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THEAGENESIS: The Birth of the Goddess
From CAWeb
by Otter G'Zell
This paper represents the first published account of what has come
to be known as "The Gaea Hypothesis" (the name suggested
by novelist William Golding in 1972). It was the immediate result
of a visionary experience that Otter had on the night of September
6, 1970. This "revelation" was delivered in the form of
a sermon to the congregation of the Church of All Worlds on September
11, 1970. Subsequently, it was published as the lead article in
Green Egg "the journal of the Neo-Pagan movement" Vol.
V, No. 40 (July 1, 1971), republished in the first issue of The
Witches Broomstick magazine (Feb. 2, 1972), excerpted in Dr. Leo
Louis Martello's book, Witchcraft; The Old Religion (University
Books, Inc. 1973), and delivered as a keynote lecture at the Third
Annual Gnostic Aquarian Festival in Minneapolis, MN, Sept. 21, 1973.
This updated and annotated edition is being prepared for the California
Institute of Integral Studies' symposium on "Gaia Consciousness:
The Goddess & the Living Earth," April 6-10, 1988.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conceptualizations of Divinity vary from religion to religion,
with adherents of each faith misunderstanding, often grotesquely,
the nature of the Divine as understood by the members of other faiths.
Thus conservatives of a given religious system often tend to feel
that all other religions are "false" but their own, and
that other people all worship the Devil, while liberals will go
to the opposite extreme and contend that all religions essentially
worship the same Deity, under different guises and customs. Both
of these points of view grossly misrepresent the fundamental distinctions
among the various religions, and try to adapt alien world-views
to fit into their own frameworks of experience.
It may be said that all religions are "true," as indeed
are all sincerely held opinions, in the sense that personal reality
is necessarily subjective. In other words, what you believe to be
true, is true, by definition. A Voudoun death-curse is as real to
its victim, and as effective, as being "saved" is to a
Christian fundamentalist, or the kosher laws are to an Orthodox
Jew. A flat Earth, with the stars and planets revolving around it,
was as real to the medieval mind as our present globe and solar
system are to us. Hysteric paralysis and blindness are as real to
the sufferer as their organic counterparts. The snakes and bugs
of alcoholic and narcotic delirium are real to the addict, and so
is the fearful world of the paranoiac. From the standpoint of human
consciousness, there is no other reality than that which we experience,
and whatever we experience is therefore reality - therefore "true."
We can only distinguish the experience of the objective world from
those which lie entirely within our own minds when we compare notes
with other people and arrive thereby at a consensus of reality.
This consensus, however, is also subjective within the entire community,
and is also liable not to be synonymous with objective reality (as
in the case of the Geocentric cosmos). The question then arises,
"How can we know objective reality?" and the answer, of
course, is that we can't; not totally. However, we can arrive at
very close approximations of objective reality by careful applications
of the scientific method combined with creative insight, and by
refusing to fill in the gaps in our knowledge with blind "leaps
of faith."
Thus religions may be considered more or less objectively true
(while recognizing that they are all subjectively true) by evaluating
how much they depend on blind faith and belief over scientific understanding
(and recognizing that we only speak of belief in the absence of
knowledge; no one would say "I believe two plus two equals
four"); how much they depend on tradition and authority over
intellectual curiosity and honesty; how much (or how little) they
are able to accommodate new discoveries in science and how much
(or how little) these discoveries substantiate their theories and
world-views. These are the criteria for objective validation of
religious viewpoints. No subjective validation is needed (or even
possible).
Ancient tribal peoples - that is, Pagans - diversified though they
were, held among them certain common viewpoints. Among these were:
veneration of an Earth-Mother Goddess; animism and pantheism; identification
with a sacred region; seasonal celebrations; love-respect, awe and
veneration for Nature and Her mysteries; sensuality and sexuality
in worship; magic and myth; and a sense of humanity being a microcosm
corresponding to the macrocosm of all Nature. These insights, however,
were largely intuitive, as science had not yet progressed to the
point of being able to provide objective validation for what must
have seemed, to outsiders, to be mere superstition. Twentieth-century
Neo-Paganism, however, has applied itself and the science of its
era to that validation, and has discovered astounding implications.
