natural change has probably ceased. 54942 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
testimony to use in constructing a natural history of Solaria Binaria and the extent to which such testimony may be reliable and valid.55077 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
world suited to mankind. The catastrophic natural frame in which the hominid quantavoluted matched the terror that seized him as he humanized. 55188 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
catastrophes; they view catastrophic reports of natural history as the fictions of a savage mind - a catastrophized mind (which it is, 55191 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
s mantle material; so it is natural that many scientists have suggested some connection between the Moon's origin and the Earth's missing crust. 55707 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 13: NOVA OF SUPER URANUS AND EJECTION OF THE MOON -
humans believe that they and the natural environment might be benignly controlled through human intelligence. 55903 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN -
analogized to objective features of the natural environment. 55908 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN -
domes are associated with petroleum and natural gas deposits. 55995 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN -
Jupiter the Thunderbolter" alone. It is natural to see in this literature an exaggeration of ordinary lightning strokes, 56258 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 15: THE JUPITER ORDER -
age, we believe). A set of natural disasters plunged the Harappan culture of India into a fatal decline now too.56777 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
settlements suffered destruction or damage from natural causes. 56791 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
with the period mention a general natural disaster. 56802 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
that every institution, behavioral pattern and natural setting that exists today, 56826 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
designing and propagating new models of natural and human history would appear to be a necessary preliminary to peace and progress. 56829 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
nearby Etruscan state was staggered by natural disasters and a decline. 56876 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
in trouble themselves and profiting from natural disasters that were besetting the earlier inhabitants. 56883 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
minority -- who are inclined to shorten natural history with an adequate theoretical instrument.57197 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
require, a short-time scheme for natural history. 57200 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
evidenced time and time again in natural history. 57203 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
a role in the theory of natural and social science has never been denied. 57238 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
role in cosmic actions. In every natural and biological process -- creation, 57288 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
yet nowhere is the malice of natural science towards the humanities so readily vented as when legends are taken seriously. 57610 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
must nevertheless stress some congruencies between natural science and mythology.57612 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
to reflect upon how much of natural science has come out of amusement, 57646 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
conjunction of electro-gravitational influences causing natural disorders on Earth the "Jupiter Effect" (see Goodsavage,57659 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
cosmic thunderbolts, the Phaeton legends, the natural events reported in Exodus, 57689 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
scientists decide to reach back to natural events and primordial human cultures with the hypothesis of Solaria Binaria, 57698 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
variable of electricity, and describing relevant natural events by the extent to which they are electron- deficient or electron-rich. 58363 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE E: : SOLARIA BINARIA IN RELATION TO CHAOS AND CREATION
Acad. Nat. Sci. Detroit Academy of Natural Sciences Ency. 59057 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
Introduction to Quantavolution in Human and Natural History (Metron: 59389 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
The Elements Rage: The Extremes of Natural Violence, 59764 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
133-46 Pliny (Gaius Plinius Secondus), Natural History, 59965 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
pp. 282-6 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, Natural Questions, 60044 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
APE LEGENDS OF CREATION MEMORIAL GENERATIONS NATURAL SELECTION SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION WAVES OF EVOLUTION Chapter 2: 60368 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
GENERATIONS NATURAL SELECTION SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION WAVES OF EVOLUTION Chapter 2: 60369 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
memorial generations. What role did great natural forces play? 60526 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
students of anthropology, linguistics, genetics, psychology, natural history, 60537 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
other animals, including primates, play about natural fires and eat roasted vegetable and animal matter consumed by the flames 3 . 60619 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION -
consumed by the flames 3 . A natural fire may borrowed preserved for a long time. 60620 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION -
of one hemisphere, and thereupon involve 'natural selection. ' 60670 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE HUMAN BRAINCASE
Evidently that helped to promote (by natural selection) the tendency of all primates to interpose an internal delay in the brain between stimulus and response, 60767 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
humanization might have occurred in a natural quantavolution. 60795 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
the under-ground history of mankind. NATURAL SELECTION Doubts about the efficacy of a ladder of evolution begin with questions about the means of constructing the ladder, 60957 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
ladder, that is, the machine of natural selection. 60960 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
work The Origin of Species by Natural Selection. 60961 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
other hand, Darwin used the term natural selection 414 times, 60968 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
as an active substitute for real natural operations and in place of non-existent evidence.60970 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
a century of confused thought about natural selection. 60973 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
Darwin (and Wallace, whose ideas on natural selection paralleled his own) received the idea behind natural selection upon reading Malthus who in turn was keen on justifying the laissez-faire notion of a struggle for survival in economic affairs. 60976 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
his own) received the idea behind natural selection upon reading Malthus who in turn was keen on justifying the laissez-faire notion of a struggle for survival in economic affairs. 60977 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
adopting the idea of evolution by natural selection. 60983 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
only to guard his idea of natural selection, 60990 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
advanced to illustrate the concept of natural selection turn out to be Lamarckian environmentalism or question-begging. 60993 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
of arguing around the weakness of natural selection in its stark logical definition.61008 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
its stark logical definition. More often, natural selection is proven by a kind of question-begging. 61010 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
an ex post facto justification by natural selection. 61012 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
But no proof is offered. Both natural selection and mutation theory abound with the stated or implied premise that whatever changed must have changed because the change helped the species to survive.61013 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
proportions resulting from the operations of natural selection'? 61048 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
the interposition of the magical term natural selection. 61049 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
alert scepticism about the language of natural selection and mutation theory will send many a popular view crashing to the ground. 61070 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
be called upon to show that natural selection, 61073 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
even 'mutation as an aid to natural selection, ' 61074 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
pong game in which a frustrated natural selection explanation bats the ball to mutation theory, 61076 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
turn, bats the ball back to natural selection. 61077 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
to great lengths. A theory of natural selection, 61078 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
an unchanging or very slowly changing natural environment are going to require very much time to effect the multitude of alterations distinguishing the human being from its imagined primate archetype. 61079 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
conveniently forgotten that Darwin conceived of natural selection as having originated and developed all species of life to their present state within a time span which, 61087 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
evolution') or a continuous process of natural selection breeding a creature more effective at survival? 61122 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
so rapidly under present and recent natural conditions. 61124 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
habitat, has there been time for natural selection. 61127 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
for natural selection. SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION And what is natural selection? 61133 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
TO NATURAL SELECTION And what is natural selection? 61135 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
that Mr. Alfred Wallace maintains, that 'natural selection could only have endowed the savage with a brain a little superior to that of an ape. ' 61136 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
