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Cracks in the Great Wall: UFOs and Traditional Metaphysics
 
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Cracks in the Great Wall: UFOs and Traditional Metaphysics [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Charles Upton

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Can we really know what UFO's are? The answer is Yes-but only if we study them armed with a kind of knowledge that explains the true and complete structure of the universe-spiritual, psychic, and material-a knowledge that only traditional metaphysics can provide. Science can supply one piece of the puzzle, detective work another, psychic investigation still another. But only metaphysics can put the puzzle together, and give us a complete and satisfying picture of the UFO phenomenon. Cracks in the Great Wall analyzes of the findings of UFO researcher Jacques Vallee and some of his colleagues in light of the teachings of René Guénon, particularly as expressed in his prophetic masterpiece The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times. According to Guénon, one of the signs of the End Times is the erosion of the energy barrier or 'Great Wall' between the material plane and the world of subtle realities-which is why our world is now being invaded by 'infra-psychic forces' of a terribly destructive nature. Author Charles Upton shows how one of the most obvious examples of this invasion is the UFO phenomenon, including the experience of 'alien abduction'. A lifetime student of comparative religion and mysticism, he explains the true nature of UFOs, the quality of the world they come from, and also something about the agenda these beings, or some of them, are trying to impose upon our world.  If you want to remain merely mystified or fascinated by the UFO phenomenon, this book is not for you. But if you want to understand it, Cracks in the Great Wall will give you the conceptual tools you need. With the help of UFOlogists Jacques Vallee and John E. Mack, Christian writers C.S. Lewis and Seraphim Rose, Kaballah authority Leo Schaya, and traditionalist writers René Guénon and Whitall Perry, Charles Upton has provided the most comprehensive explanation of the UFO phenomenon yet written. It is difficult to be objective in areas outside our collective view of reality-but if, as the author contends,  his argument is based on sound  principles, it deserves serious consideration by all who are interested in the UFO phenomenon  and its effect on our world. . "Charles Upton is a serious writer from whom I have learned much. His writing deserves close attention." -Prof. Huston Smith, author of The World's Religions, etc.

Synopsis

Can we really know what UFO's are? The answer is Yes-but only if we study them armed with a kind of knowledge that explains the true and complete structure of the universe-spiritual, psychic, and material-a knowledge that only traditional metaphysics can provide. Science can supply one piece of the puzzle, detective work another, psychic investigation still another. But only metaphysics can put the puzzle together, and give us a complete and satisfying picture of the UFO phenomenon. Cracks in the Great Wall analyzes of the findings of UFO researcher Jacques Vallee and some of his colleagues in light of the teachings of Rene Guenon, particularly as expressed in his prophetic masterpiece The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times. According to Guenon, one of the signs of the End Times is the erosion of the energy barrier or 'Great Wall' between the material plane and the world of subtle realities-which is why our world is now being invaded by 'infra-psychic forces' of a terribly destructive nature. Author Charles Upton shows how one of the most obvious examples of this invasion is the UFO phenomenon, including the experience of 'alien abduction'.A lifetime student of comparative religion and mysticism, he explains the true nature of UFOs, the quality of the world they come from, and also something about the agenda these beings, or some of them, are trying to impose upon our world.

If you want to remain merely mystified or fascinated by the UFO phenomenon, this book is not for you. But if you want to understand it, Cracks in the Great Wall will give you the conceptual tools you need. With the help of UFOlogists Jacques Vallee and John E. Mack, Christian writers C.S. Lewis and Seraphim Rose, Kaballah authority Leo Schaya, and traditionalist writers Rene Guenon and Whitall Perry, Charles Upton has provided the most comprehensive explanation of the UFO phenomenon yet written. It is difficult to be objective in areas outside our collective view of reality-but if, as the author contends, his argument is based on sound principles, it deserves serious consideration by all who are interested in the UFO phenomenon and its effect on our world. . "Charles Upton is a serious writer from whom I have learned much. His writing deserves close attention." -Prof. Huston Smith, author of The World's Religions, etc.


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A desparately needed dose of the Truth! 13. Februar 2006
Von S. Ferguson - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
I highly recommend this book to anyone who is involved in anyway with the alien/UFO experience and their own spiritual journey. Thank God for Charles Upton's courage to write this much needed information. As he says, the ETs are liars! They all have their own agendas. It is a complete waste of your time to communicate with them and the other denizens of the Invisible Realms - and dangerous for your soul.

I am someone who has personally been involved with ET transmissions. I know far too many people who have received this deceptive confusion that cunningly enhances the frail egos of those who are simply sadly unaware of traditional metaphysics. It has taken me years of meditative introspection and the brilliant writings of Rene Guenon to understand the truth.

