Washington County Enterprise-Leader

A few myths for thought

- Gene Linzey Reflection­s on Life S. Eugene Linzey is author, speaker, and mentor. Send comments and questions to masters. servant@cox.net. Visit his web site at www.genelinzey.com. The opinions expressed are those of the author..

I often hear about mythologic­al beliefs. Here are a few

Myth: No one has ever

left the atmosphere. Folks think Lunar landings, space stations, man orbiting the earth, and more, are fake. The fact that I worked on the space shuttle while working at Boeing doesn’t prove anything to them. People say, “Just because you worked on a machine doesn’t mean it went into space.”

People ask, “How can the flag be waving on the moon if there’s no atmosphere?” They don’t know the flag has internal contoured rods making it look as though it’s waving. Some of these folks think it’s all Hollywood.

Myth: Aliens have in

vaded the earth. This myth started out as a religious belief several thousand years before Jesus was born. Someday I’ll write a book about that. Orson Welles’ famous radio broadcast in 1938 titled, “War of the Worlds,” greatly expanded this theory, and the event in Roswell, N.M., in 1947 further propagated the myth. That story is too long for this article, but briefly stated: the craft or balloon was American. However, the Government accepted the “alien” story to cover up its secret operation. It’s no longer secret, but the myth has found a home in the minds of millions of people.

Myth: UFOs are seen

regularly. This is a tough one because there is no proof. It may be true that people are seeing something, and individual­s have given lengthy reports of what they call experience­s. But no photos have been taken, parts of crashed vehicles have been proven to be man-made, and we have no recordings of aliens talking. But the letters “UFO” is true because, indeed, whatever people saw has been unidentifi­ed.

Myth: UFO was seen

refueling at the sun. One report is that a spacecraft might have been seen refueling with solar plasma near the sun. This one is filled with pure speculatio­n: How does anyone know it was a spacecraft? How would anyone know it was refueling? What makes someone think the 2 million degree F radioactiv­e gases of a thermonucl­ear explosion can be used as a fuel?

Now, a little closer to home.

Myth: The earth is flat.

The basic rationale for a Christian is in the Bible. Scripture such as Job 37:2-3 sounds as though the earth is flat. “Keep listening to the thunder of his voice and the rumbling that comes from his mouth. Under the whole heaven he lets it go, and his lightning to the corners of the earth.”

Of course, the phrase “corners of the earth” means worldwide, but that doesn’t hold water for “flatearthe­rs.” They believe that pictures of the earth’s curvature taken from the space station, from the moon and from jets flying at high altitude are fake.

However, people in ancient times knew the earth is round. The Greeks knew it in 300 BC. Bartholome­w Columbus, the brother of Christophe­r Columbus, was a cartograph­er, and both of them taught that the earth was round. The myth is still popular, and thousands of people around the world have joined flat-earth societies. Of course, some have joined for the fun of it, but many are serious.

Myth: Evolution. Some folks think the concept of evolution (sometimes referred to as Darwinian Evolution) started with Charles Darwin in the 1830s. But it can be traced back to Anaximande­r of Miletus, a Greek philosophe­r around 575 BC, who thought all living organisms originated in water. But the concept of evolution is nonscienti­fic and has a scientific flaw. It is based on the idea that organic life evolved from inorganic minerals dissolved in water. But that is not possible and reveals that the entire evolutiona­ry school of thought has no scientific or practical foundation. However, it qualifies as a religion, and should be treated as such.

Myth: The Nebraska

Man. A tooth was found by a farmer in 1922. It was sent to scientists who already believed in the evolutiona­ry concept, and they readily agreed that it belonged to an anthropoid ape which, they decided, inhabited the Americas eons ago. The Nebraska Man was created by forming a figure that might use this tooth. Although in 1927 they realized it was the tooth of a pig, the evolutiona­ry-minded teaching profession continued using the Nebraska Man as an evolutiona­ry tool for years.

But today, people who can verify that the evolutiona­ry concept is neither true nor science, are often considered as conspiracy theorists.

I’m out of space. I’ll be back next week.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States