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Old 07-04-2003, 03:55 PM   #1
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Default Aliens Visit California!

Crop circles show up in the Bay area's back yard. New Agers have been visiting and claim all sorts of weird feelings. I thought the cat was out of the bag on these hoaxes -- ?
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Old 07-04-2003, 05:46 PM   #2
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Those people in California need to go check out the Circlemakers website and see what some professional crop circle makers can do!!
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Old 07-05-2003, 05:35 PM   #3
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Screw aliens visiting California. I want to hear about some actual humans going to California.
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Old 07-07-2003, 09:13 AM   #4
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Screw aliens visiting California. I want to hear about some actual humans going to California.
Like, eeeewwww! There goes the neighborhood...

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Old 07-09-2003, 06:38 AM   #5
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LA is filled with aliens.
 
Old 07-09-2003, 11:06 PM   #6
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Screw aliens visiting California. I want to hear about some actual humans going to California.
I'm human, and I lived in Walnut Creek, California for about a year.
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Old 07-12-2003, 10:44 AM   #7
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The aliens 'fess up
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Old 07-14-2003, 10:42 PM   #8
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Default Thought for the night: crop circles as an illustration of memetic selection and the s

Teenagers. Yep. Y'know, I don't think I ever had that much fun when I was that age.

Fascinating, too, I gotta note, that the believers still believe. In their judgement, apparently, the idea a coupla playful kids with boards might have done this is somehow more farfetched than aliens who, I have to suppose, must really hate wheat farmers.

Anyway: I threw together the following short essay the night that story hit the newswire:

Thought for the night: crop circles as an illustration of memetic selection and the spread of religion

A funny thing happened to me the other day: I went looking for the truth, and had one hell of a time finding it.

And I even knew the title of the book wherein it lay.

The book in question was Round in Circles, by one Jim Schnabel. The occasion of my looking was the surfacing of media stories of crop circles in a California wheat field, just a few days ago (as I'm writing this, in the summer of 2003).

The stories evoked some puzzlement on my part. They described "true believers, visionaries, psychics and people in purple robes" lying down in the circles, convinced there was some confluence of healing energies emanating from the flattened stems ( see
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...03/CIRCLES.TMP ).

This puzzled me principally because, in my innocence, I didn't see how anyone (or, at east, anyone not heavily medicated) could believe such a thing in 2003. A card-carrying skeptic, I knew of the Schnabel work -- an apparently delightfully funny 1994 work in which Schnabel, a Washington Post reporter, does affectionate portraits of the cult of circle believers, and, critically, interviews the two British gentlemen -- Doug Bower and Dave Chorley -- who almost certainly started the whole deal in the late 1970s, when, after a few pints in the local pub, they took it into their heads to make it look like a flying saucer had landed in a nearby wheat field, using boards and lengths of rope.

After a few years of growing interest in the circles from UFO and new age types and the media, and copycat circles cropping up (if you'll pardon the pun) all around the globe, Bower and Chorley, fearing they'd created a monster, and tiring of the sustained nocturnal activity, went public. Schnabel wrote a book, and you'd think (or, I suppose, I'd have thought, in my innocence of the work of certain sociologists who've seen this sort of thing before) that would have been the end of it. Sure, you'd get the odd tinfoil hat case who was convinced Bower and Chorley confessed as some part of a vast conspiracy, but otherwise, shouldn't most of the crazies have gone home about then, maybe moved on to posing in white robes down the mountain from Palomar or something?

Apparently not, or not particularly. Flash forward to 2003. I read the California story, and, bemusedly, go looking for the Schnabel book. I type "Crop circles" and "Round in Circles" into a search engine...

And here we fall into madness. Even knowing what I'm looking for, I can't easily find it.

There are so many, many pages by the folk convinced the circles are made by invisible aliens, mysterious healing energy vortices, and so on, that Schnabel's little gem of a work is lost in the noise. I find it, eventually, but interestingly, the review, though positive, doesn't even mention Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, nor the reasonable conclusion to which Schnabel came -- that these were hoaxes, conceived, actually, innocently (and humourously) enough. but hoaxes all the same. And the review is mixed in amongst pages and pages of considerably more credulous works -- the circles as messages from aliens, the divine geometry of the circles, and so on.

Stop for a moment, imagine what this means. Suppose you're an innocent in the world of crop circles. Never really heard about them. Someone mentions them, and what a fascinating mystery they are. You go to the Internet (yeah, okay, probably your first mistake), and do a search. And find the following paragraph prominently features:

"Although there are many theories as to their creation, none have been able to explain satisfactorily exactly how the circles are made. But, perhaps some of the most persuasive evidence comes in the form of video taped footage showing small bright balls of white light in and around the crop circles. Many of these lights have been filmed in broad daylight and the objects seem to move with purpose and intelligence, could this hint at a possible link between these balls of light and the formation of crop circles?" (
from http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/a...duction98.html )

None have been able to explain. Indeed. Apparently, no, boards (and, occasionally, lawn rollers) and rope, Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, and a small tribe of bemused and mischievous imitators, aren't ripe for mention on the first page. Or, possibly, the authors of this site have never actually read nor heard of Schnabel (to be fair, I didn't exhaustively work through it to determine this, but it's not as if it's unlikely they missed it, given the glut of everything else out there). In any case, the innocent in the world of crop circles may well assume: well, there is no explanation yet. How fascinating. What a mystery... Aliens, maybe. Sure seems to need some kind of miraculous explanation.