ape. ' 34 It may be that natural selection, 61138 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
may be cutting into this reproductivity. Natural selection is a measure of the influence, 61141 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
lose their merits as factors in natural selection. 61150 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
next year. So it is that natural selection is a more persuasive idea if one is a uniformitarian,61151 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
the correlation matrix, the likelihood of natural selection collapses. 61155 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
infinite contradictions. The general reliability of natural selection in producing an 'advance' must be close to zero.61158 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
be credible as an effect of natural selection. 61161 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, 61171 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
occurred, considering the extreme sensitivity of natural selection, 61175 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
laboring under a delusion, that of natural selection, 61192 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
the controversy as 'lucky survivors' versus natural selection. 61209 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
do not arise by any provable natural selection but only on occasion flourish thereby or decline, 61210 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
versus the refined general theory of natural selection. 61221 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
refined general theory of natural selection. Natural selection by any means whatsoever, 61221 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
and individuals designed as 'improvements by natural selection, ' 61224 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
mean that catastrophe and reproducibility determine natural selection. 61229 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
determine natural selection. For the rest, natural selection has been a fol-de-rol, 61230 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
expounding gradualism, he predicted, so will natural selection, 61232 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
ecumenically cultured, split off in early natural disasters, 61352 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
biosphere generally, is quantavolution in the natural sphere, 61373 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
D. Morris, Primate's Aesthetics, 70 Natural History (1961), 61408 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
quoted by L. R. Godfrey in Natural History, 61489 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
climate (which he claims) and no natural disasters to muck it up (but 10 volcanos were active thereabouts in Lucy's days).61834 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : FOOTPRINTS
evolution by other means such as natural selection, 61961 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
of time for mutation and for natural selection to transform the biosphere. 62025 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
question-begging is the plague of natural selection, 62027 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
the human race, in conjunction with natural catastrophes. 62275 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
biological quantavolution, an eventful scene in natural history, 62287 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
calls upon, a divine or even natural penchant of the soma of a species to transmute into a phylum crowned by a mysterious noos 25 . 62290 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
and new species as times of natural catastrophes, 62396 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
affects seriously the theories of evolution, natural selection, 62405 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
evolution, natural selection, and long-time natural history. 62405 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
ought to stress the importance of natural catastrophes as a background and source of quantavolutions in biology.62619 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
dismiss obsessions of creation as a 'natural' reluctance of people to conceive of infinity. 62643 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
period itself embraces many more fundamental natural events than were once accredited to it, 62651 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
have exposed the revolutionary character of natural events in such ages. 62662 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
conceptually to regard all expressions of natural forces of a destructive character witnessed by modern humanity as but the flattened tails of negatively exponential curves of catastrophism. 62666 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
negatively exponential curves of catastrophism. These natural forces of the past worked through explosions of the legendary elements of earth, 62668 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
their time in an environment of natural and social chaos and suffered intense physical and mental stress. 62685 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
developed within the historical bounds of natural catastrophe. 62717 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
of man, the number of 'spontaneous' ('natural, ' ' 63080 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
is thus impossible. To call in natural selection, 63110 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
usually done, does not help. For natural selection, 63110 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
process that Simpson spoke of above. Natural selection has to work only with the gene pool already available to a species and is questionable on the grounds already stated in the preceding chapters. 63188 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
offers plenty of possible changes but natural selection is more important: 63193 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
evolutionary ping-pong between mutation and natural selection. 63195 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
which to accomplish evolution. Evolution and natural selection, 63200 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
and wisdom of God in the natural and moral world meant to the naturalist, 63216 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
will afford numerous possibilities for immediate natural selection. 63311 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
of genetic change are provided by natural catastrophes -- isolation, 63406 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
quick time the supposed effects of natural selection. 63410 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
measuring the succession of events in natural history. 63447 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
experiences. Humanity was created during a natural reign of terror. 63514 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
memory traces. Homo schizo has a natural cultural output: 63613 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : PSYCHOSOMATIC GENETICS
in connection with large biosphere and natural destruction 35 . 63741 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
adapted habitat. In this case, however, natural disasters inflict shocks upon the hominid beyond its 'normal' tolerances of stimulation. 63805 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
intensity; of the ranging of the natural elements. 63812 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
result of suppressing its memories of natural disasters. 63825 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
from time to time by fresh natural (or man-made) catastrophe. 63837 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
J. B. S. Haldane's approach, Natural Selection, 63983 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : Notes (Chapter 3: Mechanics of Humanization)
Postulate now a set of terrorizing natural disasters and distraught faunal populations.64077 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
damaged and threatened. A reign of natural terror. 64082 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
onto other people and the threatening natural forces. 64094 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
individuals, and between groups and divine (natural) forces. 64117 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE The necessity of natural catastrophe has been recognized, 64713 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
is also the overlapping of the natural catastrophes with the earliest experience of homo schizo. 64721 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
be, naturally imagines all kinds of natural catastrophes to have occurred to which he was witness; 64725 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
now be trapped and killed. No natural enemies exist, 64846 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : A PRIMORDIAL SCENARIO
for survival in the process of natural selection upon the persistence of a stable natural environment and ecology. 65341 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
upon the persistence of a stable natural environment and ecology. 65342 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
Might it have been frequent devastating natural disasters? 65410 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
fission would have occurred because of natural catastrophe, 65506 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
saying what I earlier implied, widespread natural disasters may have driven humans into agriculture, 65654 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
So the mills of evolution by natural selection and mutation would have to be working very finely, 65726 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
others, whether in the wanderings after natural disasters and war, 65774 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
except in the periods of great natural turbulence, 65932 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
Within a thousand years of increasing natural terror, 65979 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
27, 1980; A Smith Woodward, 15 Natural Sci (1899) 351-4. 66143 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
585; cf A. C. Haddon, 10 Natural Sci (1897) 33-6. 66170 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
Yale U. Press, 1944, 48. 32. Natural Symbols: 66196 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
populations. Bureaucratic states might collapse from natural disaster, 66647 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PSYCHOLOGY OF ORGANIZATION
proof is rendered necessary by a natural (divine) destruction of the previous power of the prior dynasty and rule, 66792 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : REPUBLIC AND MONARCHY
is something resembling a catastrophe: a natural disaster such as a drought, 66817 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : AUTHORITY