A single cell develops physically into a human being by a process
of continuous division and subdivision into the myriad of cells
eventually required to comprise an adult body; groups of cells specializing
to become the various organs and tissues needed for full functioning
of the organism. Now, when a cell reproduces, the mother cell does
not remain intact, but actually becomes the two new daughter cells.
Since the same protoplasm is present in the daughter cells as was
in the mother cell, the two daughter cells still comprise but a
single organism; one living being. The original cell ceases to exist
in that form, but its life goes on in the continuous evolution of
the growing organism. Thus, the three trillion or so cells of the
adult human body continue to comprise a single living organism,
even though different cells may be highly specialized, and some
may even be mobile enough to travel independently around in the
collective body. No matter how complex the final form of the adult
organism, no matter how diversified its component cells, the same
thread of life of the original cell, the same protoplasm, continues
coursing through every cell in that body. Since the gametes, or
sex cells, are also included in this ultimate diversification of
a single original cell, the act of reproduction carries this same
thread on in the offspring, combined with the equivalent threat
of protoplasm from the other parent. Thus your children, while spatially
distinct from you, are in fact as much a part of your growing, evolving
organism as your blood cells (which can easily be removed and survive
independently of your collective body) or somatic cells (which can
also be extracted and grown in independent tissue cultures). Your
children are still "you" - your own living protoplasm
continues on in their cellularly-diversified bodies. And in your
children's children for all generations to come. All the cells in
all your descendants will still comprise but one living being.
Tracing our evolution back nearly four billion years, through mammals,
reptiles, amphibians, fish, and so on, we eventually wind up with
one single cell that was the ancestor of all life on Earth. Even
though there were undoubtedly many proto-cells formed in those ancient
seas [or clays, as is now thought [OZ, 1988]], the first one to
develop the capacity to reproduce would have quickly consumed all
the available free proteins and amino acids floating in the sea,
effectively preventing the development of any competitors. Cell
reproduction occurs at a fantastic geometric rate, which, unchecked,
would result in all the planet being buried beneath the progeny
of a single cell within months. Obviously, what checked this fantastic
reproductive potential was a limited food supply, which would have
included any not-yet-formed or newly-formed competitive cells. But
when this original mother cell reproduced itself, and continued
to do so for eons, some of its daughter cells mutating and evolving
into new forms, it still, as in the human body, continued to comprise
but a SINGLE total organism. When a cell divides and subdivides,
no matter how often, the same cellular material, the same protoplasm,
the same life, passes into the daughter cells, and the granddaughter
cells, and the great-granddaughter cells, forever. No matter how
often, or for how long this subdivision goes on, the aggregate total
of the new cells continues to comprise one single living organism!
[Note: Lewis Thomas, in Lives of a Cell, 1974, observes: "The
uniformity of the earth's life, more astonishing than its diversity,
is accountable by the high probability that we derived, originally,
from some single cell, fertilized in a bolt of lightning as the
Earth cooled. It is from the progeny of this parent cell that we
take our looks; we still share genes around, and the resemblance
of the enzymes of grasses to those of whales is a family resemblance."]
[Note: Science News "News of the Week," Jan. 16, 1988:
"Seekers of Ancestral Cell Debate New Data: A new, computerized
method of analyzing bacterial genes is stirring controversy among
biologists seeking to characterize the ancestral cell from which
all life evolved. The novel program predicts that all living things
evolved from a single-celled organism that had a penchant for living
in boiling sulfur springs. The prediction conflicts with the popular
notion that life began in a tepid primordial soup..." [SN,
Vol. 133, No. 3]]
Every amino acid (except glycine) found in the proteins of living
organisms can exist in two forms, each one the mirror image of the
other. Since they have the same spatial relationship as a pair of
gloves, one type is arbitrarily designated "right-handed"
(D, dextro) and the other "left-handed" (L, levo). The
two forms are identical in chemical composition and physical properties.
