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Gateway to the Gods - New Approach to Mysteries of Egypt -Picknett & Prince
2/2
http://www.templarlodge.com/stargate.html#Ancient Egypt, Mars & ET's

But first, it is worth considering how we tend to think people learn new
skills. We normally think that there are only two ways - whether we're
talking about an individual or a civilisation. Either we work it our for
ourselves by experimentation or trial and error, or somebody else (who has
already worked it out) teaches us.

This is, in a nutshell, the problem of the anomalous sophistication of
ancient Egypt (and many other ancient civilisations). There is no
archeaological evidence of a process of gradual development of these skills.
So logically we have to invoke the second method, and assume that they were
taught these things, either by a lost civilisation or by ancient astronauts.

But what if there is a third way to acquire knowledge? On an individual
level, we know that there is: inspiration. But can this work for an entire
culture, and if so what would be the mechanism behind it? Is there any
evidence for such a thing?

There is. And it is something that is happening today.

During our research we came across the ground-breaking work of a Swiss
anthroplogist named Jeremy Narby, who in 1995 wrote a book called, in
English, The Cosmic Serpent, DNA and the Origins of Knowledge.

About fifteen years ago, Narby was studying the indigenous people of the
Peruvian Amazon, and became fascinated by their astounding botanical
knwowledge, specifically their use of plants for medical and other purposes.
What intrigued him most was how these supposedly primitive people had
acquired this knowledge.

Since they have no science in the sense that we understand it, they must
have learned how to make their medicines by trial and error. But there are
some 80,000 species of plants growing in the Amazon rain forest, so to
discover an effective remedy using just two of them would theoretically
require the testing of every possible combination - just under four billion.
But many of their medicines involve not just two plants, but several. If
they had found their recipes by experimentation, it would have taken
millions of years to find just a few, and yet they have a vast range of
medicines and other useful substances. Added to this, preparation of many of
them involve long and complex processes with many stages.

The classic example is curare. This is a powerful poison whose ingredients
come from several different plants, and which, Narby points out, fits a very
precise set of requirements. The hunters needed something that, when smeared
on the tips of blow-pipe darts, would not only kill an animal but also
ensure that it does not tighten its death-grip on a branch and die out of
reach (as often happens with animals killed by arrows). And the meat would
have to be safe to eat. It seems like a very tall order - but curare fits
all these requirements perfectly. It is a muscle relaxant, which kills by
arresting the respiratory muscles. It is only effective when injected
directly into the bloodstream, hence its delivery by blowpipe, and has no
effect when taken by mouth.

The most common type of curare requires a complicated method of preparation
in which the extracts of several plants are boiled together for three days,
during which lethal fumes are given off. And the final result needs a
specific piece of technology - the blow-pipe - to deliver it. How was all
this discovered?

The problem becomes even more baffling, because no fewer than forty
different types of curare are used in the Amazon rain forest. All do the
same job but use slightly different ingredients, because the same plants do
not grow in every region. Therefore, in effect, curare was invented forty
times.

After puzzling about such questions for a long time, Narby realised that the
best way to find an answer was to ask the Amazonians themselves. So how do
they claim to have discovered curare - and all the other plants-derived
substances that they use? In fact, they take no credit for them. They claim
that all were given to them by the spirits through their shamans.

Shamans have existed throughout the world, especially in tribal societies.
They are what used to be called witch doctors, especially talented and
highly trained trance psychics, who use their gifts to heal, locate the best
hunting and find water in times of drought. In short, they help to solve the
problems of the tribe, and help it survive.

The shaman does this by going into trance, which can be induced in a variety
of ways, from whirling, drumming and dancing, to taking psychoactive drugs
derived from plants or mushrooms. Those studied by Narby in Peru achieve
their trance by ingesting a plant mixture called ayahuasca, which mimics a
substance found naturally in the human brain and which, in large doses, is a
powerful hallucinogen.