David. Several of these followed upon natural disasters. 66854 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : COVENANT AND CONTRACT
partially conscious analogizing and philosophizing. Important natural events will be related to sex, 66928 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
did not care for what was natural to animals, 66949 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
the occasion of near extinction from natural disasters, 67250 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : CANNIBALISM
external, and, to that degree, a natural quality is indicated for it. 67388 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
by contemporary history 37 . Moreover, the natural storms amidst which hominid was mutated into man and which occurred throughout his earlier history added to his fright and stressed his already biologically catastrophized nature. 67428 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
and cultural practices are permeated by natural catastrophes. 67432 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
in mentation and behavior. Whenever the natural environment seemed to settle down, 67579 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY -
some lawful principle, like evolution by natural selection, 67729 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HISTORISM
hypnosis. Recapitulation of collective trauma, of natural disasters and defeats, 67866 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOID EPISODES IN ABUNDANCE
even literally, upon the warpath by natural disasters. 67964 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOID EPISODES IN ABUNDANCE
such actual hells, brought on by natural disasters. 67988 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HELL
fear of things invisible is the Natural seed of Religion. 68324 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
about the change would be called natural selection. 68424 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
change would be called natural selection. Natural selection was more than a name to him; 68425 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
switch between the genetic pool and natural selection. 68488 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
the genetic pool and natural selection. Natural selection can never fail as the means of evolution because it will always presumptively find among the genes of any species whatever precise gene, 68488 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
any hole in the hulk of natural selection can be plugged. 68491 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
more in the non-metaphorical mode. Natural catastrophes occurred after humanization on a grand scale and at intervals of time.68636 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : REAL AND PSYCHIC DISASTER
the burden of proving the true natural catastrophes entirely upon this one book. 68641 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : REAL AND PSYCHIC DISASTER
a disaster emergency -- is sandwiched between natural catastrophes that preceded it and natural catastrophes that succeeded it. 68647 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : REAL AND PSYCHIC DISASTER
natural catastrophes that preceded it and natural catastrophes that succeeded it. 68647 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : REAL AND PSYCHIC DISASTER
hominid. The preconditions for mutation included natural particle or viral storms of sufficient scope, 68739 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
same species name. There is no natural law that demands that all people be of the same species in that they apparently can interbreed. 68832 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
the human being was born with natural reason and good motives. 69599 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
core that, when struck, will resonate natural goodness. 69625 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
are sculpted out of a basic natural "insanity." 69654 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
is, not because he is a natural man, 69714 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
the ready access to experimental and natural subjects. 69871 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : CATEGORIES OF MADNESS
or non-schizophrenic condition of their natural parents, 69974 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE HUMAN DISEASE
of these symptoms, just as many natural human behaviors can be found to correspond to them. 70156 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : RECONCILING THE NORMAL AND ABNORMAL
engender visions of fear, plague, and natural catastrophe. 70661 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT -
struggle. The self, others, and the natural world are the triple object of efforts at control.70805 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : SELF-FEAR AND SELF-CONTROL
resultants of certain adjustments to a natural schizophrenia. 70937 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
not by clearing away impediments to natural courage. 71088 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
as he did the idea of "natural selection," 71172 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
it. He obsessively connects himself with natural instruments of time-passage, 71342 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT
skull is an impressive work of natural architecture, 71602 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK -
with gods and laws and great natural forces are imprinted early upon the young. 72925 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : PROJECTION AND PEDAGOGY
universe as an essentially neutral and natural order. 73316 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
and permutations of the high-energy natural forces - lightning, 73549 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
flurry of mutational cases in primordial natural disaster, 73666 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
the rich assemblage of forms that natural bodies can assume, 73788 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : AMBIVALENCE
that pleasure should be regarded as natural and in this day people who are anhedonic should be regarded as mad, 73843 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
So, too, conflict. To defend is "natural," 73889 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
defend is "natural," to flee is natural; 73889 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
analogies in the human mind between natural and political violence; 74091 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ORGIES AND HOLOCAUSTS
their untutored babbling how the original natural human tongue might have developed. 74629 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : CULTURAL DISCIPLINE AND SPEECH DIVERGENCE
race or in perfecting an ideal natural tongue.. 74669 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : CULTURAL DISCIPLINE AND SPEECH DIVERGENCE
grand conceit that humans have a natural, 74950 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
animal and the pragmatic is the natural level of homo schizo, 74970 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
21 Sept. 1979), 1253. 5. "The Natural History of Language," 75007 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : Notes (Chapter 6: Symbols and Speech)
incorporating it in oneself. Considering the "natural reason" supposedly granted to humans, 75291 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SECRET WORDS AND PANRELATIONISM
simple to draw a distinction between natural forces and animate forces. 75292 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SECRET WORDS AND PANRELATIONISM
through the act of first constructing natural laws and then of finding out how to evade them. 75647 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : CAUSATION
his own laws. A set of natural events in the sky was observed, 76078 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
the inner selves, interpersonal relations, the natural world, 76179 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE ORIGINS OF GOOD AND EVIL
Greek culture was badly damaged by natural disasters of the eight and seventh centuries before this era, 76646 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
this suggests the unspeakable horror of natural disasters brought by these planetary gods upon Earth and humanity.76657 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
taking up Velikovsky's chronology. Although natural disasters had befallen the numerous settlements of Troy (possibly Hisarlik) throughout its history, 76671 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
history, a final major destruction by natural forces may well have occurred during Homer's boyhood. 76673 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
the life of survivors of worldwide natural catastrophes would be fearful and turbulent. 76677 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
Athena permitted a picture of her natural human form to develop over the centuries. 76842 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 1: AN ATHENA PRODUCTION -
shocked spell amidst conditions of horrifying natural disaster. 77231 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 3: THE LOVE AFFAIR AS THE MASK OF TRAGEDY -
their feelings. Accounts of historically experienced natural disasters such as Vesuvius, 77257 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 3: THE LOVE AFFAIR AS THE MASK OF TRAGEDY -
his eighties. His long life as natural philosopher and political scientist carried him through the extensive revolutions and religious debates of the times and up to Newton and Whiston. 77797 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 5: HOLY DREAMTIME : THE SCANDALOUS LITTLE PIECE
the leitmotif of his works the natural history of seven centuries. 78261 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 6: THE RAPE OF HELEN : THE INDESTRUCTIBLE LADY HELEN
disappeared on the occasion of a natural tumult during which, 78309 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 6: THE RAPE OF HELEN : THE AGE OF MARS
explained, except as a consequence of natural disasters. 78327 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 6: THE RAPE OF HELEN : THE AGE OF MARS
survivors; "At first, they would have natural fear ringing in their ears which would prevent their descending from the heights into the plain." 78715 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
Civilization collapsed in a set of natural disasters. 79075 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
time sequence derived from evidences of natural disaster. ( 79080 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
largely or partly such. Pliny, the natural historian of Rome, 79755 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : CONFUSION COMPOUNDED
by a name assignment, to neglect natural and human history, 79974 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : HOW TO NAME A PLANET?
the association of great gods with natural objects and events here was compounded and intensified by the transference of Aphrodite to an actually antagonistic planet.80008 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : HOW TO NAME A PLANET?
