302 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
302 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
<<UFONET I>> * 416-237-1204 * PC-Pursuitable * File Requestable * HST
|
|||
|
* 24 Hour Operation * Sysop - Tom Mickus * Toronto * FREE
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
SPUTNIK1.TXT - "Time To Study The Facts"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- by Mark Milchiker, a biophysicist
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Note: The following article was excerpted from the October, 1989
|
|||
|
edition of "SPUTNIK", the monthy digest of the Soviet Press.
|
|||
|
It is published in the Soviet Union, and translated into
|
|||
|
several languages, with of course English being one of them.
|
|||
|
The following article was "abridged" from the Soviet language
|
|||
|
magazine, "Priroda I Chelovek". If someone is interested in
|
|||
|
the full text of this article, perhaps they could try to
|
|||
|
obtain a copy of the above magazine and have it translated.
|
|||
|
The following article also contained about a half-dozen photos
|
|||
|
of various UFOs pictured over the Soviet Union.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Tom Mickus 11/20/89
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TIME TO STUDY THE FACTS
|
|||
|
-----------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The above epigraph, which belongs to an outstanding scientist
|
|||
|
of our time and the founder of world cosmonautics, clearly shows what
|
|||
|
he thought of the fairly mysterious and debatable problem of the
|
|||
|
possible contact between earthly, human civilization and intelligent
|
|||
|
beings from extra-terrestrial worlds.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Indeed, have non-earthmen ever visited our planet? Are contacts
|
|||
|
with them maintained today? Are such contacts possible in the future?
|
|||
|
These questions stir many people, especially enthusiasts researching the
|
|||
|
problem. I will try to answer these questions and outline the appropriate
|
|||
|
little-known views of Tsiolkovsky. This great schooteacher of Kaluga
|
|||
|
not only foresaw mankind's egress into outer space, but also, long before
|
|||
|
the commencement of the Space Age and the huge growth of interest in
|
|||
|
"visitors", declared that extra-terrestrial civilizations could exist
|
|||
|
and make contact with mankind.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Unfortunately, there is no telling what facts collected by "people
|
|||
|
whose judgement may be relied upon" Tsiolkovsky had in mind. The
|
|||
|
scientist did not specify them. But the phrase itself is highly significant,
|
|||
|
suggesting that appropriate facts existed even in his days, that people
|
|||
|
collected and tried to analyse them over half a century ago! And what
|
|||
|
is the situation now?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is known that twenty years ago groups of researchers all over
|
|||
|
the world collected about two hundred and fifty thousand stories about
|
|||
|
flying objects, tales of other unorthodox phenomena, and of contacts between
|
|||
|
humans and extra-terrestrial beings, referred to as hominoids. If all
|
|||
|
these were falsifications or hallucinations, it would suggest that the
|
|||
|
world is full of lunatics, wouldn't it? Shouldn't these stories be
|
|||
|
carefully studied?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here is what Tsiolkovsky wrote in 1928 in his work "The Will of the
|
|||
|
Universe. Unknown Intelligent Forces:"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"A mass of inexplicable phenomena have been recorded in history and
|
|||
|
literature. The majority of them can undoubtedly be classified with
|
|||
|
hallucinations and other delusions, but does this apply to all such
|
|||
|
phenomena? Now that the possibility of interplanetary travel has been
|
|||
|
proven, man should show greater consideration for such 'incomphrehensible'
|
|||
|
phenomena. I believe that some such phenomena are not illusions, but real
|
|||
|
proof of the presence of unknown intelligent forces in outer space."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tsiolkovsky categorized as such phenomena, in particular, images
|
|||
|
of a geometric figure and a man which had observed in the sky in the spring
|
|||
|
of 1886 and the word "ChAU" which he had seen spelled in Russian letters
|
|||
|
on the horizon during the sunset on May 31, 1928. Thus, Tsiolkovsky
|
|||
|
observed what is known as anomalous phenomena himself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It all shows that obscure phenomena do exist. Moreover, researchers
|
|||
|
have found evidence of possible contacts between humans and extra-terrestrials
|
|||
|
in the distant past. I will make bold to say that in our days, too,
|
|||
|
thousands of people have seen objects which I call ALO (astra-levitating
|
|||
|
objects or objects flying from the stars in the sky).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The eye witness accounts of such phenomena are fairly numerous a
|
|||
|
well documented.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A group of enthusiasts in the West has even set up an international
|
|||
|
organization for coordinating the study of UFOs - ICUFON (Intercontinental
|
|||
|
UFO Galactic Space-craft Research and Analitic Network).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For instance, one of the most recent eyewitness accounts came from
|
|||
|
