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The End of Eden: The Comet That Changed Civilization [Paperback]

Graham Phillips (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 9, 2007
Presents compelling evidence that civilizations worldwide became warlike and monotheistic after Earth passed through the tail of a comet in 1500 B.C.

• Explores the violent effect of debris from comet 12P/Pons-Brooks on peaceful cultures such as the Olmec of Mexico and the Megalithic people who built Stonehenge

• Shows how this comet’s appearance was taken as a significant religious event that still has repercussions today

In the year 2024, the comet 12P/Pons-Brooks is due to pass near Earth again for the first time in 3,500 years. In 1500 B.C., Earth passed through this comet’s tail, and in the decade following, cultures the world over began to exhibit significant aggressive tendencies. Civilizations in India, the Middle East, China, Japan, Europe, and Central America suddenly abandoned their peaceful ways and devoted themselves with uncharacteristic fervor to making war on their neighbors and fighting among themselves.

But this was not the only effect that is linked to this celestial event. Sudden outbreaks of monotheism--the worship of a single god, and a new idea at the time--occurred simultaneously in locales spread widely throughout the world. Most of these monotheistic religions represented their god symbolically as a circle with a series of lines extending below--resembling a simple drawing of a comet.

In The End of Eden, Graham Phillips chronicles the sudden shifts in social demeanor and religious philosophy that swept the world in the wake of 12P/Pons-Brooks. He argues that there is no other explanation for these changes other than the presence of this massive comet in the skies above Earth. He contends that debris in the comet’s tail contaminated the atmosphere with a chemical known to cause aggressive behavior, and that after little more than a decade, worldwide hostility abruptly abated. He also explores how the appearance of a celestial body that outshone the moon would have been interpreted as a significant religious event--the premier appearance of a powerful new god to supplant the deities previously worshipped around the world.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Graham Phillips argues persuasively that Earth encountered a massive comet 3,500 years ago around the time of the Exodus from Egypt. The object appeared twenty times larger than the full moon and was by far the largest comet sighting ever recorded by ancient historians. The worldwide consequences for mankind were devastating. Our own scientific research confirms that the author’s theory is completely credible.”
(Allen West, coauthor of The Cycle of Cosmic Catastrophes  )

“an extraordinary tour de force . . . ”
(Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince, authors of The Templar Revelation and The Sion Revelation )

“In an extraordinary tour de force, Graham Phillips pinpoints a major mystery with important implications for our understanding of the remote past and the origins of ancient religion. Painstakingly researched and soberly presented--but never less than eminently readable--this book provides an answer so explosive that it should instantly ensure itself a place among the great revelations of history.”
(Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince, authors of The Templar Revelation and The Sion Revelation )

“This is a very exciting and important book, which suggests a highly plausible reason why organized cruelty seems to have come into the world at a surprisingly late date. I believe Graham Phillips’s ideas are going to cause widespread controversy.”
(Colin Wilson, author of The Outsider and Atlantis and the Kingdom of the Neanderthals: 100,000 Years of Lost History )

"An intriguing 'must' new age collections will relish."
(The Midwest Book Review, Sept 2007 )

"The theory {Phillips] puts forth in The End of Eden is nothing short of paradigm-shattering, if true."
(Fate, Sep 2007 )

"The material in this work is well-organized. The author's style is very readable and accessible to non-experts. For those wishing to delve deeper into source materials, there are excellent endnotes and a full bibliographpy." (
Jennifer Hoskins, New Dawn, Mar/Apr 2009
)

From the Back Cover

ANCIENT MYSTERIES / EARTH CHANGES

“Graham Phillips argues persuasively that Earth encountered a massive comet 3,500 years ago around the time of the Exodus from Egypt. The object appeared twenty times larger than the full moon and was by far the largest comet sighting ever recorded by ancient historians. The worldwide consequences for mankind were devastating. Our own scientific research confirms that the author’s theory is completely credible.”
--Allen West, coauthor of The Cycle of Cosmic Catastrophes

“an extraordinary tour de force . . . ”
--Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince, authors of The Templar Revelation and The Sion Revelation

In the year 2024, the comet 12P/Pons-Brooks is due to pass near Earth again for the first time in 3,500 years. In 1500 B.C., Earth passed through this comet’s tail, and in the decade following, cultures the world over began to exhibit significant aggressive tendencies. Civilizations in India, the Middle East, China, Japan, Europe, and Central America suddenly abandoned their peaceful ways and devoted themselves with uncharacteristic fervor to making war on their neighbors and fighting among themselves.

But this was not the only effect that is linked to this celestial event. Sudden outbreaks of monotheism--the worship of a single god, a new idea at the time--occurred simultaneously in locales spread widely throughout the world. Most of these monotheistic religions represented their god symbolically as a circle with a series of lines extending below--resembling a simple drawing of a comet.

In The End of Eden, Graham Phillips chronicles the sudden shifts in social demeanor and religious philosophy that swept the world in the wake of 12P/Pons-Brooks. He argues that there is no other explanation for these changes other than the presence of this massive comet in the skies above Earth. He contends that debris in the comet’s tail contaminated the atmosphere with a chemical known to cause aggressive behavior, and that after little more than a decade, worldwide hostility abruptly abated. He also explores how the appearance of a celestial body that outshone the moon would have been interpreted as a significant religious event--the premier appearance of a powerful new god to supplant the deities previously worshipped around the world.