When in trance, the shaman's spirit goes on a journey to another realm, in
which he faces horrible dangers. But once he has overcome his adversaries he
communicates with superior intelligences, who often appear in the form of
animals, who answer his questions.

As in fairy tales, the spirits only answer the questions they are asked -
they seldom, if ever, volunteer extra information. So, if the shaman asks
them how to cure a little village girl's meningitis, they will give him that
information - but they will not also tell him how to cure her mother's
cancer unless he specifically asks. And that may involve another trip.

This is what the Amazonians told Jeremy Narby about how they know the
properties of plants and how to combine them. But they also claim that this
is how they learned of specific techniques, such as woodworking and
weaving - in fact, all the arts and crafts necessary for survival.

We must stress that the Amazonians' knowledge of pharmacology (plant-derived
drugs and their potential and actual uses) is not just surprising for what
are considered primitive peoples, but actually exceeds that of modern
Western science. Many modern medicines were taken from those used in the
Amazon - curare, for example, is used in heart surgery. Even the giant drug
companies do not have the ability to develop products to meet specific
requirements as quickly, easily - and naturally - as the Amazonian shamans
can.

This is, in fact, an exact analogy for the problem posed by the ancient
Egyptians' anomalous knowledge of, for example, highly sophisticated
constructon techniques. Although they are two very different fields of
knowledge, the basic problem in accounting for the knowledge is exactly the
same.

Could it be that the ancient Egyptians acquired the knowledge of how to
build pyramids the shaman's way - by asking the great spirits directly?

It might be thought that it is just too big a step from brewing up potions
to designing and building one of the world's largest and most enduring
buildings, but Jeremy Narby pointed out to us that in some ancient American
civilisations both skills existed side by side. The Aztecs, Incas and Maya
constructed comparable temples to those of Egypt, and attributed their
knowledge of how to build them to their gods. But they also maintained that
the gods had also taught them other arts, such as the use of plants for
healing, and astronomy.

So there is a direct analogue for the mysterious knowledge of, and evidence
of advanced technology in, ancient Egypt - in something that is happening
today.

So could the Heliopolitan religion have been based on a form of shamanism?
It is instructive to look at the experiences of anthropologist Michael
Harner among the Conibo Indians of the Peruvian Amazon in the 1960s. He took
the shamans' hallucinogenic drink and later wrote:

'For several hours after drinking the brew I found myself, though awake, in
a world literally beyond my wildest dreams. I met bird-headed people, as
well as dragon-like creatures who explained that they were the gods of this
world.'

Bird-headed people. Doesn't this remind us of the ibis-headed god Thoth and
the hawk-headed Horus? The Egyptians had many animal-headed gods, including
the fearsome lioness-headed Sekhmet and the jackal-headed Anubis. Do they
all live through the stargate of shamanic vision?

In the Pyramid Texts there are many passages that are an exact parallel for
the shamanic experience.

In the Pyramid Texts we read how the King, who is identified with Osiris,
must face terrifying ordeals, similar to the myth of the god himself, in
which he was cut into pieces by the evil god Set, later to be reassembled
and brought back to life by his sister-wife Isis. This is virtually
identical to the classic shamanic experience in which the shaman is hacked
to pieces and magically reassembled before ascending into the spirit world.

Jeremy Narby made a study of shamanism all over the world, and found many
common themes in shamanic visions. A major example is that of snakes or
serpents being bringers of wisdom. This is found even in cultures living in
regions where there are no snakes.

Another common theme is that of the divine twins, also as bringers of
wisdom. Narby points out that the Aztec word 'coatl', as in the name
Quetzalcoatl, means both 'snake' and 'twin'. This reminds us of the two sets
of twins in the Heliopolitan pantheon - Isis and Osiris, and Nephtys and
Set.

