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    Do You Know Who Are ‘Crypto-Terrestrials’?

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    A study by Harvard University’s Human Flourishing program has indicated some startling possibilities about aliens. It has gone as far as to suggest that aliens could be living underground in the earth, or in a base inside the moon.

    Conducted by Harvard University’s Tim Lomas and Brendan Case, along with Michael Paul Masters of the University of Montana; the study proposes that aliens, or Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP), could be from hidden intelligent beings on Earth, possibly living underground or on the moon, or disguised among us.

    The study admits that while the proposition is unconventional, the hypothesis aims to invite an open-minded investigation of alien sightings.

    The paper also discusses the possibility of the existence of a type of life known as ‘crypto-terrestrials’. They are beings speculated to be behind UFOs and alien abductions but are actually believed to be secretive races of earthly origin. The term was developed by Mac Tonnies, an American author and blogger.

    The paper says that Crypto-terrestrials come in at least four forms. There are the human crypto-terrestrials, remnants of an ancient, technologically advanced human civilization, possibly destroyed long ago but persisting in some form.

    Then, there are the hominids or theropod crypto terrestrials; theorized to be evolved terrestrial animals with advanced technology, possibly ape-like hominids or descendants of intelligent dinosaurs.

    The third type involves former extra-terrestrial or extra-tempest rial crypto-terrestrials, who arrived from elsewhere in the cosmos and hid themselves, possibly on the Moon.

    Another category, CTH 4, encompasses “magical Crypto-Terrestrials,” beings more akin to earthbound angels than aliens, such as fairies, elves and nymphs, interacting with humans in magical rather than technological ways.

    Established in 2016, Harvard’s Institute for Quantitative Social Science hosts the Human Flourishing Program, dedicated to investigating and advancing human flourishing and to “develop systematic approaches to the synthesis of knowledge across disciplines.”

    In this regard, there are certain postulations liked and well understood and absorbed by the people:

    If there were no God, and no purpose to existence, could we rationally expect a cosmic home like ours — a universe with a beginning, ultra-finely tuned for life, with living beings far surpassing in sophistication the most advanced human technology?

    Follow the science! It demonstrates that the digitally encoded information in DNA, like all such information (including in the programming for the computer you’re using right now), could have arisen from only one source: an intelligent agent, acting deliberately.

    Resisting the evidence of cosmic and biological design, some atheist scientists have retreated to desperate rationalizations — such as a purely speculative “multiverse,” or space aliens seeding life on Earth. All in vain, it’s an effort to avoid the conclusion of a transcendent creator.

    Some scientists, including Albert Einstein, fought hard against the idea of a Big Bang — that the universe burst into existence a finite time ago — until the scientific data became too overwhelming to fudge or deny anymore. “In the beginning,” indeed.

    Atheist thinkers insist there can be no peace between a scientific understanding of reality, and religious one. History, however, shows that the rise of science drew deeply on Judeo-Christian presuppositions, without which we would be both spiritually and scientifically far poorer.

    For a century Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution has been as unquestioned as Newton’s theory of gravity. But science never stops asking questions. Or at least it’s not supposed to. Are there questions about the origins of life that Darwinism can’t answer?

    There is indeed a rational and intellectually defensible strategy for maintaining a measure of optimism about the possibility of extra-terrestrial life.

    It has been read somewhere that King’s College philosophy Prof Tony Milligan worries that too many people believe that aliens have visited Earth — a fifth of UK citizens and a third of Americans, according to some research. As he helpfully details, political figures as prominent as Jimmy Carter, Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, and Chuck Schumer have deemed the matter worthy of investigation.

    Seeing belief in UFOs and alien visitations as a “a widespread societal problem,” he writes: “The belief is rising to the extent that politicians, at least in the US, feel they have to respond. The disclosure of information about claimed Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs rather than UFOs) from the Pentagon has got a lot of attention in the country.

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    Commencing teaching in his early twenties, Prof Aggarwal has diverse experience of great tenure in the top institutions not only as an educationist, administrator, editor, author but also promoting youth and its achievements through the nicest possible content framing. A revolutionary to the core, he is also keen to address the society around him for its betterment and growth on positive notes while imbibing the true team spirit the work force along with.

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