Now you might, if you're a skeptical sort, and a pessimistic sort, given to dwelling on the endless gullibility of the human species, take this as a somewhat depressing commentary. And on a level, I suppose I do. But I also really have to say: as a dimension to another problem altogether, I think this phenomenon is actually entirely fascinating, and quite illuminating.

Here's the thing: I think we're looking here at a rather unusually clear-cut case of what can reasonably called memetic selection, and one probably not unlike what you might see near the birth of a miraculous religion.

Meme theory's a bit of a new idea itself, but broadly speaking (I'll keep this short; most of you have probably already heard this), a meme is a self-replicating entity that lives in the human brain -- an idea, a snatch of a melody, anything that can be passed on. Religions, scientific theories, cults, and superstitions are all either memes or meme complexes -- sets of memes that function together, and usually, travel as a group because they tend to reinforce each other.

Memes and meme complexes undergo natural selection and evolution, like all self-reproducing entities. Features of the meme and of its environment do or do not work well together, and it reproduces at a better or worse rate than its competitors, accordingly.

Okay. Thus endeth the meme lesson. Assuming most of you have heard all this before anyway.

This is interesting, I'd say, in this case, (and as I keep foreshadowing), because it seems to me, in my innocent Google search, I may have just witnessed a phenomenon that shines some light on the birth of the various flavours of religious belief that trade in the miraculous.

In this particular case of memetic selection, it would appear that the fantastical, for whatever reason, confers selective advantage. This may or may not generally be the case (there may be more skeptical ages, and questions on which people are more inclined to be skeptical); it would appear, however, it is here. The folk interested in this stuff tend not to notice, nor to be interested in, the clearly more parsimonious 'hoax' explanation. So, the less fantastical explanation is at a disadvantage. It doesn't get passed on. The book doesn't get bought, doesn't get reviewed, and doesn't get reprinted.

Yes, you may have heard of this (or even noticed this) phenomenon before. Believe Dawkins mentioned it (if memory serves) in the passage in which he coined the term (in The Selfish Gene) at one point. Just thought I'd bring this instance to your attention, however, as my recent experience brought it to mine.

Getting to the birth of religions: consider, of course, the historical possibilities, and the evolution in ideas that can occur with time, particularly in oral traditions, where the 'genetic drift' in the form of a meme is probably somewhat accelerated, and prior to the printing press, where multiple copies of a work contain multiple errors, and in scholastic cultures where the mass of believers do not read, or are not allowed to read, and interpretation occurs within almost 'allopatrically' isolated ecclesiastic branches.

With regard to the birth of religions, let's consider a prominent example (and I hope the Christians will forgive me for picking on them in particular, but I know their stories better than most of the others, and believe I can reasonably expect from what I'm reading around here that they also will act as a common reference among most readers of these boards). So it's around two thousand years ago. The followers of a probably basically decent street preacher/Essene/rabble rouser who's just managed to get himself done in by the military empire currently knocking heads (apparently at the behest of the local clergy, who were finding he was hurting their box office) are consoling themselves, over some warm red wine. It becomes fashionable among them to comment that really, old Jesu is still with us, in spirit; he's not dead, really.

A few years later, followers of the surviving movement are not so much repeating this presence is one "in spirit" any more. And he's not dead shifts to he didn't die; it didn't quite take, not that those Romans didn't give it a try. They're thinking it's a bit more concrete than before. Inward, emotional, and fondly remembered perceptions, of the absent preacher's presence become understood as being a bit more physical. Again, it's a mix of alleles, meme-wise; there are still people around saying, no, he wasn't actually *here* here, but we felt like he was; but as their story is a bit less interesting in another environment where the fantastical, for whatever reason, travels well, it doesn't get passed along so frequently.

There are other reasons than just that it's fantastical, that might promote the spread of such versions of the story as well. Comparative religion types have previously noted the correspondences between many of the major religions, borrowed elements, so on. The Christian story does bear some interesting resemblances (or at least apparently; as this is idle musing, not so much a scholarly article; I'm not going to go looking for footnotes right about now) to the Isis/Osiris myths; gods that sacrifice themselves and return from the dead would seem to have been something of a tradition. Again, you can imagine reasons, mechanisms that would have fused the tradition with the younger, growing story -- adherents of both systems unconcerned to keep them particularly separate; we still often hear the 'it's all the same god' ecumenism stuff attempting to bridge traditions today. And leaning on its now archetypal, familiar quality, its tendency to spread grows yet again.

Note also that some such apparent shifts in interpretation are rather unambiguously recorded in the now canonical versions of the texts in use at present day; scholars have previously commented on the rather strong suggestions in the text that the alleged messiah was talking about a rather imminent set of events when he talked about the coming paradise; when this is believed by the textual analysis people to have worked its way into the stories, I'm not so sure, but note that interpretation-wise, regardless of when it got written down, what it is popularly supposed to have meant has rather clearly changed since. Again, quite plausibly, it evolved. The promise has some currency if it's still an open offer, adds an attraction to this particular meme complex; offers something to look forward to. Those who treat it this way get repeated. Those who don't aren't quite so likely to have their comment passed along.

Wild conjecture, of course. But just this evening's odd thought. Take it as my two cents worth.

-- AJM, 2003, 2003 July 7

See also:

Crop circles as guerilla art: http://www.circlemakers.org/case_history.html

Susan Blackmore, The Meme Machine, Oxford, 2000 (excerpt at http://www.memes.org.uk/extracts/SBOct1998Ch1.html)

Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene, Oxford, 1990
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