1995 by Godfrey Daniels
Spacecraft or Lovecraft? - The Puzzling Nature of UFOs
Especially interesting were the correspondences between UFOs and angels.
Alleged contactee George Hunt Williamson even included in his books examples of "extraterrestrial" vocabulary words - words that, interestingly, turned out to be nearly identical to words from the so-called Enochian, or angelic, language used by occultists from John Dee to Aleister Crowley.
The
history of our own planet demonstrates the flaw in that conclusion:
the twentieth century, the most technologically advanced period in
human history, has also been history's bloodiest, with at least 170
million people murdered by various governments - and that figure
doesn't even include the 39 million war dead. In spite of the
evidence to the contrary, however, great numbers of people continue
to equate intelligence with goodness, and those who believe in
extraterrestrial intelligence prefer to put their faith in kindly
technological "visitors" -- angels not from heaven but from deep
space.
It's hard to say, partly because
the study of UFOs has been so plagued by hoaxes, looniness, and
misinterpretations of completely natural occurrences (such as
meteorological phenomena, sleep paralysis, and the like).
Nevertheless, the phenomenon of otherworldly contact has been so
widely spread over time and place that it would not be unreasonable
to believe that something is going on, something so consistent in
its manifestations as to suggest the work of unknown intelligences.
Unlikely - that is, if our
current understanding of physics bears any relation to the nature of
reality. The great distances from us to even our nearest neighboring
galaxies make it highly improbable that any inhabitants -- at least,
any physical inhabitants - no matter how technologically adept,
could ever reach us alive. But if the visitors aren't space aliens,
then who - or what - are they?
It seems that the phenomenon currently known as the contactee experience is almost coeval with human existence, under many different guises.
These visitors, if they really exist, are obviously quite
willing to conform to whatever mythology or beliefs they find;
becoming whatever we want them to be and telling us whatever we want
to hear. Modern mythology having shifted from the magical to the
scientific, it's only logical that such beings would pose as
scientifically advanced beings from space.
Whitley Streiber, alleged UFO abductee and author of several books on the subject, has even questioned the wisdom of writing about it:
Given their
willingness to pretend to be whatever they think we want them to be
and their increasingly enlarged capacity for calculated
manipulation, how likely is it that the visitors' intentions towards
us are benign?
Lovecraft's Great Old Ones and Elder Gods are reminiscent of the Book of Enoch's evil angels - and the UFO visitors. Some of the contactees themselves have associated the visitors with the gods of ancient mythology. When the visitors told Streiber they were "very old," he found himself wondering, "Who were the old gods, really?"
If the visitors are gods, they certainly conform to the ancient Greek conception of divinity:
Their dealings with Streiber nearly caused him to lose his mind.
Streiber's attempt to understand the visitors in spiritual, rather than scientific, terms is not as strange as it may sound. Vallee, too, believes the UFO phenomenon is not primarily a scientific matter.
He draws a suggestive parallel between our culture, which looks to science for the answers to our questions, and the society upon which our culture is largely based, that of the ancient Greeks:
The danger of which Vallee warns -- that people may rush into the spiritual void left by science -- remains the same even if the visitors are not real:
If, however, the visitors are real, then it makes no difference whether they are almond-eyed aliens or tentacled Lovecraftian monsters; as Vallee says,
That we cannot say for certain whether or not the visitors even exist -- let alone who they might be and what they might want with us -- shows how little we really know, scientifically or otherwise, about our tiny speck of the universe.
Vallee has some sound advice for those who would look to unknown intelligences for some form of salvation:
For who knows but that those who look for salvation from beings with unknown purposes might help bring about some version of the nightmare future envisioned by H.P. Lovecraft:
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