* First World: 16.4 billion years ago. The Big Bang. Development of cellular life on earth.
* Second World: 820 million years ago. Animal life emerged.
* Third World: 41 million years ago. Evolution of primates and first use of rudimentary tools.
* Fourth World: 2 million years ago. Tribal organization.
* Fifth World: 102,000 years ago. Homo sapiens emerged. First use of language.
* Sixth World: 5,125 years ago (from 2012). Creation of patriarchal society, law, writing.
* Seventh World: 256 years ago. Creation of Industrialization, Electricity, Technology.
* Eighth World: 12.8 years ago (from 2012). 1999. The dissemination and consumption of global information via the Internet.
* Ninth World: 260 days after 2012. ???
Its anyone's guess as to what will happen at this point, but there is plenty of conjecture. Some hypothesize that the earth's poles will undergo a magnetic shift, causing problems in instrumentation but also in the migratory patterns of birds and insects. Some hypotheses put the culmination of peak oil at this date, at which point massive socio-economic shifts will take place, leading to increased pressure on food stores and fresh water supplies. Some think that 2012 will usher in the first use of widespread nuclear weapons. Global warming will decimate the planet.
Pinchbeck attempts to fill in the question marks and in so doing hits all of it in this book: global warming, massive culminations of wealth by the very few, exponentially increasing availability of information through the internet, terrorism and runaway nation-states, excessive materialism and its effect on our psyche, nuclear proliferation, disintegration of the family and our national health.
Quoting Marcuse: "There is a fundamental irrational rationality of our system. Industrialization and mechanization could - and logically should - have led to a reduction in labor time and the institution of a post-work and post-scarcity global society after World War II... The response to this deep threat to the controlling apparatus was the creation of "false needs" in the consumer, the perpetuating fear of nuclear war and terrorism, and the use of the mass media to enforce consensus consciousness:
The union of growing productivity and growing destruction; the brinkmanship of annihilation; the surrender of thought, hope, and fear to the decisions of the powers that be; the preservation of misery in the face of unprecedented wealth constitute the most impartial indictment. Its sweeping rationality, which propels efficiency and growth, is itself irrational.The great mass of humanity forfeits their inner freedom of thought, conscience, and will to participate in this system, which presents itself as inevitable, inescapable, and airtight."
Pinchbeck looks at the theme behind all of these trends, and gives archetypical descriptions along with personal and global ramifications of all of it. He goes about answering these questions in a very personal way, one that i think we are all ultimately facing: do we find in ourselves the strength to change what is necessary in order to avoid total extinction? Pinchbeck's answer is ultimately a Gnostic one, where he integrates multiple shamanic religions and narratives to arrive at an answer that corroborates well with my own understanding of our role. Fear is the first and most natural response given any threat. But because we have a higher role as human beings, we must ultimately move past our fear and overcome ourselves first to usher in the change that we so desperately need.
Quoting Gebsner:
All work, the genuine work we must achieve, is that which is most difficult and painful: the work on ourselves. If we do not freely take upon ourselves this pre-acceptance of the pain and torment, they will be visited upon us in an otherwise necessary individual and universal collapse. Anyone dissociated from his origin and his spirituality sensed task acts against origin. Anyone who acts against it neither has a today nor a tomorrow.
2 comments:
I have to hope that 2012 is less catastrophic than expected. Kind of like Y2K.
So you have a blog, Eric's got a blog, Liz has a blog (www.lizelliott.blogspot.com), and mine is www.annkrueger.blogspot.com. Y'all are my blogging crew.
Anybody else?
It's funny, my entire life, i've been a bit excited about the year 2012, not for the obvious reasons, the end of the world saga that lays claim in the minds of millions.... rather, being born on the 12th of december, the year 2012 looks rather nice on my birthday; so even, so balance, so... indescribably tempting to look forward to.
But i digress.
Another point of interest to add to your informative insight, Brandon, is about the sun spot "cycle." Maurice Cotterall, and i'm not sure what his background is all about, wrote a book on the mayan calendar. i read his book not too long ago about the history of the Mayan calendar, and the various correlations of "change" throughout history. one such change dealt with sun spot quantities. according to his mathematical/astrological research, more sun spots appeared during the beginning of new worlds.
the last such encounter, where the sun freckled itself was March 5th at 13.54gMT, 1989. THere was a massive Xray flare lasting about 137 minutes. Then what followed was a massive solar proton movement, resulting in "a large deviation of terresterial magnetism."
Now i have not thoroughly followed up with my own research, the business of life has... led me astray from the ticking time piece in the sky, but, in the off chance that there's another enthusiast out there wanted more informtion: check out 'sun spots + mayan calendar + math/algorythm.' the sun spot cycle suposedly follows the exact mathematical pattern for the 'beginning of new worlds' as indicated in the mayan calendar.
it will blow your mind, and hopefully way before 2012.
really enjoyed the dialogue Brandon, i dug through stacks of paper to pull that Cotterall quote out. thanks for the prompt to revisit the magic in the world.
Best.
kimberly an
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