Mozambique. On February 11, 1988, thousands of people in the city of Beira
|
|||
|
witnessed an ALO flight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The object appeared in the sky at approximately three o'clock in the
|
|||
|
afternoon local time, hanging over the city. Workers at the local
|
|||
|
meteorological station said that the object, which looked like a parachute
|
|||
|
and had two powerful sources of light aboard, remained at a height of about
|
|||
|
three kilometres and could be very well observed through field-glasses. It
|
|||
|
continuously revolved around its axis. From a short distance the object
|
|||
|
was observed by the pilots of a passenger plane of the Mozambiquean LAM
|
|||
|
Air Company, which, having taken off from the city airport, was then
|
|||
|
gaining altitude. Only three hours later did this gleaming object fly away
|
|||
|
southwards. Incidentally, this unorthodox phenomenon was also watched by
|
|||
|
APN's and Izvestia's own correspondents in Mozambique (see Izvestia,
|
|||
|
February 18, 1988).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How can we, scientists, classify the multitude of similar facts?
|
|||
|
They are either well-presented falsifications or true stories. Everyone
|
|||
|
is free to interpret them as he wishes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Of course, it would be simple to laugh off all these stories. But
|
|||
|
I am not an advocate of such an approach.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is known that during the first meeting between Mikhail Gorbachev
|
|||
|
and Ronald Reagan in Geneva, the US President said that if the Earth was
|
|||
|
threatened by an extra-terrestrial invasion, the United States and the
|
|||
|
Soviet Union should pool their efforts to rebuff any attack. Was this
|
|||
|
just a casually dropped idea, a hyperbole geared to emphasize the importance
|
|||
|
of this meeting of the top leaders of our two countries? However, it is
|
|||
|
quite possible that President Reagan was not joking at all, that he had
|
|||
|
serious reasons for making such a statement.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Possibly, efforts to decipher the ALO structure and manufacturing
|
|||
|
technology are being made in the United States, and Americans are working
|
|||
|
seriously on the problem of contact with messengers of extra-terrestrial
|
|||
|
civilizations. Back in 1981 Dr.Colman S. von Kevietzky, Director of above
|
|||
|
-mentioned ICUFON, a member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
|
|||
|
Astronautics (Aerospace), and a former military man, sent to President
|
|||
|
Reagan two packages of materials containing proofs of the military activity
|
|||
|
of UFO's ("flying saucers"), demanding that the government prevent a fatal
|
|||
|
war between the United States and galactic forces. This brings to mind
|
|||
|
H.G.Well's "The War of the Worlds", doesn't it?! Von Kevietzky received a
|
|||
|
reply from the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs in
|
|||
|
the US National Security Council, Major-General Robert L.Schweitzer, saying
|
|||
|
that the President was fully aware of the threat so competently outlined
|
|||
|
in Kevitzky's document. Soon afterwards, General Schweitzer was dismissed
|
|||
|
- in the opinion of US researchers, under an all too clearly fabricated
|
|||
|
excuse. It seems as if the real reason for his dismissal was Schweitzer's
|
|||
|
indirect admission of the development of problems connected with contacts
|
|||
|
with UFOs in the United States. That cost him his position.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The most curious fact, however, was that long before this happened
|
|||
|
the "National Enquirer Magazine" published extracts from statements of
|
|||
|
official representatives of the US State Department about a possible threat
|
|||
|
posed by extraterrestrial visitors.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In view of the hushing up of this problem, Dr. von Kevitzky made
|
|||
|
public all information about UFO activity he had in a Memorandum intended
|
|||
|
for the government and peoples of all countries. A press release which
|
|||
|
was then circulated warned that the pursuit of UFOs by earthly military
|
|||
|
forces could provoke a global Pearl Harbor. The Memorandum said that
|
|||
|
instead of the insane slipdown, with all its nuclear arsenals and secret
|
|||
|
military missions, towards a war in space, man should realize that he was
|
|||
|
not an isolated entity living on a planet isolated in the Universe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another press release, issued by the ICUFON jointly with the
|
|||
|
Planetary Professionals Citizens Committee in 1982, said that the time
|
|||
|
has come to lift the iron curtain of the secrecy surrounding the global
|
|||
|
UFO problem. All available documents regarding UFOs should be granted
|
|||
|
to interested individuals and institutions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So that is where the wind blows from. And, as I see it, it was
|
|||
|
no fortuity that the US President should suddenly have raised the question
|
|||
|
of visitors from outer space. This subject was too serious for high-
|
|||
|
level jokes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I am profoundly convinced of the objectivity and authenticity of
|
|||
|
much ALO data, having done fifteen years' research myself jointly with
|
|||
|
specialists in various fields. Our research has a public service basis.