a long time before the disastrous natural events of the Eighth and Seventh centuries that involved Mars. 80209 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : THE ROMAN VENUS
photograph, in a surprising amount of natural light, 81236 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : ATHENA'S LAST BATTLES
about the other. For understanding both natural and social relations, 81356 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : APPENDIX TO CHAPTER TEN LOGIC OF IDENTIFYING RELATIONS SUCH AS "HEPHAESTUS IS ATHENA"
appeared to exhibit prior to each natural or human disaster visited upon them 6 .81580 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 11: THE BLASTED CAREER OF THE MIGHTY SWORDSMAN : THE QUALITIES OF ARES
explored this possibility in detail. The natural history of Mercury is significantly marked by its appearance earlier as a most prominent god in the succession of gods. 82002 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 12: THE LAUGHING GODS : MERCURY
of a wish from completing its natural aim. 82267 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 12: THE LAUGHING GODS : A DIVINE SENSE OF HUMOR
687 B. C., but the same natural phenomena may continue in a subdued form. 82897 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 13: HOW THE GODS FLY : Notes (Chapter 13: How the Gods Fly)
uses... This inexactness of function is natural in speech which is still finding itself."83050 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : METER AND METAPHOR
surviving from a set of recent natural and social disasters. 83065 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : METER AND METAPHOR
work in social reconstruction following upon natural disaster." 83142 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : HOMER: EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
new alphabet was precipitated by the natural disasters and social destruction. 83559 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : Notes (Chapter 14: The Uses of Language)
the catastrophes must come from a "natural history" - geology, 83654 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY -
problem from an acquaintanceship with the natural sciences or the social sciences. 83658 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY -
By the time of Homer, numerous natural disasters had befallen humanity; 83785 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : THE RULES OF MEMORY
the Moon. In the first place, natural disasters and sudden change did occupy the minds of ancient thinkers (sticking still to the Greek-speaking area). 83970 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : AMNESIAC PHILOSOPHERS
survivors on numerous occasions owing to natural disasters. 83977 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : AMNESIAC PHILOSOPHERS
were habituated to a level of natural disaster that would astonish moderns. 84021 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : AMNESIAC PHILOSOPHERS
of knowledge of important historical problems, natural or social, 84568 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : THE KERNELS OF HISTORY
a way as to display their natural histories, 84679 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : WHAT HOMER REMEMBERED
may be explained as originating in natural causes and as preserving itself by regular motions whose disruption was quite unlikely.84777 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE
Newton would say, "To the same natural effects we must as far as possible assign the same causes." 84829 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : A CLAIM OF SUCCESS
rational" and view ancient catastrophes and natural history as truly natural, 84910 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
catastrophes and natural history as truly natural, 84911 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
the capacity for viewing events as natural in the first place. 84912 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
humanoid who pointed at an active natural force with a capacity to impress a whole people and said: "84914 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
world. Unless we comprehend precisely the natural and social upheavals of those days, 85376 GODS FIRE: - - - FOREWORD -
that ancient times might have witnessed natural behavior of a scope and intensity not experienced today.85487 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COMETS AND ANGELS
sociology of organization, and even the natural sciences, 85574 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COMETS AND ANGELS
certain enough of the emergent unsettling natural forces to approach the king of Egypt as the chief spokesman for the Hebrews. 85625 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
are trying to divide the turbulent natural unity into types of effects. 85637 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
through the air." 32 In great natural disasters - earthquakes, 85734 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
of dust from everywhere, obscuring all natural light. 85800 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
and even world-wide obscuration from natural disasters is not unknown in recent times, 85800 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
rederung christ. Theo. 65 (1922). 11. Natural History, 86017 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : Notes (Chapter 1: Plagues and Comets)
place, not far form Memphis. 22. Natural History, 86049 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : Notes (Chapter 1: Plagues and Comets)
on what was happening in the natural world. 86197 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : HIGH-LEVEL NEGOTIATIONS
renown, coupled with the increasingly terrible natural manifestations, 86267 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : HIGH-LEVEL NEGOTIATIONS
vainly to explain otherwise: the great natural force - the body in the sky - that was operative would hear no plea, 86304 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : HIGH-LEVEL NEGOTIATIONS
of power, already experienced from the natural and "divine" forces. 86414 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : WHY PHARAOH PURSUED THE HEBREWS
under such duress, with such immense natural and human forces pressing in upon them, 86556 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : THE ORGANIZED MOVE
imagined the horrible immensity of the natural catastrophe. 86705 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES
better shape all-around and the natural forces had become subdued. 86710 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES
part of Exodus. If a named natural object were worshipped, 87199 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : THE CENSORED DESIGNS OF HEAVEN
be distorted. The trauma of anthropomorphic natural force can be managed; 87232 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : THE CENSORED DESIGNS OF HEAVEN
force can be managed; a great natural force cannot, 87233 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : THE CENSORED DESIGNS OF HEAVEN
inspires one to seek the corresponding natural phenomenon, 87618 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : YAHWEH'S ELECTRICAL FIRE CONGLOMERATE
trumpets and singing; piezoelectric effects; and natural electrochemical compositions of manna and other substances. 87717 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : YAHWEH'S ELECTRICAL FIRE CONGLOMERATE
206 Science (1979), 1072. 55. "The Natural History of Lightning," 87946 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : Notes (Chapter 3: Catastrophe and Divine Fires)
of it there was) belonged to 'natural magic, ' " 88044 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION -
rediscovered electricity through experiment, that is, "natural magic." 88046 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION -
below). The abundant electrostatic phenomena, both natural and humanly induced, 88111 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION -
much advanced over his times. Moreover, natural electricity is erratic and powerful. 88304 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE GOLDEN BOX
reason: the sufficiency of atmospheric or natural electrical electricity, 88309 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE GOLDEN BOX
contributed to blocking further development. As natural electrification diminished in the environment, 88311 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE GOLDEN BOX
to distinguish between inanimate and animate natural forces, 88493 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE GOLDEN BOX
74 . He ascribes the phenomenon to natural gas, 88901 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE BATTLE OF JERICHO
best standing upon a source of natural heat. 89058 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE ARK'S END
Ark was connected with the deep natural rock and water, 89108 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE ARK'S END
achieved. But then, of course, the natural conditions for the progressive development of an electrical weapon had disappeared. 89174 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE ARK'S END
Israel. Few scholars doubt that something natural and edible was being made available to the starving Israelites. 89836 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : MANNA
of it. The basis for its natural production was the huge volume of formaldehyde gas, 89860 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : MANNA
1979, 60. 49. Manoilov, 81. 50. Natural History, 90316 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : Notes (Chapter 5: Legends and Miracles)
of Jethro. His mind was on natural events and the court of Egypt; 90697 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE COURTLY SHEPHERD
religious deviations, and, most importantly, if natural disturbances were not mounting in intensity, 91273 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : TALKING WITH GODS
spectacular set of media provided by natural events. 91300 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : TALKING WITH GODS
a fixed territory, victims of repeated natural disasters, 91400 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : AN ISRAELITE OPINION SURVEY
intricate and ingenious works and of natural events. 91663 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
images of the external world during natural catastrophe and the feelings normally inspired by the images. 91762 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
in the framework of the surrealist natural and human behavior he was experiencing.91768 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
of this was achieved amidst recurrent natural chaos. 91790 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
water and covered the land. The natural excitation, 92268 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : TECHNICIANS AND SECURITY POLICE
legend, Moses cannot get the great natural bodies Sun, 93614 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD -
and so on; he wills all natural forces and especially great or unusual natural forces.93912 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE CHARACTER OF YAHWEH
forces and especially great or unusual natural forces. 93913 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE CHARACTER OF YAHWEH
read the Exodus and wanderings as natural history? 93920 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE CHARACTER OF YAHWEH
uses the word "nature" or "a natural force," 93920 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE CHARACTER OF YAHWEH
are laid down by social and natural scientists? 93967 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE CHARACTER OF YAHWEH
in a monstrous takeover by wild natural forces. 94008 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : SIN VS SCIENCE
the process and aftermath of the natural catastrophe of Exodus. 94014 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : SIN VS SCIENCE
the Bible unthreatening, by erasing the natural catastrophes, 94047 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : SIN VS SCIENCE
both our human problems and our natural problems. 94195 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : SIN VS SCIENCE
Yahweh as a god of frightful natural catastrophes, 94537 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : MONOTHEISM
in time and as effect, the natural disasters whose turbulence destroyed the social order.94547 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : MONOTHEISM
of Exodus. It is, furthermore, that natural scientists, 94898 GODS FIRE: - - - CONCLUSION -