Were it not for the fact that they rotate a beam of polarized light
in opposite directions, they would be indistinguishable. Now, when
amino acids are synthesized in the laboratory, an equal amount of
D and L forms are produced. Moreover, NASA recently [1970] reported
the discovery of 17 different amino acids in a meteorite, with an
almost equal number of D and L forms. In any given cell, of course,
only one of these two variant forms can exist; either all the cell's
protein would contain D-acids, or they would all contain L-acids.
And when the cell divides, whichever form was contained in the mother
cell would be perpetuated in the daughter cells. If all life on
Earth did not originate with a single cell, we would expect to find
various creatures and plants with D-acids and others with L-acids.
However, this is not the case: it is an established biochemical
fact that all life on Earth contains only l-amino acids! The equivalent
D-acids are simply not found in any living organisms on this planet.
Therefore, it is a biological fact that all life on Earth comprises
one single living organism! Literally, we are all "One."
The blue whale and the redwood tree are not the largest living
organisms on Earth; the entire planetary biosphereis.
[Note: Dr. Leslie Orgel of the Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA, commenting
on origins of Life on Earth: "But the evidence that interests
us most...is the uniformity of all living systems on Earth today...If
life had arisen and evolved spontaneously here...it seems at least
possible that many very different forms of life would be competing
with each other. But in fact we know that all living things have
evolved from a single cell, which inhabited Earth about three or
four billion years ago - and there don't seem to be any traces of
any extinct competitors which arose in different ways..." The
implication was obvious. The first living cell, a single seed of
protoplasm, a single microscopic organism, might have replicated
itself billions and billions of times in short order. Its replicas
would adjust to warmth or cold, evolving accordingly. In the course
of time they would branch out along many different paths, and evolve
as enzymes, genes, insulin, hemoglobin; they would organize into
bone and muscles and organs and coordinate their work; they would
begin the beating of hearts, the pumping of lungs, the vibrations
of nerves, and ultimately, the flashes of thought. [In Search of
Ancient Mysteries by Alan and Sally Landsburg, 1974, Bantam.]]
Let us consider the following corollaries:
An organism is composed of many organs - more, obviously, in complex
organisms than in simple ones. As an embryo develops, groups of
cells specialize into each of the organs that the adult organism
will require. At very early stages in cell differentiation, unspecialized
cells can be moved from one part of the embryo to another, and the
transplanted cells will still develop into whatever organs are needed
in their new locations. Just so, the Planetary Organism (to which
I will hereby give the scientific name of "Terrebia")
needs various organs in order to function properly.
[Note: As is customary in scientific nomenclature for living species,
I based my name for the planetary organism on the Latin for "Earth
life." When, in 1972, James Lovelock independently came up
with the observation of the organic unity of all terrestrial life,
his friend, the novelist William Golding, suggested the name of
the ancient Greek Earth Goddess: "Gaia." Even though Greek
is customarily used only in designating extinct species, in this
case I yield primacy of the name to Golding, as I much prefer the
connotations thereof. But I will use the American spelling, "Gaea,"
to distinguish my development of the concept from Lovelock's. Henceforth
in this updated edition of my paper I will replace "Terrebia"
with "Gaea." [OZ, 1988]]
Continuing the analogy with the human body, each animal and plant
on Earth is the equivalent of a single cell in the vast body of
Gaea. Each biome, such as pine forest, coral reef, desert, prairie,
marsh, etc., complete with all its plants and animals, is the equivalent
of an organ in the body of our biospheric Being; sub-structures
and tissues consisting of types of plants and animals, such as trees,
insects, grasses, predators, grazing ungulates, etc. All the components
of a biome are essential to its proper functioning, and each biome
is essential to the proper functioning of Gaea. If some essential
elements of a biome are removed or destroyed, it may be possible
for relatively unspecialized "cells" of plants and animals
to differentiate out by adaptive radiation to become all the required
components. The most classic recent case of this is the radiation
of marsupials in Australia, following the demise of the dinosaurs,
to fill all the ecological niches occupied elsewhere by placentas
with creatures virtually identical in structure and habits with
their placental equivalents. Moreover, recent [as of 1970] papers
and books on the genetics of evolution, including Biophilosophy,
stress that modern Darwinian theory has abandoned the notion of
individuals determining the direction of the evolution of a species.