GRAHAM PHILLIPS is the author of The Templars and the Ark of the Covenant and Atlantis and the Ten Plagues of Egypt. He lives in England.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Bear & Company (June 9, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1591430690
  • ISBN-13: 978-1591430698
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,205,387 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.0 out of 5 stars Another look at how monotheism started, January 7, 2012
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This review is from: The End of Eden: The Comet That Changed Civilization (Paperback)
Graham Phillips is always an interesting read no matter what the subject. This time he delves into the idea a comet hit the Earth around 1450 BC causing war, famine etc. He also states it was the cause of monotheism, which seems to me to be more significant than what the comet allegedly did to humanity.

Mr Phillips does write about the early starts of civilization and how peaceful everyone was for the most part. He then states during the time of around 1450 BC. all hell broke loose as many countries went to war against each other on a massive scale. He also looks at the writings of the day and many reported a large disk like object in the sky.

Mr Phillips then goes on to discuss the cults built around said object such as the Cult of Ir and the Aten of ancient Egypt which became popular around the same time. Atenism was the first form of monotheism and that became what is now Judaism. Of course, Christianity and Islam are offshoots of the belief system.

This is interesting stuff, and much of it is speculation. I do think Atenism did start monotheism and Judaism itself, but the author contradicts his earlier works where he claimed Atenism came after Judaism. I guess this is a work in progress, and it is fun to follow how he gets his conclusions.

There really isn't anything shocking revealed in this book as the events written about were recorded. It also is interesting to think Christianity ultimately got its start from a comet getting too close to Earth 3500 years ago.
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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Comet that Brought About An End of Eden, February 16, 2008
This review is from: The End of Eden: The Comet That Changed Civilization (Paperback)
I have brought this book by Graham Phillips, out of curiosity as well to further study the subject of and the history of the comets, and an interesting theory of this book caught my attention as I became quite skeptical. The choice for the title, "End of Eden," reflected the whole thesis of this book as initially the comet of 1486 BC brought about a major change from peaceful/egalitarian to violent/aggressiveness societies.

This interesting work discussed the shifts in the social institutions/orders as coincided with the appearance of the comet, namely 12P/Pons-Brooks. It is stressed that Earth has passed through the comet's tail or the meteoroid stream in the past as ancient human beings became exposed to certain chemical (i.e., vasopressin), which triggered the mass aggressive tendencies. Before the appearance of the comet, the civilizations (Megalithic, pre-Olmec, Mehrgarh, etc.) were very peaceful egalitarian societies and after the comet's appearance, these mentioned civilizations changed in a massive scale and revealed their violent/aggressive tendencies, and it also brought about the birth of the monotheism. He proposed that the mentioned comet was the common cause of such major shift in our history.

While I was impressed with his presentation of historical researches to explain the evidence behind the pre-written historic societies before and after the passing of the comet in 1486 BC, I am not quite sure if the Phillips' theory of the number of ancient civilizations as being remarkably peaceful as factual. There were histories of violence, war, death, and aggressiveness having been occurred numerous times and long before the passing of comet in 1500s BC.

Also, while the author brings a good and important point about the cosmic event having such an impact on the human societies in the past as it was taken in a similar approach as Immanuel Velikovsky did in his Worlds in Collision, as Richard Firestone did in his The Cycle of Cosmic Catastrophes: How a Stone-Age Comet Changed the Course of World Culture, and as Mike Baillie did in his New Light on the Black Death, I would question about the chemicals from the comet (such as vasopressin) that triggered the aggressiveness in human beings. An epidemic of mass aggression as occurred in 1500s BC can be as a result of having seen the passing comet in the sky, but it is highly uncertain if it was only caused by the chemicals like vasopressin from the comet's ion tail. If this was true, not only would we face a possible plague from the comet impact, but we would have people killing other people on our hands as well. I think the chemicals/aggression/comet equation may require more scientific research as part of this aspect of the theory.

However, overall, I think this work presents an interesting look at the affects of the comet on the ancient civilizations and how imagery of the comet was depicted in the historical records (such as monuments, ancient texts, mythology, hieroglyphics, etc.). This book is a very readable and well-written, with just close to 200 pages, fourteen chapters and six pages worth of bibliography.

It is certainly the book that I could not put down as it was very intriguing to read, and I would surely recommend it.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Exciting Idea and Explanation, (but not proven), October 23, 2008
This review is from: The End of Eden: The Comet That Changed Civilization (Paperback)
The book gets off to a slow start, since it isn't immediately apparent what megalithic construction has to do with comets, or their affect on civilization. However, the author uses historical and archeological research to establish that a number of societies around the globe had experienced lengthy periods of relative peace until they were simultaneously shaken by episodes of extreme irrational violence.

With that fairly well established, the author searches for and finds a significant incident in the near passage of an extremely large bright comet around the year 1486 B.C. Although the mechanism that he proposes of how this comet induced our ancestors to sudden violence, is a bit of a stretch, and without any substantial proof, the timing does seem to be far beyond coincidental. Astrologically, comets are generally thought to be harbingers of social upheaval and disaster. Perhaps this comet did have some effect to contribute to that association.

But for me, the most valuable contribution the book makes to my understanding of history, is the development of monotheism (again attributed to the comet), and the explanations of the biblical story of Exodus and the explosion of the volcanic island of Thera / Santorini in the Mediterannean just before the plagues affected Egypt and the enslaved Jews. While the author does not succeed at proving his thesis, he certainly makes a very strong case for the event and its consequences. And for providing so much well researched and reasoned food for though, I am very grateful.
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