
Further, I wasn't much impressed by the claims advanced by Temple in his attempt to represent to Dogon, nor in his attempt to show how they migrated via Egypt to their current habitations. His reason for imagining such?: that a people in southern Chad, the Dogon, knew things about the trinary Sirius system that no one else did, things subsequently confirmed by contemporary astrophysics.įrom other sources I've noted that this claim is contested. Temple's thesis is that amphibians from the Sirius star system visited Earth and imparted some information, possibly to the Egyptians, possibly to a culture antedating Egypt or Sumer, approximately 7000+ years ago. and was disappointed upon finishing its critical apparatus and beginning its first part. Excited by my purchase I began to read it immediately. I found the latter recently at the Amarynth Bookstore in Evanston. The Sirius Mystery (excerpt from UFOs and Outer Space Mysteries), a skeptical analysis by James Oberg.I've long kept my eye out for Hamlet's Mill and The Sirius Mystery, both books being often referred to in the UFO literature.THE SIRIUS MYSTERY: ANSWERING THE CRITICS.

She cites The Sirius Mystery's description of the Dogon people's knowledge and suggests it is possible that Reiki may also be of extraterrestrial origin. That's obviously why The Sirius Mystery is available on Temple's site (which is, of course, suppressed and online at the same time), Amazon, and Barnes & Noble.īarbara Weber Ray, in The 'Reiki' Factor in The Radiance Technique, claims Reiki is very ancient and goes back thousands of years. Temple has claimed that various government agencies from around the world are trying to suppress his works.

Showing these titles is somewhat like a scientist proudly advertising the fact that they're a member of National Geographic.

Also open to anyone willing to pay the entry fee.