Rather, the entire species seems to migrate towards a fortuitous
ecological niche as if it had a sense of whither it needed to go.
If all the mutations in the direction of such a change are destroyed,
the species will produce more.
The non-living components of the planetary structure of the Earth
itself itself serve the developing organism if Gaea much as the
non-living components of our own bodies serve us. These components
are the Lithosphere, the Hydrosphere, and the Atmosphere. The Lithosphere,
the rock and mineral foundation of our planet, functions in the
body of Gaea much as the skeleton functions in the human body -
as foundation and structural support (like the Lithosphere, our
own skeleton is largely mineral). The Hydrosphere, the water of
oceans, lakes and rivers that covers three fifths of the surface
of the Earth, functions homologously with the plasma in the blood
of the human body, which, incidentally, has a composition very like
the water in those primeval seas wherein life first appeared. The
ocean tides may even be viewed as our planetary pulse, driven by
the heartbeat of our orbiting moon. The atmosphere serves the great
organism of Gaea much as it does us, as individual "cells"
- in a carbon-cycle respiratory process, involving breaking down
carbon dioxide into carbon and oxygen by plants and building carbon
and oxygen back up into carbon dioxide by animals.
[Note: The observations which led to Lovelock's formulation of
the Gaia Hypothesis were concerned with the Atmosphere, in the same
way that my own observations were of the Biosphere. Lovelock, an
atmospheric biochemist, analyzed and noted a remarkable homeostasis
of atmospheric composition and surface temperature over the past
three billion years, and concluded that this could only be attributed
to a biospheric regulatory mechanism.[OZ, 1988]]
What is the ultimate source of energy for Gaea - her "food?"
Sunlight, which, through photosynthesis in green plants, converts
materials of the Lithosphere, Hydrosphere and Atmosphere into the
materials of life: the Biosphere.
Now, it follows that if a biomic component occupies a particular
ecological niche in a given biome, it does so because it belongs
there and is necessary to the proper functioning of that biome,
and hence of Gaea. Further, if some plant or animal is missing from
a particular biome, it is probably because it doesn't belong there.
Now, everybody realizes that the human body will not function properly
if one removes, replaces or rearranges parts of it. You may survive
if your leg is amputated, but you certainly won't walk as well as
before. This same principle of coherency applies to Gaea, as we
are beginning to learn only too well. We cannot kill all the bison
in North America, import rabbits to Australia, clear cut or burn
off whole forests, or plow and plant the Great Plains with wheat
and corn without seriously disrupting the ecosystem. Remember the
dust bowl? Australia's plague of rabbits? Mississippi basin floods?
Recent drought in the Southwestern US? Gaea is a single living organism,
and her parts are not to be removed, replaced or rearranged without
consequence.
Just as in the human body the brain and nervous system is the last
organ to develop, so in Gaea the last biome to develop is the Noosphere,
composed of Earth's aggregate population of Homo Sapiens.
[Note: "In man," says Lovelock, Gaia has the equivalent
of a central nervous system and an awareness of herself and the
rest of the Universe. Through man, she has a rudimentary capacity,
capable of development, to anticipate and guard against threats
to her existence. For example, man can command just about enough
capacity to ward off a collision with a planetoid the size of Icarus.
Can it then be that in the course of man's evolution within Gaia
he has been acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to ensure
her survival?" ["The Quest for Gaia," New Scientist,
Feb. 6, 1975]]
What function does humanity, as the Noospheric organ, the planetary
"brain," perform? It would seem at the present stage of
evolution that the function of a biome of awareness would be to
act as steward of the planetary ecosystem. Humanity's purpose in
Gaea, our responsibility, is to see that her whole organism functions
at its highest potential and that none of her vital systems become
disrupted or impaired. We might judge the state of humanity's functioning
in the macrocosmic realm by evaluating our performance of this organic
responsibility.
