Wednesday, January 28, 2009

The End of the World?



I tend to take apocalyptic predictions with a grain of salt.

When I was in college, I was fascinated by a film I saw on cable about the predictions of Nostradamus. It was narrated by Orson Welles, and it dealt with the interpretations many scholars had made about Nostradamus' predictions for the future. (The title was "The Man Who Saw Tomorrow.")

In the film, Nostradamus (who died in the 16th century) was said to have predicted such things as:
  • The French Revolution in the 18th century;

  • the American Revolution, also in the 18th century;

  • the assassinations of Presidents Lincoln and Kennedy;

  • the assassination of presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy;

  • the rise to power of Hitler and World War II, as well as the first uses of the atomic bomb; and

  • the Islamic Revolution in Iran.
The film was made in the early 1980s. Welles, who died in 1985, suggested in the film that Nostradamus' predictions pointed to, among other things, a major earthquake in Los Angeles in May 1988. That never happened, although a major earthquake did strike in San Francisco the following year, and Los Angeles was the victim of an earthquake in 1994.

Welles also said the predictions suggested that a "third antichrist" (the first two were Napoleon and Hitler) would rise to power in the Middle East and would start a third world war. Some people have suggested that this third antichrist is Osama bin Laden, but the war in Afghanistan — so far — hardly rises to the level of either of the first two world wars.

Nevertheless, the film provoked some intriguing discussions between my friends and myself. So did the interpretation of the prediction of when the world would come to an end — late in the 38th century.

None of us will still be here nearly 1,800 years from now, so we won't be able to confirm whether Nostradmus was right.

Welles, who had a reputation for accepting just about any work that would provide him with funds to support endeavors he really believed in, seems to have rejected most, if not all, of the conclusions in the film. At the time he made "The Man Who Saw Tomorrow," Welles reportedly was interested in making an extended videotape of his 1942 film "The Magnificent Ambersons" — these days, it would be called a "director's cut." Perhaps that was his motivation for making the film.

"One might as well make predictions based on random passages from the phone book," he once told Merv Griffin.

But others have predicted a date for the end of the world that is much closer — Dec. 21, 2012. That is the date that allegedly was forecast by the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar, which was used by the Mayan civilization.

And, whether 2012 will be apocalyptic or not, several writers have penned books suggesting that all kinds of things will happen that year — the collision of an asteroid or comet with the earth; a shift of consciousness; all kinds of upheaval.

Now, a new film, called simply "2012," is going to be released later this year.

I learned many things when I was in college. After I saw "The Man Who Saw Tomorrow," I was inspired to buy a couple of books on Nostradamus' predictions. And I remember asking the father of my high school girlfriend, who was a philosophy professor, what he knew of Nostradamus and what he thought of the predictions. At the time, I was disappointed when he merely chuckled and said he didn't think much of it.

I still have those books, and they make for interesting reading, but I like to think that I've matured in my thinking since I received my bachelor's degree. And I'm not inclined to think that Nostradamus' predictions have any more constructive information to reveal about the future than I am about the "Book of Revelation" in the Bible — although there are certainly a lot of people in the world who believe in that.

The fact is there are still people who do believe that sort of thing and need little encouragement to eagerly embrace it. And one of the things I've learned in my life is that there are always other people who are anxious to exploit this kind of thing, whether for their own pleasure or profit or out of malice or whatever.

I recall that, almost immediately after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, someone began circulating an e-mail message that claimed that Nostradamus had predicted those events. My own brother sent me an e-mail and asked me if there was anything to it. He knew I had read these books about Nostradamus' predictions, and he felt I would be a good source for accurate information.

I reported to him — and I later confirmed, by re-reading the material — that the e-mail in question appeared to have combined phrases from separate "quatrains," which gave it the sound of authenticity. But I found no evidence that Nostradamus ever wrote a prediction that forecast the attacks.

Now, that doesn't mean that there aren't legitimate threats to the planet that should concern us all. Former Vice President Al Gore, for example, has warned people of the dangers of global warming. He has been ridiculed for it in some quarters, but he's received some support for his hypothesis in others.

And the new president has been encouraging moves toward energy independence, in part to help curb global warming, whether it is real or merely perceived. Even if global warming does not exist, as some people have suggested, surely we will all benefit from finding new fuel sources that make the air cleaner and lessen our dependence on foreign suppliers.

If there was a part of Welles' narration that was a reflection of his actual beliefs, it was his observation that man holds in his own hands the keys to his fate.

We may not have the technology to prevent a collision between our planet and an asteroid.

But we can control the course of events here on earth.

4 comments:

Todd Laurence said...

"But we can control the course of events here on earth".????

In 1558., Nostradamus,
writing to King Henry, mentions the Chaldean
Alphabet, (numerology).
This system produced
extraordinary results, which
were verified as precognitions, by senior
researchers at Princeton
University.

Highlights here:

http://www.webspawner.com/users/cosmic/

Chaldean numerology:
http://www.crystalinks.com/numerology.html

The numerology system also
points me to an appropriate
quatrain, that I interpreted
as a direct reference to my
dream experience of 10/10/1988.

Century 5 #53....

"The law of the Sun, (a star) contending with Venus,
(the feminine) appropriates
the spirit of Prophecy. Neither the one nor the other will be understood.
The law of the Great Messiah
will hold, (come?) through
a Star, (sun)."

Greater details in google search-under: Kochab,1080

"numomathematics"
New York

David Goodloe said...

Todd,

Thanks for your comments.

Perhaps I should have said, "we SHOULD BE ABLE TO control the events here on earth."

Mike said...

Whether or not you can believe in Nostradamus's predictions, I would just like to mention that I love that movie! I don't even know why. Maybe it was that Ol' Orson read the material with such drama, but if it is on, I will watch it LMAO

David Goodloe said...

Otin,

I'll watch it, too. If you find out that it is going to be shown, let me know, will you?

I can't say I believe Nostradamus was a prophet, but he sure was an entertaining writer!