|
|||
|
We have collected a vast body of information on the sites of presumptive
|
|||
|
ALO Landings - eyewitness accounts, photographs, and the data of various
|
|||
|
psycho-chemical analyses. At the places of putative ALO landings and
|
|||
|
contacts of earthmen with non-earthmen aided by biological detection and
|
|||
|
ranging frames measurements were taken of the residual fields induced by
|
|||
|
the extra-terrestrial visitors on the ground and in the atmosphere. It
|
|||
|
was established that these fields survived for seven to nine years.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Furthermore, we closely questioned those who claimed that they had
|
|||
|
been in contact with non-earthmen. The questioning was done under hypnosis
|
|||
|
(hypnotesting), the conversations being tape-recorded. To our way of
|
|||
|
thinking, such a method made it possible to establish the authenticity of
|
|||
|
the contactor's story, to reconstruct forgotten facts, and to specify
|
|||
|
details. Of the twelve contactors, four were interrogated using this
|
|||
|
method.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The most incredible case of contact was an encounter by driver
|
|||
|
V.P.B. with extra-terrestrials near the village of Polushino in the
|
|||
|
Mozhaisk District of the Moscow Region. The meeting, it was claimed,
|
|||
|
took place on July 28, 1980. The visitors studied the contactor using
|
|||
|
a ring-shaped cap placed on his head and connected by cables to a panel.
|
|||
|
Then they talked with him. Finally, they told the man that he would
|
|||
|
forget about their encounter. And indeed he only recalled it following
|
|||
|
a period of great stress. A detailed study of a map depicted by the
|
|||
|
contacter which he had seen over the panel aboard the extra-terrestrial
|
|||
|
vehicle and which had consisted of nine stars that had formed a hoof-shaped
|
|||
|
figure led us to draw the conclusion that this particular ALO had arrived
|
|||
|
from the southern constellation of Vela (Sails).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I realize that any sober-minded reader might be persuaded that all
|
|||
|
these stories are a mere send-up. Another surprise is the abundance of
|
|||
|
proofs of encounters with ALOs and ALOnauts. Such a profusion of facts has
|
|||
|
a double explanation: either the earthmen are susceptible to collective
|
|||
|
psychosis or extra-terrestrial civilizations really are studying our planet.
|
|||
|
There are no other possibilities.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now let us return to the views of our great dreamer, whose works are
|
|||
|
still only poorly known. In many of his writings, Tsiolkovsky tries to
|
|||
|
convince his readers that life does exist on other planets, that outer
|
|||
|
space is populated by highly intelligent social beings and predominantly
|
|||
|
highly developed civilizations. In his "Scientific Ethics" he wrote:
|
|||
|
"Since life has appeared on Earth, why shouldn't it have appeared on
|
|||
|
billions of other planets having the same conditions as our own? The
|
|||
|
presence of life in the Universe is an incontestible fact. To assume that,
|
|||
|
apart from man, the Universe is unpopulated and lifeless because we cannot
|
|||
|
see its life is a gross delusion." According to Tsiolkovsky, when
|
|||
|
civilization spreads from one area of outer space to another, it "creates
|
|||
|
a wide variety of breeds of perfect beings -- capable of living in different
|
|||
|
atmospheres, at different gravity, on different planets, in a vacuum or
|
|||
|
in rarefied gas, living on food and without food - exclusively on sunrays,
|
|||
|
beings which resist cold, and beings which resist abrupt and considerable
|
|||
|
temperature fluctuations".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But a question arises, why have representatives of extra-terrestrial
|
|||
|
civilizations to this day failed to present themselves to mankind with full
|
|||
|
visual clarity? As if anticipating this question, in 1933 Tsiolkovsky wrote
|
|||
|
on a letter from student A. Yudin of Tomsk: "Attempts of higher beings to
|
|||
|
help us are possible, because they continue to be made to this day. We,
|
|||
|
people, do not try to convince animals of the irrationality of their life.