[Note: Since writing the preceding paragraph back in 1970, I have
radically altered my perception of humanity as a kind of planetary
cerebral cortex, which function I am now firmly inclined to attribute
to the Great Whales. Apropos of this attribution, I am now even
more appalled than ever at humanity's near-extermination of these
vastly-brained leviathans, as I cannot avoid viewing it as a kind
of planetary lobotomy. I have developed this idea at some extent
in another paper, entitled "Mind Beneath the Silver Sky."
Regarding our own proper function, I have come to perceive us in
a far different role: that of a reproductive system. For it is not
true that the brain and nervous system is the last organ to develop
in an organism; the ultimate objective of a living system is to
reproduce itself, and the reproductive organs are the final product
of physical development, be it embryological or evolutionary. Maturation
essentially means achieving reproductive capability. I envision
our greater purpose, capability and destiny as agents of planetary
reproduction via extraterrestrial colonization and terraforming.
However, I still include an ancillary and continuing function of
ourselves as peripheral neurons and planetary stewards; after all,
we as humans need not die in childbirth, but ideally continue to
live long and productive lives beyond merely reproducing ourselves.
[OZ, 1988]]
When in the human body some cells start multiplying all out of
control and excreting toxins into the bloodstream, we have a cancer.
One of the ways cancer can be controlled is by radiation treatment
At this moment, humanity as a species is multiplying wildly out
of control and excreting vast quantities of deadly pollutants into
the air, water and soil, If our own cancerous population growth
is not halted - indeed, drastically reduced - our numbers and poisons
will severely cripple or kill our planetary organism, Gaea. Perhaps
nuclear war - a global "radiation treatment" - will be
needed... But it is still to be hoped that it is not to late for
us to wake up to our responsibility of stewardship.
[Note: In reading these words, 18 years later, I am appalled at
how casually I invoked nuclear holocaust as an antidote for the
cancer of our species. Studies on the "nuclear winter"
scenario, as well as the recent discoveries concerning asteroid/comet
impacts as agents of massive extinctions in the past, have severely
curtailed any prospect of Gaea's ability to survive a nuclear war.
She has her own devices for regulating overpopulation: plague, famine,
drought, flood, etc. Or we could save ourselves a lot of grief and
just decide not to have so many children...[OZ, 1988]]
Gaea is nearing maturity. All the physical ecological niches have
been filled, and the recently developed Noosphere now extends over
the entire globe. . . Projecting a bit, it would seem most reasonable
that Teilhard de Chardin was correct in his vision of an emerging
planetary consciousness, what he called the "Omega Point"
(The Phenomenon of Man) and Carlton Berenda calls "The First
Coming of God" (The New Genesis). The maturation of a Planetary
Biosphere requires the evolution of total telepathic union among
the "cells" of its Noosphere (its most intelligent species;
humanity). When such an intelligent species ultimately develops
telepathy to the extent that it eventually shares a single global
consciousness, a planetary mind awakens in the "brain"
(Noosphere) of the Biosphere.
[Note: "Lewis Thomas can readily see the worldwide community
of humans as a kind of giant brain, exchanging thoughts so rapidly
'that the brains of mankind often appear, functionally, to be undergoing
fusion.' With mankind as its "nervous system," the whole
earth becomes, in one of Thomas's highest flights of fancy, a breathing
organism of finely meshed parts, all growing together under the
"protective membrane" of the planet's own atmosphere."
[ "The Boswell of Organelles," Newsweek, June 24, 1974]]
This is our human destiny - our ultimate function in the organism
of Gaea.
[Please, gentle readers; forgive this hubris. I've outgrown it.
