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The Origin of Man
and the Structure of Heaven
Cornelis J. DeMooy, Ph.D.
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Price: $14.95
Perfect Bound | 152 pages
ISBN: 978-0-615-15844-0 |
Summary
The origin of the human race from its beginnings as microbes several billion years ago until the present time took quite a different path according to scientific literature from that recorded in ancient Oriental philosophy. Investigation shows that both, science and philosophy, missed important aspects of the development process. Sciences ignored the contribution of paranormal phenomena in the explanation of the laws of nature. Ancient Oriental philosophy did the opposite by underestimating the importance of the role of physical life forms. It divided the progress of human development from start to finish into seven consecutive cycles or Rounds, the first half of which was imagined in spiritual rather than physical form.
The book shows the need for correction of consecutive Rounds into activity in parallel universes only on of which is of physical nature. This view involves seen as well as unseen worlds. It can explain previously inexplicable events as the natural phenomena they really are. It affects physical and spiritual concepts of life and spreads deeply into religious beliefs. It modifies human understanding of life for the better. It is found that close interpretation of Jesus' teachings already included some of these concepts two thousand years ago. They now take on a long overdue new dimension. Jesus and his disciples accepted reincarnation as a normal phenomenon.
Improved understanding of the structure of heaven can drastically change religious practices all over the world. It will bring various different religions closer together. This is exactly what continued evolution of mankind needs at this time.
About the Author
Dr. Cornelis DeMooy was born in the Netherlands, and educated at the State University of Agricultural Sciences there, and Iowa State University.
From his early teenage years he was fascinated by the mystery of the origin of life on Earth and studied the subject from a western scientific as well as an ancient eastern philosophic point of view. He spent most of his working life lecturing and publishing in earth sciences. He traveled widely, dealing with problems of agricultural development in various parts of the world. In the process he maintained close contact with people in Oriental philosophy. Science and philosophy represented two different worlds which could be brought together. An opportunity would present itself for that to happen.
The sciences today are more inclined to include factors of the unknown world into their theories than they were before. It has been proven that human thought can affect the outcome of scientific experiments. Now is the time to unify the laws of sciences of the material world and the astral spheres. Science, philosophy, and religion can be brought to agreement. All three will have to open up to the others and modify some of their fundamental concepts to allow the formation of a unified worldwide, science-related, spiritual philosophy.