Another central element common to shamanism all over the world is that of a
ladder joining Heaven and Earth, which the shaman ascends to meet the
spirits of wisdom. As Narby says:

'They talk of a ladder, or a vine, a rope, a spiral staircase, a twisted
rope ladder, that connects Heaven and Earth and which they use to gain
access to the world of spirits. They consider these spirits to have come
from the sky and to have created life on Earth.'

Significantly, the same imagery is found in the Pyramid Texts. For example,
speaking of Isis as the personification of the ladder, it says:

'As for any spirit or any god who will help me when I ascend to the sky on
the ladder of the god; my bones are assembled for me, my limbs are gathered
together for me, and I leap up to the sky in the presence of the god of the
lord of the ladder.'

Ascension to the Milky Way is a central theme of the Pyramid Texts.

The fact that Isis is personified as the ladder is interesting because it
brings up the whole question of the role of women in shamanism. We have been
saying 'he' whenever we have talked about shamans, because virtually all of
them are men.

We were at a conference in London about four years ago at which Jeremy Narby
was speaking. During question time, one of the audience asked why he hadn't
mentioned female shamans. He replied that womens' place in this is very
interesting. In the Amazonian shamanic rites he had witnessed, the shaman
takes ayahuasca, goes into trance, and then goes off on his otherwordly
flight. But next to him is a woman, and she accompanies him on his journey,
experiencing exactly the same visions that he experiences. It is her job to
make him recall them when he returns, because shamans often forget their
experiences. But she does this without touching ayahuasca.

How can the women do this without recourse to artificial means - the drug?
It appears that certain women find the shamanic experience comes to them
quite naturally. We don't know the details of this, because in tribal
societies the men's mysteries and the women's mysteries are kept strictly
apart. Until recently, the vast majority of Western anthropologists have
been male, so if they were let in on any secrets it was the male ones. As a
result, the literature on female shamanism is virtually non-existent.

The fact that Isis plays this role in the Pyramid Texts suggests that women
played an important part in Egyptian shamanism - and we know that there were
female priests at Heliopolis.

It is generally accepted as fact that the Pyramid Texts describe the
afterlife journey of the King, but there is much internal evience that this
is simply not so - or rather that they do not exclusively describe an
afterlife journey at all.

We believe that they actually describe the classic out-of-the-body flight of
the shaman, who is, significantly, often regarded as physically dead while
in his trance, in which he visits the world of the dead. The gods and
monsters encountered in the Pyramid Texts are strikingly similar to those
described across the world by tribal shamans.

There are many ways for shamans to become entranced, which include whirling,
dancing, drumming and pushing the mind and body beyond the limit through
induced pain. All of these techniques produce some form of altered state of
consciousness, perhaps hallucinations, certainly an apparent physical
deadness and mental and spiritual alertness. But it must be said that the
most favoured way of inducing shamanic trance is through the use of
psychoactive drugs.

Jeremy Narby spent a lot of time researching the shamans of the Amazonian
rain forest, in particular their use of ayahuasca. Narby himself took
ayahuasca and, although at first it made him violently sick, he then entered
into the sacred trance state, where he had a particularly significant
vision.

He encountered two giant serpents who talked with him. They told him that he
was 'only a human being', which humbled him. He later said that they induced
thoughts that he wasn't then capable of having himself. All of this made him
examine his Western arrogance and preconceptions about life and humanity's
place in the scheme of things, which led directly to him writing his
ground-breaking book. As we will see, the serpents are very important. For
now, suffice it to say that Narby's own experience showed that the shamanic
state can provide otherwise inaccessible knowledge and an entirely different
way of looking at things.

We asked Narby whether he thought that his theory about the shamanic
acquisition of knowledge could apply to ancient Egypt. He replied that he
was reluctant to comment on this, as it was outside his area of specialism,
but he did suggest that if we could establish that they used drugs for
sacred purposes, this would make a strong connection with the shamanic
cultures.

To be honest we didn't know then whether such drugs were used in ancient
Egypt, but by an amazing piece of synchronicity virtually the next day there
was a Channel 4 programme in the Sacred Weeds series about the possible use
of the blue waterlily as a psychoactive drug in ancient Egypt.