I consider that we could - and should - be participants in this
awakening of planetary consciousness, but I hardly believe any longer
in our exclusive claim to sentience on this planet! As I mentioned
earlier, I heartily do believe that whales, for instance, are way
ahead of us in this department. Actually, I think that the planetarization
of consciousness would, by its very nature, include "all creatures
great and small..."[OZ, 1988]]
And just as the brain in the human body is capable, via the conscious
mind, of controlling virtually everything that goes on in the body
and a good deal that goes on outside it, so a planetary consciousness
would be in complete control of virtually everything that goes on
in the planet - from earthquakes to rainfall to ice ages to mountain
building to hurricanes - and perhaps influence the rest of its local
stellar system as well.
[Note: Dane Rudhyar writes: "...mankind is to fulfill a definite
function in the total operation of this vast, yet closely integrated,
system of activities which we call the planet Earth - provided we
do not think of the Earth as merely a mass of matter. This function
appears to be to extract consciousness out of all the activities
within the Earth-field - a field which may extend at least to, and
perhaps in a sense include, the Moon." ["The Astrology
of Self-Actualization and the New Morality", pp. 24-25]]
At this point it becomes necessary to define Divinity:
Divinity is the highest level of aware consciousness accessible
to each living being, manifesting itself in the self-actualization
of that being. Thus we can truly say, "All that groks is God"
(Heinlein; Stranger in a Strange Land). Divinity is a cat being
fully feline, grass being grassy, and people being fully human.
Collective Divinity emerges when a number of people (a culture or
society) share enough values, beliefs and aspects of a common life-style
that they conceptualize a tribal God or Goddess, which takes on
the character (and the gender) of the dominant elements of that
culture. Thus the masculine God of the Western Monotheists (Jews,
Christians, Moslems) may be seen to have arisen out of the values,
ideals and principles of a nomadic, patriarchal culture - the ancient
Hebrews. Matrifocal agrarian cultures, on the other hand, personified
their values of fertility, sensuality, peace and the arts in the
conceptualization of Goddesses. As small tribes coalesced into states
and nations, their Gods and Goddesses battled for supremacy through
their respective devotees. In some circumstances, various tribal
divinities were joined peaceably (often through marriage) into a
polytheistic pantheon, being ranked in status as their followers'
respective influences determined. In other circumstances, one particularly
fanatic tribe was able to completely dominate others and eliminate
their own deities, elevating its God to the status of a solitary
ruler over all creation, and enforcing His worship upon the people,
usually upon pain of death. However, no matter to what rank a single
tribal deity may be exalted by its followers, it still could be
no other than a tribal divinity, existing only as an embodiment
of the values of that tribe. "Gods are only as strong as those
who believe in them think they are" (Alley Oop). When the planetary
consciousness of Gaea awakens, She too will be Divinity - but on
an entirely new level: the emergent deity Carlton Berenda postulates
in The New Genesis. Indeed, even though yet unawakened, the slumbering
subconscious [and dreaming?] mind of Gaea is experienced intuitively
by us all, and has been referred to instinctively by us as Mother
Earth, Mother Nature - The Goddess for whom She is well named. Indeed,
this intuitive conceptualization of feminine gender for our planetary
Divinity is scientifically valid, for biologically unisexual organisms
(such as amoebae or hydra) are always considered female; in the
act of reproduction they are referred to as mothers and their offspring
as daughters.
[Note: I came later to the conclusion that Gaea may have indeed
achieved consciousness in more ancient times, and that she was actually
"knocked unconscious" by the worldwide cataclysms and
attendant destruction of Her worshippers which ended the Bronze
Age and ushered in the Age of Iron around 1500 BCE. This hypothesis
is more fully developed in my 1977 research paper, "Cataclysm
and Consciousness - From the Golden Age to the Age of Iron."
[OZ, 1988]]
Thus we find that "God" is in reality Goddess, and that
our ancient Pagan ancestors had an intuitive understanding of what
we are now able to prove scientifically. Thus also we expose the
logical absurdity of a concept of cosmic Divinity in the masculine
gender. These few pages, however, have only been the briefest of
introductions to the implications of a discovery so vast that its
impact on the world's thinking will ultimately surpass the impact
of the discovery of the Heliocentric structure of the solar system.
This is the discovery that the entire Biosphere of the Earth comprises
a single living Organism. |