matching the known later political and natural environments with the suspected changes in the text over time.95027 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE LIMITS OF DISTORTION
promiscuously as a shorthand substitution for natural explanations or references. 95043 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE LIMITS OF DISTORTION
and Exodus. 3) Eliminate realistic and natural explanations of events in favor of the indefinite, 95062 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE LIMITS OF DISTORTION
ancient and folk accounts of unusual natural events. 95228 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
offers to explain the plagues as natural events, 95229 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
the uniformitarian law that the same natural conditions of today have prevailed over millions of years. 95232 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
enough energy in the ordinary, terrestrial, natural forces she employs to deliver the quick succession of shattering blows to the Egyptian Empire. 95234 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
scholars have painted its human and natural background, 95251 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
by philosophical confusion, he speaks of natural forces at the crossing from Egypt:95303 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
The same may be true of natural phenomena other than fire, 95361 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
the cause of a variety of natural events or a confession of ignorance of such causes. "95370 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
1850. I speak not alone of natural history but in some cases of pure science and applied science. 95426 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
of manna in the atmosphere by natural means was not considered. 95440 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
the limited sense of reifying incredible natural operations and events occurring in the atmosphere.95452 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
say, as has Daiches, that normal natural conditions prevailed at Sinai during the handing down of the Ten Commandments, 95542 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
validated by this, and within the natural realm of events, 95621 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
local volcano-god. But once the natural conditions of Exodus and the character of Moses and his cohorts are established, 95700 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
religious man, nature is never only 'natural'; 96134 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
alive until proven dead" is the natural psychic principle to go along with "Everything is sacred, 96203 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
secular." To say then that a natural force has to be animated into a god by some separate superstition which the observer must be trained to apply is incorrect. 96207 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
beginning human speech), and then, following natural observation, 96213 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
not only by celestial or other natural apparitions; 96244 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
development prior to a mutation, or natural selection, 96324 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
we believe this tumultuous set of natural events took a part in creating the human race itself, 96344 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
exist, which are related to real natural events as experienced by widely separated people, 96493 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
planets, upon the occasion of great natural catastrophes be falling the Earth. 96547 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
occurrence cannot be contemporaneously connected with natural events of the caliber of world-wide catastrophe. 96658 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
of gods reflects a series of natural catastrophes upon Earth. 96670 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
years since the probable last great natural catastrophes have not been distinguished by peacefulness. 96681 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
the character of religion reflected clearly natural events and imposed models of conduct upon man. 96689 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
It is a dependent variable of natural events. 96693 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
freed of human nature and ancient natural disasters. 96695 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
himself in the midst of great natural turbulence. 96838 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
veracity of ancient reports, the super natural character of the reports is thrown into doubt. 96852 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
the relations between gods and the natural world, 96873 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
will say "Explain all effects by natural causes; 96885 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
those not precisely determinable must be natural as well; 96885 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
effects are produced, these too are natural; 96886 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
been nearly destroyed on occasion by natural (divine) forces, 96993 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
minor devils, minor divinities, spirits, divinized natural phenomena of the earth, 97189 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
symbol, and image. It is also natural even among apes (The neuter gender, 97215 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
comes readily to mind. Periods of natural and social crisis are their favored setting. 97237 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
and evident appearance and behavior of natural gods, 97289 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
disastrous experiences: a succession of personalized natural forces beat against the hero, 97329 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
control himself and the human and natural environment. 97330 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
astronomers Strube and Napier attempted a natural history of the encounters between Earth and comets, 97385 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
that is respected by historical and natural science, 97664 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND SCRIPTURE -
that by proving the capability of natural causes to have produced the Biblical "miracle," 97719 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND SCRIPTURE -
even while providing another form of natural explanation which authenticates in its own way the actions and speech conveyed in the scripture.97727 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND SCRIPTURE -
responding not only to the successive natural catastrophes which, 98033 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
catastrophized memory by a succession of natural catastrophes. 98043 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
mechanisms of the analyzed human mind. Natural expressions of high energy occur in cometary approaches to Earth, 98219 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
against the backdrop of an unchanging natural scenery. 98238 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
term rational behavior, it is because natural conditions have allowed him to do so, 98244 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
delusionally) and assign the fantastically great natural events to interventions of the gods, 98250 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
express concepts of divine rule and natural law. 98367 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
for they argue with themselves in Natural Law, 98856 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
impute sacred meaning to any event, natural or human, 98993 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
his larger culture, and accidents and natural disasters. 99036 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
whether in the human or the natural realm. 99132 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
man. He simply holds it on natural grounds: " 99161 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
In turn, every field of the natural sciences, 99416 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
believe that attention is a real, natural, 99460 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
preferring and achieving certain human and natural relations and states of being.99520 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
heap of experience, commands, forces, and natural traits. 99568 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
that all processes are explained in natural terms, 99699 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
was at the mercy of savage natural forces. 99812 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
historical, connected with the sciences of natural and socio-psychological processes, 99999 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
science includes social as well as natural science. 100053 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
scientific method in its application to natural phenomena that, 100056 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
especially psychology in the workings of natural science, 100059 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
animals. Evolutionary theory is a shambles; "natural selection" is invoked as often as God in the Bible, 100127 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
and market. Their efforts to correlate natural history with sacred scripture qualify for the field of theology, 100292 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
a hypothesis for testing human or natural history. 100295 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
and plan to adduce evidence from natural history of such a deluge, 100305 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
selves with the larger human and natural world, 100364 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
set in order, and it is natural for one to apply the pragmatic( scientific) techniques that substitute for instinct in the obtaining of both very close necessities and the most faraway necessities, 100408 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
would otherwise be, hence aggravating his natural paranoia, 100507 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
philosophers before us have advocated, a natural law of human behavior: 100559 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
would appear best to label our natural law as hypothetical, 100564 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
cultures. This might be called a natural moral consensus. 100566 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
many truths, even literal truths about natural events, 100616 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
of the universe, the greatest of natural laws, 100993 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
inestimable time, depending upon mostly unpredictable natural, 101166 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 13: CATECHISM -
as a problem of coping with natural forces. 101231 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 13: CATECHISM -
How should a person behave toward natural objects? 101260 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 13: CATECHISM -
be attributed to catastrophes and other natural causes? 101397 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 13: CATECHISM -
based upon the terrible power of natural forces, 101529 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: CONCLUSION - THE DIVINE AND HUMAN -
The gods were born as disastrous natural occurrences playing upon the existential fear of the self-aware human.101530 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: CONCLUSION - THE DIVINE AND HUMAN -
was very old, whereas to this natural philosopher, 101842 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - - FOREWORD -
and with others. Those who interpret natural history by the "sudden leap" of quantavolution or catastrophe may not accept even one, 101881 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
Soter and Gold's erupting, abiogenic, natural gases. 101948 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
B. C. Martian period tablet: "The natural order of things somehow has gotten reversed and the response of the high gods, 101969 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