In fact, it has long been recognised that the blue lily was important to the
Egyptians, because it was depicted in many wall paintings and papyri. It
even forms the design of the pillars of the Temple of Karnak. Egyptologists
believe that it was so popular simply because it is very pretty. There are
many pictures of virtually naked young ladies in party settings with blue
lilies stuck - often a bit askew - into their headdresses or belts. In fact,
the blue lily is so often associated with party scenes that some researchers
were led to wonder if they were, in fact, not merely pretty, but
recreational drugs.

The programme set out to test the properties of the blue lily and, yes, it
does have a psychoactive effect, although Channel 4 erred on the side of
caution and only used a very mild dose on its volunteers. However, we have
every reason to believe that the ancient Egyptians probably had no such
scruples. At the end of the programme, one of the contributors, the
historian Michael Carmichael, said that in larger quantities the blue lily
could be used to induce shamanic trances.

It is, perhaps, significant that the blue lily was sacred to Atum, the god
of Heliopolis.

We contacted Michael Carmichael and discussed the whole subject. He said
that the ancient Egyptians are known to have used many drugs, includinbg
opium, mandrake and cannabis. Carmichael had made a specific study of all
this, but had not heard of Jeremy Narby's work, although he had come to
virtually the same conclusions about the acquisition of knowledge while in
shamanic trance.

We ought to say at this point that we are not in any way encouraging drug
taking. It must be pointed out that shamans are highly trained and
experienced in their techniques. Don't think that we can just take some drug
or another and we'll all have extraordinary shamanic visions. We won't.
We'll get very ill, perhaps suffer psychological problems, and maybe even
die. There are no shortcuts to enlightenment.

And there are other dangers apart from the physical ones. Not all the
entities encountered in visions are benevolent. Many are tricksters, bent on
deceiving the untrained and unwary. Shamans know how to recognise them and
outwit them. Untrained people can be misled, or even possessed.

So, we know that it is possible for people to acquire advanced,
sophisticated knowledge direct from some source. Is this how the ancient
Egyptians discovered, for example, how to build the pyramids, or the secrets
of the cosmos?

In fact, we may, paradoxically, be able to deduce that this is so from the
things that the ancient Egyptians didn't know. Remember, the Amazonian
shamans get specific answers to specific questions, no less, but certainly
no more than they ask for.

The Egyptians, for all their advanced building techniques, had no concept of
the arch. The arch is a particularly efficient way of distributing weight,
compared to straight lintels. However, building with an arch requires a
conceptual leap and an understanding of weight distribution. Perhaps this
also accounts for the fact that the ancient Egyptians did not build large
bridges.

There is more evidence that they had no understanding of the intricacies of
weight distribution. Recently, French Egyptologist Jean Kerisel argued that
the cracks in the ceiling of the King's Chamber in the Great Pyramid were
not, as generally believed, caused by an earthquake at some point in the
monument's long history, but actually happened while it was being built.
This was because the builders did not appreciate the consequences of
juxtaposing granite and limestone, which compress at different rates.
Despite all the wonders of the construction of the Great Pyramid - the
quarrying, transportation, shaping and placing of such mammoth blocks of
stone - the builders made a simple technical error that would be avoided by
any modern student of architecture. Everything about the ancient Egyptians
is practise, not theory.

It is as if they were given specific answers to specific qeustions, just as
the Amazonian shamans are.

It might seem a big leap from building the pyramids to understanding the
properties of plants but we argue that the both skills came were the result
of the same process. We do not know the limits of the knowledge that can be
acquired the shaman's way. Could it, for example, include techniques for
quarrying and shifting huge blocks of stone? Could it include information
about distant stars and the origins of the cosmos?