|
|||
|
The distance between us and perfect beings is hardly any less."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But if we concede that people may encounter probes and ALOnauts, we
|
|||
|
should think about making psychological preparations for such contacts.
|
|||
|
The importance of such psychological readiness goes far beyond the confines
|
|||
|
of cosmonautics proper. Man must form a clear idea of what he wants of
|
|||
|
the possible contacts with extra-terrestrial civilizations. Perhaps in view
|
|||
|
view of such contacts he should at least cease to silence the problem and
|
|||
|
talk about it openly?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is clear that the problem of searching for contacts with extra-
|
|||
|
terrestrial civilizations must pass from the field of purely academic
|
|||
|
speculations to the field of scientific research and practical actions not
|
|||
|
limited to radioastronomy. It appears that searching for and studying
|
|||
|
emergence of ALOs and the presumptive "contact" with representatives of
|
|||
|
other worlds should change from a semi-legal gratuitous occupation into
|
|||
|
work of serious research teams, which, most importantly, would strive not
|
|||
|
to disprove eyewitness accounts, but to search for proofs of such contacts.
|
|||
|
Methodologically, such an approach would be more fruitful. The only way
|
|||
|
to solve this problem is by using integral methods and by drawing on the
|
|||
|
achievements of various branches of science - natural, engineering, and
|
|||
|
social. This requires laboratories fitted with special equipment for
|
|||
|
searching for, confirming, and meticulously analysing "contacts". This
|
|||
|
should be done if only to make the problem cease to be an object of
|
|||
|
speculation, science fiction, send-ups, and mystification, so that science
|
|||
|
could, with full confidence, declare its findings on the subject.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Incidentally, it should be recalled that Tsiolkovsky was against
|
|||
|
any limitation of the sphere of scientific research. Speaking, with his
|
|||
|
friend Alexander Chizhevsky, one of the founders of cosmobiology, he mae
|
|||
|
indignant remarks about people who regarded as scientific only what they
|
|||
|
already "hold in their hands", excluding obscure phenomena from the sphere
|
|||
|
of science:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Man is yet to study the entire Universe, a place which abounds in
|
|||
|
unknown and simply obscure phenomena. And yet he is already putting up
|
|||
|
fences between the possible and the impossible! Study this, but don't
|
|||
|
dare touch that!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What an apt and absolutely correct summing up of the question!
|
|||
|
The entire history of the formation of many scientific disciplines,
|
|||
|
including cosmonautics, shows that unorthodox ideas were first denied
|
|||
|
acceptance. Research connected with the quest for ALOs is presently at
|
|||
|
an embryonic stage. In fact, it is being rejected as absurd because it
|
|||
|
"contradicts science".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And how good it would be if the scientific search for extra-
|
|||
|
terrestrial civilizations were always keynoted by the words of another
|
|||
|
pioneer of Soviet cosmonautics, Friedrich Tsander:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Who, fixing his gaze on the sky on a clear autumn night, at the
|
|||
|
sight of the stars glimmering in it, has not thought that distant planets
|
|||
|
are perhaps inhabited by intelligent beings like ourselves but are
|
|||
|
culturally thousands of years ahead of us? Innumerable cultural values
|
|||
|
could be delivered to the Earth and multiply the treasury of science if
|
|||
|
man could transport himself there. What negligible expenditures this
|
|||
|
great scheme would require compared to what man squanders!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
===================================== EOF ===================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=============================================================================
|
|||
|
= IF YOU HAVE ANY UFO RELATED INFORMATION THAT YOU WOULD LIKE US TO SEE =
|
|||
|
= OR HAVE DISTRIBUTED, YOU CAN NOW SEND IT VIA OUR NEW UFONET FAX LINE. =
|
|||
|
=============================================================================
|
|||
|
= ------>>> UFONET FAX HOTLINE - 24 Hrs - (414) 351-2075 <<<------ =
|
|||
|
=============================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|