trained to see a record of natural destruction in the history of nature and man. 102066 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
destructions of Bronze Age civilizations by natural causes. 102218 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
seen 'red ashes of wood' in natural fires, 102417 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY
on its own foundation. A flourishing natural forest and the ground cover is estimated to provide 200 tons organic matter per acre 12 . 102427 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY
to the alternative that some huge natural force ruined Schliemann's Troy. 102535 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY
stones continued in good condition. The natural force seems here to have been selective, 102635 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY
walls.) In his command of the natural sciences involved and their interweaving with ancient sources and psychology, 102755 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
a result of direct or indirect natural causes. 102841 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
ruins is also present in some natural lowland areas of slow deposition, 102888 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
the analysis of combustion or other natural phenomena. 102893 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
from its usefulness to social and natural history, 102901 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
purified metal, or ore in a natural state? 102931 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
combustion studies with good effect is natural but perhaps overly optimistic. 102942 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
hydrocarbons could be distinguished from the natural hydrocarbons in the char. (" 103098 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : Notes (Chapter 2: The Burning of Troy)
together in fact a number of natural catastrophes and movements of people that Claude Schaeffer had coordinated in time, 103242 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
our theory of a period of natural catastrophes and survivors occurring in the VIII century. 103460 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
but were beset (significantly) by a natural disaster that made further consultation with Apollo necessary. 103505 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
settled in Italy and were a natural and continual foe of the new Latins; 103563 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
and that in the VIII Century natural conditions were normal. 103564 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
the ignorance and neglect of great natural disasters, 103572 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
are defined as large-scale intensive natural disasters. 103787 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
indicators of the expression of high natural energy, 103806 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
have been caused to disappear in natural disasters. 103822 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
traumas. In short, the world of natural and social history becomes a different world and had better be studied differently.103825 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
perturbations of cultures were caused by natural catastrophes, 103860 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
abrupt and terrible end. Both inculpate natural catastrophe as the general cause, 103897 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
after it, a multitude of other natural forces were unleashed, 103929 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
quasi-catastrophic, Robert Raikes holding that natural dams formed and then broke, 103985 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
centers. The formation and collapse of natural dams can truly create great destruction; 103986 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
can fail to show evidence of natural destruction dating from the middle of the second millennium.104099 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
part of the devastations wrought by natural forces. 104113 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : BROADER CONSIDERATIONS
of the mid-second millennium experienced natural catastrophes on a scale inconceivable today. 104153 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : BROADER CONSIDERATIONS
appears that these points coincide with natural catastrophes. 104189 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : A SCHEDULE OF CATASTROPHIC AGES
cast down, it was from the natural forces; 104197 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : A SCHEDULE OF CATASTROPHIC AGES
age could be distinguished in its natural and human condition by the nature of its god. 104207 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : A SCHEDULE OF CATASTROPHIC AGES
and assigns the greatest weight to natural disaster, 104314 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY -
B. C. were destroyed by concurrent natural disasters at points in time conventionally denoting the various Bronze Ages; 104332 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY -
civilization at significant time intervals by natural forces. 104342 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY -
time intervals by natural forces. CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS The reformulation of the Schaeffer Hypothesis can be summarized as follows:104349 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY : CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS
the East and West Mediterranean. D. Natural Disasters are demonstrable. 104361 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY : CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS
on a separate map, of all natural destruction levels that are not correlated with the presumed major destruction levels and of missing levels of destruction adverse to the hypothesis.104404 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY : CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS
10. On the character of the natural disasters implicated. 104421 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY : CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS
Ages have been basically determined by natural forces. 104435 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY : CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS
the world escaped heavy destruction from natural causes in the midsecond millennium." 104654 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
second-millennium mention a general and natural disaster." 104675 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
of the Hindus focus upon momentous natural events at the time of their main descent upon India from the North, 104679 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
as often agree that plagues and natural destruction were occurring then. 104685 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
Neosphere. "Every institution, behavioral pattern, and natural setting that exists today, 104751 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
a fairly full list of disastrous natural forces, 104896 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS -
heroes. They were the displays of natural forces as perceived by an aroused, 105035 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
heavy ashes and calcinated debris from natural disasters over "Old World" settlements and cities, 105146 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 10: INDIANS OF ILLINOIS -
the American Indian was a great natural recycler of materials, 105243 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 10: INDIANS OF ILLINOIS -
antagonists prowl in the jungle of natural history seeking the one definitive test that will finally discomfit and silence the other. 105294 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
introduced a major change in the natural world -- a wholesale simultaneous extinction of species, 105300 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
glaciologists begin their investigations with a natural pastiche: 105321 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
recent climatic changes, say most glaciologists, natural historians, 105607 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
the theory of recent quantavolutions in natural history. 105678 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
them and sealed them repeatedly? What natural forces were playing about the world outside? 105845 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
caves quickly, and so the interesting natural sculpture within the caves, 105959 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Natural History, 106195 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
ancient contest, between vast, marvelously ornate natural sculpting and determined, 106314 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
in time, and an absence of natural catastrophe. 106507 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE -
separating the two are found in natural forces. 106511 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE -
of the Bronze Ages "razed" by natural forces, 107796 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE -
psychology, sociology), the humanities, and the natural sciences. 107818 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE -
laws of gravity and motion govern natural events rigidly; 107832 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
subject to destruction by divine or natural forces in the skies and earth; 107874 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
brought on by divine, heroic, and natural forces that are immense and unpredictable; 107877 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
could invoke seriously mysterious life forms, natural disasters, 107890 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
in the Relations of Scientific Thought, Natural Theology and Social Opinion in Great Britain, 108335 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PERTINENT WORKS
Jay Gould. "Evolution's Erratic Pace," Natural History (May, 108345 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PERTINENT WORKS
laws of gravity and motion govern natural events rigidly; 108795 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
subject to destruction by divine or natural forces in the skies and earth; 108827 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
brought on by divine, heroic, and natural forces that are immense and unpredictable; 108829 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
step-by-step biological evolution through natural selection could never be simply such. 108890 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
time"; "evolutionary biology"; stable nature, and "natural selection" into this system.108902 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
his inspiration for the theory of natural selection!) 109030 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN : BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE
conceived of society as having a natural history and was a king of evolutionist, 109074 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN : POSTSCRIPT: A CAUSE FOR EMBARRASSMENT
was a king of evolutionist, without natural selection. 109075 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN : POSTSCRIPT: A CAUSE FOR EMBARRASSMENT
evolutionism. If so, the center of natural philosophy and its subtended sciences might shift to the Soviet Union.109086 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN : POSTSCRIPT: A CAUSE FOR EMBARRASSMENT
schoolroom discussion of various hypotheses of natural history. 109117 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION -
section inquires how far the various natural and social sciences have gone, 109240 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : INTRODUCTION:
of creation and the role of natural catastrophes in bringing about the changed state of the world. 109242 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : INTRODUCTION:
WITH COSMOGONY IX. The Topics of Natural and Religious History: 109322 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
Time-table of the World, of Natural and Human History. 109326 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
Biology A. Darwinian, neo-darwinian, mutation, natural selection, 109342 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