In our previous talk we looked at the mysterious knowledge of the West
African Dogon tribe about the Sirius star system, which Robert Temple
believes results from actual contact with beings from that system. But could
their knowledge have been acquired using the shamanic technique, by asking
the spirits about the brightest star in the sky? There are clear shamanistic
aspects of the Dogon religion and mythology. For example, the gods of the
Dogon are pairs of twins, which is a common theme of shamanism the world
over.

All tribal cultures use the skills of shamans, but does this mean that it is
a primitive practise, something that a society grows out of as it becomes
more sophisticated? In the Amazon, it is true that the shamans only give
information that is necessary for day to day survival. But what would happen
if shamanism continued to exist as a culture became more organised and
sophisticated? What would be the limits of the knowledge that its shamans
could gather?

What if the Egyptians had built shamanism into their advanced culture? Could
they have taken their quest for knowledge to new levels? Could the
priesthood of Heliopolis have been, in effect, a college of shamans?

The big question is, who or what bestows this information? Are the entities,
the spirits or gods real or some kind of dramatisation of the shamans'
subconscious? Does the shaman actually go somewhere on his visionary flight,
or is it 'all in the mind'? The whole subject of otherworld reality is a
very complex one that has received little scientific or academic attention,
but which is now beginning to attract serious study at last. In the final
analysis we just don't know the answers, but at least some people are
beginning to phrase the questions.

Jeremy Narby has made a hugely thought-provoking suggestion. We have seen
that he identified certain common elements in shamanism worldwide. There is
the theme of the twin gods and serpents as bringers of wisdom - often
combined in the form of twin serpents who impart great secrets. Nrby himself
encountered two giant snakes when he took ayahuasca.

There is also the theme of the twisting rope ladder or the twisted vine.
Another theme is that of the spirits that the shamans meet, who often claim
that they are in some way present in every living thing - that they are life
itself...

It occurred to Narby from that statement that those common images of twin
serpents and twisted ladders are descriptions of the DNA double helix. In
fact, if straightened out the strands of DNA would look exactly like a rope
ladder.

What Narby suggests is that the shaman is, in some way, communicating with
his own DNA, and this is where he is getting the information from. This may
sound bizarre, but it must be remembered that we do not know the function of
97% of DNA, which science terms 'junk DNA', but which Narby suggests we call
'mystery DNA'. All the diversity of life is accounted for by just 3% of DNA,
so it seems inconceivable that the other 97% has no function. But what could
it do?

Narby goes further. He points out that it is known that DNA in one cell
actually exchanges signals with the DNA in other cells. He suggests that,
once someone taps into their own DNA, it can then communicate across
organisms, across species - even across the boundary between animal and
plant - and that the totality of all the DNA in the world forms a kind of
matrix. Perhaps this could explain phenomena such as telepathy and ESP.

The DNA in one cell transmits and receives signals from DNA in other cells.
This is done by emitting photons - that is, they actually exchange signals
in the form of light, oddly at a wavelength that is visible to humans.
Perhaps this is where we get the concept of being 'enlightened' from, and it
could be a literal description of the 'Light' of Gnosticism.

It is early days for the DNA theory, but, in our view, it has a lot going
for it. What is certain is that shamans acquire knowledge direct from some
source without any process of trial and error. It is knowledge that they
didn't have before, useful knowledge which we cannot explain - and which is
often more advanced than ours. This is something that is happening right
now, and there is no suggestion of visitors from lost continents or
spaceships landing.

We have called our book The Stargate Conspiracy, which some take to be a
reference to the movie and the TV series. In fact, it is very largely a
reference to the ancient Egyptian word sba which means both 'star' and
'gateway'. Unlike the concept of the movie, in which there is a physical
portal through which you can step up to meet the space gods, we suggest that
the real stargate is much, much closer to home. It is probably even within
each cell of our bodies. Perhaps in seeking wisdom from gurus and those with
secret agendas we are actually moving away from enlightenment. Perhaps we
should just recognise that not only the stargate, but also the gods are
within us all.


320pp, ISBN 0 316 64861 2



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