This dissertation argues that human beings possess three latent capacities — biological longevity extension, consciousness projection beyond the body, and deliberate navigation of the death transition — that were operational in prior civilizational peaks and are encoded as technical curricula in at least six independent ancient traditions. The loss of these capacities is not evolutionary but cyclical, driven by the electromagnetic oscillation of the ~25,920-year precessional cycle (the Yuga cycle of Vedic cosmology), which periodically collapses the field conditions that make these capacities natural. The argument assembles six converging lines of evidence: (1) the Emerald Tablets and cognate Hermetic literature as technical documentation of three specific human capabilities; (2) six geographically independent traditions — Egyptian-Hermetic, Vedic-Yogic, Tibetan Buddhist, Taoist, Kabbalistic-Merkavah, and Greco-Orphic — preserving structurally identical three-part curricula, constituting independent corroboration; (3) the binary/ternary stellar mechanism (Sol–Sirius–companion) as the astronomical explanation for cyclical forgetting; (4) the chromosome 2 telomere-to-telomere fusion (~900,000 years BP) as hard genomic evidence that a prior civilization possessed genetic engineering sophistication exceeding our own; (5) modern experimental validation from Project Stargate, telomerase research, near-death studies, and group coherence experiments; and (6) the current ascending phase of the Yuga cycle as generating testable predictions for the progressive recovery of these capacities. The synthesis proposes that the ‘gods’ of mythology were Satya Yuga humans operating in electromagnetic conditions that supported what we now classify as supernatural, and that the curricula they left encode reproducible technologies for recovering these capacities as conditions permit.
Erik Hoekstra (Fri,) studied this question.