to the social sciences, biology, the natural sciences, 109411 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART FOUR: PRAGMATIC
more absolute deviants among behavioral and natural scientists; 109462 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS -
be phrased in relation to several natural and human relations sets, 109531 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
is further erroneously believed that the natural sciences are systematic. 109541 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
answer to the other points.) The natural sciences are not systematic, 109545 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
is shaped by the empirical sciences, natural and social. 109548 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
of them will deny that the natural scientist is a SOCIAL scientist. 109584 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
the continuous susceptibility of social and natural materials to the scientific method.109587 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
with the second belief, that the natural scientist is not a social scientist, 109589 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
his work. f) His statements about natural events and relations are human-oriented, 109612 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
if least credible, any statement of natural relations (even if it be discovering a sub-atomic particle) is a statement of social science - in all of the above senses in the first place, 109616 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
a whole range of social and natural sciences possessing a new common language, 109626 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
and interchangeable operations wherein social and natural are "nonexistent" as separates.109627 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
to the last defense of a natural science as apart from human science, 109653 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : ALL SCIENCE IS SOCIAL SCIENCE
operationalist position. If a "core" of natural science is left, 109682 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : ALL SCIENCE IS SOCIAL SCIENCE
of two interactants, is human, not natural. 109685 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : ALL SCIENCE IS SOCIAL SCIENCE
precisely this de-humanizing of the natural world, 109686 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : ALL SCIENCE IS SOCIAL SCIENCE
the ambition to make discoveries about natural and human relations. 109738 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : THE ADMINISTRATION OF SCIENTISTS
The Earth has suffered wide-scale natural disasters in consequence of changes in the solar system. 110391 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : EVOLUTIONARY AND REVOLUTIONARY PRINCIPLES
destruction of the great civilizations by natural causes, 110469 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : II
hand in hand with a reconstructed natural history to permit great advances in translating symbols and making sense out of the apparently senseless. 110521 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : III
that mankind is in a fundamental, natural sense helpless in the lap of God or Nature. 110903 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : SUMMARY
catastrophe occur? Surely this is a natural human concern. 110957 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : SUMMARY
by which is meant that drastic natural changes (disasters) have occurred in 14, 111028 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
of the social sciences, humanities, and natural sciences. 111033 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
macroevolution, punctuated equilibria, quantum evolution, quantavolution, natural saltations, 111195 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
scale change in the process of natural and human history. 111196 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
AND ANTHROPOLOGY 7. Archaeology: Levels of natural destruction and ancient excavations.111233 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
system of science A. Problems of natural science models clashing with unconforming natural history B. 111321 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
natural science models clashing with unconforming natural history B. 111321 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
Chaos and Creation: Quantavolution in the Natural and Human Science; 111391 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
and pre-history of man extensive natural changes occurred abruptly and catastrophically, 111452 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM -
people have been subjected to catastrophic natural experiences (flood, 111458 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM -
scientific theory, introducing critical modifications concerning natural history, 111464 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM -
in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. 111526 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM : CURRICULUM
and legend obscure while they discuss natural disasters and cultural consequences; 111556 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM : CURRICULUM
myth and legend, partly lost in natural disasters, 111857 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE -
watch the world of human and natural events with catastrophic expectation, 112024 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : ANXIETY AND CATASTROPHISM
critical exposure of the foundations illuminates natural and early human history and makes history a living part of the operations of science.112199 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
or later, as the area of natural history is mined with quantavolutionary tools, 112202 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
threatened by its own hand. Whenever natural disasters and the compulsion to repeat them occurred,112259 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
the human threat to humanity, the natural threat appears to be moderate. 112263 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
suffered much from its birth throes, natural catastrophes, 112298 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
and her voice was no longer natural, 112763 KA: - - Chapter 1: AUGURY -
10. Herodotus: II 57 11. Pliny: 'Natural History' XXXVII: 114140 KA: - - Chapter 4: AMBER, ARK, AND EL : Notes (Chapter Four: Amber, Ark, and El)
modern scholars as anthropomorphic descriptions of natural phenomena, 114657 KA: - - Chapter 6: SKY LINKS -
is moved in accord with her natural tendency. 115967 KA: - - Chapter 10: THE EVIDENCE FROM PLUTARCH -
Such a relationship seemed inevitable and natural, 116422 KA: - - Chapter 12: MYSTERY RELIGIONS -
it was instituted in Samothrace." Pliny, Natural History 33: 116538 KA: - - Chapter 12: MYSTERY RELIGIONS -
the high point of a big natural disturbance such as those of the 2nd and 1st millennia B. 117205 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC : STATUES AND MUMMIES
ones of terrible aspect", is a natural one in the ancient world, 119397 KA: - - Chapter 21: THE DEATH OF KINGS -
What is the cause of this natural bias towards antithesis? 120165 KA: - - Chapter 22: LIVING WITH ELECTRICITY : PHILOSOPHY
to have created statues standing in natural poses instead of having arms close to the sides and one foot forward.122788 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 10: CHRONOLOGY -
been seen as explanations of ordinary natural phenomena, 122870 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 11: CHANGING INTERPRETATIONS -
gods and monsters as personifications of natural forces. 122871 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 11: CHANGING INTERPRETATIONS -
translated as wisdom, means cleverness and natural aptitude, 125001 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 22: SACRED BIRDS -
equations, despite much evidence that many natural phenomena are clearly non-linear in behaviour.126359 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : - FOREWORD : Notes (Foreword)
set up genetically, and is the natural system to be used for analogous experiencing by the person or for training purposes by the group as it organizes ancestral group experiences (as symbolized) and new future experiences (as interpreted). (127128 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : FEAR STORAGE
is to say, by principle: i) Natural catastrophes must be the origins of the overload of fear-affect that has driven man to create most of his goods and evils, 127259 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : CATASTROPHIC FEAR
Thus ordinary behaviors, then, cannot be natural; 127292 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : CATASTROPHIC FEAR
the catastrophes must come from a "natural history" - geology, 127361 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : PART II: MEMORY
problem from an acquaintanceship with the natural sciences or the social sciences. 127365 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : PART II: MEMORY
time of Homer, for example, numerous natural disasters had befallen humanity. 127429 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE RULES OF MEMORY
in large part of great prehistoric natural disasters, 127640 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE DIFFICULTY OF D-FEAR THERAPY
memories of cosmic disturbance or violent natural events. 128140 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
of the ego is experienced as natural catastrophe. 128400 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
read: 1. Haeckel: The History of Natural Creation 2. 128489 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
cyclical repetition of time in the natural world and among the celestial bodies. 128950 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
harmony with the divine and the natural, 129252 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
source of life, starlight as the natural environment of true love - but these areas, 129353 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
life, or destruction. Here, where the natural order of which Oberon and Titania are a part has been broken, 129422 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
beings affect the weather and the natural cycles and result in floods, 129704 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
reestablishing the human affinity with the natural cycles 15 . 129773 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
spiritual things with spiritual. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; 130085 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
who is attuned to deep things. Natural man, 130093 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
as we watch the last act - natural man or spiritual man. 130095 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
and madmen, Theseus had been as natural as Bottom, 130166 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
and Cleopatra in this way, as natural offshoots of their Roman identification with Mars and Venus, 130745 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
involvement of the whole of the natural order 55 . 130935 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
a new order, in both the natural and political worlds. 130947 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
is portrayed as a disturber of natural order. 130988 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
to achieve a reversal of the natural order, 130995 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
possess unconscious collective memories of enormous natural catastrophes, 131344 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
traditional anthropologists, the images derive from natural phenomena, 131485 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
are neither coded vegetation symbols nor natural manifestations of the constitution of the psyche or the brain, 131510 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
Elizabeth, The Orphic Voice: Poetry and Natural History (Yale University Press, 131704 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Notes (Shakespeare and Veliovsky)
John Woodward's Essay Towards a Natural History of the Earth, 132039 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
the most ancient, and the most natural form of government. 132064 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
government. The key word there was "'natural." 132065 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
echoed Bossuet's words. Monarchy was natural, 132070 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