PLEASE READ this book and clear the cobwebs out!
VS Ferguson - author of Inanna Returns
UFOs: Harbingers of the Anti-Christ? 4. Mai 2012
Von Ashtar Command - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
Charles Upton is a Traditionalist writer with a rather colourful (and interesting!) background. He even claims to be "part of the diminutive Left-wing of the quite conservative Traditionalist world". A convert to Islam through a Sufi order, Upton is a friend of the perennial Huston Smith (pun intended), who is also something of a maverick in Traditionalist circles, equally at home with psychedelic left-liberals and the Moonie Jonathan Wells.

"Cracks in the great wall" is a critical look at the UFO scene, especially as it has developed post-Whitley Strieber. Apparently, most of the book is excerpted from a larger work by the same author, "The System of the Anti-Christ".

Upton doesn't deny the reality of UFOs or "aliens". However, he believes that UFOs cannot be explained from a purely materialist perspective. UFOs aren't nuts-and-bolts alien craft from other star systems, nor are they the result of a government conspiracy. Rather, UFOs are precisely what they seem to be: paranormal. Upton is particularly fond of Jacques Vallée, a French ufologist who saw similarities between UFO reports and older claims about fairies and other mythological creatures, and therefore drew the conclusion that they are, at bottom, the same paranormal phenomenon.

Upton believes that UFOs and their occupants come from the so-called subtle realm, a kind of astral double of our own material world. At one point, he refers to the "aliens" as Jinns. In Muslim tradition, Jinns are spirit-beings who are usually regarded as malevolent. A few Jinns are "Muslim", since they were converted by the prophet Muhammad, and Upton even mentions a sighting of a green elf-ship made by one of his friends on a hike. Most Jinns, however, are demonic. The author regards both the seemingly benevolent "space brothers" of neo-Theosophical lore, and the more obviously malevolent "Greys" who abduct humans, as equally satanic. The "space brothers" preach a false religion, and the author spends some time distancing Traditionalism from various Theosophical and New Age notions (including reincarnation). The book places strong emphasis on Guénon's concept of counter-initiation, a kind of inverted and perverted form of the true religion. Guénon believed that Theosophy was a form of counter-initiation, and Upton claims that the UFO phenomenon is a modern version of pretty much the same thing.

The author takes strong exception to John E. Mack's book "Abductions", a book I rather dislike myself. Mack's sees the abduction experiences as somehow positive, despite the bizarre abuse reported by the abductees. (A similar attitude is taken by Colin Wilson in "Alien Dawn".) Upton has a point here: *if* the abduction experiences are real - something Mack did indeed believe - then they are obviously demonic in character. It's disturbing that New Age denial of evil and perhaps a certain kind of "positive thinking" made Mack deny this. After all, alien abductions are "evil" even if regarded as purely hallucinatory! Upton also has a point that many people in today's culture are impressed by almost anything that seems spiritual or paranormal, regardless of how trivial or even "demonic" the manifestations might be. Much of the New Age scene is surely based on this craving after paranormal experience of whatever kind. Anything to disprove materialism!

But what is the UFO phenomenon ultimately about, according to the author? Upton quotes Guénon, who apparently believed that the material world has been "solidified" by the collective consciousness of our materialist civilization. However, at the end of our cosmic cycle, the great wall separating our world from the supernatural realms will crack. However, since modernity is preoccupied with "quantity" and the lower, the walls will crack beneath us rather than above us, making it possible for all kinds of demonic creatures and influences to flood our level of reality. Indeed, the walls are cracking in large parts because a growing number of people actively seek to conjure up the "Jinns". Another feature of modern civilization which makes us vulnerable to demonic deceptions is human cloning, which the author regards as an attempt to destroy the imago Dei in Man.

What it will ultimately lead to is less clear, but the author implies in his work that the apocalypse might be near. He quotes Seraphim Rose's book "Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future" at several points. (Rose was an American convert to Eastern Orthodox Christianity, but also a very controversial one even among his co-religionists.)

In plain English: UFOs are real, and the harbingers of the Anti-Christ.

"Cracks in the great wall" remind me in some ways of "Alien Identities" by Richard Thompson, a member of the ISKCON who also identifies many of the aliens with demonic beings, this time the Asuras from Hindu mythology, and also accuses them of preaching a phoney religion. The aliens, after all, don't seem to know about Krishna! However, it seems Thompson is less apocalyptic than Upton.

I recommend this book both to avid ufologists, and perhaps to students of comparative religion.

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