of a much longer work on Natural Theology in which the' cosmological foundations of monarchy were once again reiterated.132104 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
wars, famines and plagues, as a natural check on the population because the death rate was so high.132133 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART II: THE CAUSE
and this entailed destroying Paley's Natural Theology. 132145 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART II: THE CAUSE
the scientific foundations of Paley's Natural Theology were false, 132157 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART II: THE CAUSE
which every time they ascribed a natural event to God, 132162 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART II: THE CAUSE
a king to interfere with the natural and intrinsic laws of economics and of society.132167 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART II: THE CAUSE
in geology but in astronomy and natural history, 132200 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART II: THE CAUSE
he began pre-medical. studies in natural science at Edinburgh, 133567 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
began to speculate: Was there a natural catastrophe at the time of the Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt? 133602 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
of a single titanic cataclysm of natural forces? 133605 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
seemed to be a calamity of natural forces. 133614 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
his growing suspicions that the great natural catastrophes that visited the Near East had been global in scale. 133617 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
occasionally in the guise of a natural philosopher, 133644 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
minds of philosophers, theologians, humanists, social, natural, 133652 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
structures. The history of science and natural history are composed of psycho-social- empirical problems, 134088 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: - SCIENTISM VERSUS SCIENCE - INTRODUCTION TO THE 2ND EDITION -
work: despite his proficiency in the natural sciences, 134264 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: - SCIENTISM VERSUS SCIENCE - INTRODUCTION TO THE 1ST EDITION -
response. Numerous scholars, both in the natural and social sciences, 134334 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: - SCIENTISM VERSUS SCIENCE - INTRODUCTION TO THE 1ST EDITION -
Palestine, he began premedical studies in natural science at Edinburgh, 134476 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
began to speculate: Was there a natural catastrophe at the time of the Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt? 134517 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
aspects of single titanic cataclysm of natural forces? 134520 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
seemed to be a calamity of natural forces. 134530 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
his growing suspicion that the great natural catastrophes that visited the Near East had been global in scale. 134559 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
Astronomy of the American Museum of Natural History - examined the manuscript and recommended publication, 134656 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
whether or not evolution was a natural phenomenon, 135218 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
inadequacy of Darwin's hypothesis; 'if natural selection... 135220 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
little - only to the role of natural selection in weeding out the unfit. ' 135222 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
Middle Eastern civilizations had suffered simultaneous natural catastrophes on five occasions in the third and second millennia B. 135267 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
have so many diverse anticipations - the natural fallout from a single central idea - been so quickly substantiated by independent investigation.135356 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
essentially questions of ethics, a seemingly natural choice of vehicle in which to pursue these issues was the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 135747 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 2: AFTERMATH TO EXPOSURE - - -
theoretical science, but a branch of natural history... 136178 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 2: AFTERMATH TO EXPOSURE - - -
fossils at the American Museum of Natural History and professor of paleontology at Columbia, 136199 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 2: AFTERMATH TO EXPOSURE - - -
that subject. David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (1779), 136234 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
a creed both for medieval scholastic natural philosophers and, 136288 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the laws of nature are by natural agents observed, 136487 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the religious view that was called 'natural religion agreeing with revealed. ' 136673 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
doubt that several of our contemporary natural scientists would object that these are metaphysical preoccupations that do not concern an observational science like modern astronomy. 136695 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
writings Newton tried to prove that natural science does not contradict this exegesis and corresponding theology.136818 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
disbelief, hear it being attributed to natural bodies as a great honour and perfection that they are impassible, 136958 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
of the Earth's rotation. The natural scientists who gave Velikovsky's evidence the benefit of objective examination were few. 137022 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
greatest number of reviews written by natural scientists, 137027 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
observation that the great mass of natural scientists has not yet assimilated the implications of the great scientific transformation that started at the end of the last century (on the foundations laid by Berkeley, 137061 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
or does not constitute superstitious thinking, natural scientists have had their signals crossed for a long time. '137129 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the references to astronomical and other natural events in myths - aspects of mythology so frequently cited by his opponents. 137178 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the accumulated records of human experience. Natural scientists who scorn these records put themselves in the position of the early astronomers who held that no truly respectable scholar should resort to the telescope. 137210 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
of antiquity can contribute to the natural sciences. 137230 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
William Whiston, Astronomical Principles of Religion Natural and Reveal'd (London, 137286 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
physics; Cf. F. S. C. Northrop, 'Natural Science and the Critical Philosophy of Kant, ' 137388 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
P. Maguire, 'Plato's Theory of Natural Law, ' 137421 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
Modern Enemies and the Theory of Natural Law (Chicago, 137424 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the Stars and Phaethon Seen as Natural History, '( 137522 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 4: CUNEIFORM ASTRONOMICAL RECORDS AND CELESTIAL INSTABILITY - - -
of astronomy (which is relevant to natural science). 137572 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 4: CUNEIFORM ASTRONOMICAL RECORDS AND CELESTIAL INSTABILITY - - -
patently describes complicated extraordinary and violent natural events. 137649 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 4: CUNEIFORM ASTRONOMICAL RECORDS AND CELESTIAL INSTABILITY - - -
contain 'an elegant dressing of real natural events according to a fully unified plan' 5 .137735 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 4: CUNEIFORM ASTRONOMICAL RECORDS AND CELESTIAL INSTABILITY - - -
Department of the American Museum of Natural History and prevented from ever practising his art, 138500 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 5: ASTRONOMICAL THEORY AND HISTORICAL DATA - - -
and-butter issue, the fear of natural scientists that they might be compelled to learn something about historical evidence. 138605 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 5: ASTRONOMICAL THEORY AND HISTORICAL DATA - - -
of science. In the area of natural science they have to claim that astrophysical data, 138633 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 5: ASTRONOMICAL THEORY AND HISTORICAL DATA - - -
the contrary and put observation before natural reason (as indeed is right); 138663 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 5: ASTRONOMICAL THEORY AND HISTORICAL DATA - - -
of the unalterability of heaven by natural, 138667 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 5: ASTRONOMICAL THEORY AND HISTORICAL DATA - - -
there is little difference between the natural and social sciences in this regard.138775 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
was frequently called into question by natural scientists, 138991 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
case is the humanistic ignorance of natural scientists. 139033 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
of curriculum for students of the natural sciences. 139035 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
s method to key problems of natural science. 139042 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
passage of time has relegated the natural sciences principally to hardware instrumentation. 139044 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
sciences principally to hardware instrumentation. The natural scientists are still dwelling mentally in the hollow rationalistic universe of the 19th century. 139045 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
a previous article as common among natural scientist 10 . 139049 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
that in astronomy and other sciences, natural and social, 139082 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
a good basic background in the natural sciences and you are quite uninhibited by the prejudices and probability taboos which confine the thinking of most of us.139169 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
recognizable to social scientists than to natural scientists. 139386 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
a personalizing of events not less natural for being human? 139463 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
conditioned by the existence of Velikovskian natural and historical science, 139471 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
of Velikovsky. Probably some thousands of natural and social scientists might have been among the readers of Velikovsky's works - which are written clearly, 139475 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
Doubleday Company along with Velikovsky. My natural inclination, 139790 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
There has been no revolt. The natural resort of the denied and dispossessed in a power system, 139852 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
what the laws of human and natural behaviour 'are' and how a corpus of science survives.139867 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
of a sociological revolution in science, natural scientists as a group will constitute a dead weight in public and professional policy, 140055 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
of the theory affected almost all natural sciences and many social disciplines. 140345 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -
in the radiocarbon dates, assumes that natural events caused a radical change in the intensity of the magnetosphere and in the influx of cosmic rays sometime in the second millennium before the present era.140560 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -
Persia, and Palestine-Syria, underwent immense natural paroxysms, 140612 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -