enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Aetherius Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aetherius_Society

    The theology of the Aetherius Society is regarded as firmly based in theosophy, [9][15][4][17] the Aetherius Society combines UFO claims, yoga, and ideas from various world religions, [2][3] notably Hinduism, Buddhism, and Christianity. [18][19] The society asserts itself as a plural or liberal religion, stating "nor does God favor people of ...

  3. George King (religious leader) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_King_(religious_leader)

    George King (January 23, 1919, Wellington, Shropshire – July 12, 1997, Santa Barbara, California) was a British author, esotericist, and spiritual figure who founded the Aetherius Society, a new religious movement, [ 1] during the mid-1950s.

  4. List of UFO religions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_UFO_religions

    Christopher Hugh Partridge writes in UFO Religions that J. Gordon Melton identifies the first UFO religion as the group "I AM" Activity, founded by Guy Ballard. [1] Partridge says it "can be seen as the obvious theosophical forerunner to UFO religions such as the Aetherius Society, and to the thought of UFO religionists such as George Adamski ...

  5. Holdstone Down - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holdstone_Down

    Geography. Location. United Kingdom. Holdstone Down, also known as Holdstone Hill, is a hill on the north coast of Devon, England. [2] It is 349 metres (1,145 ft) tall. [1] It can be reached via the South West Coast Path. [3] The Aetherius Society considers it to be one of its 19 holy mountains. [4] [5] [6]

  6. George King (author) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_King_(author)

    Contact Your Higher Self Through Yoga (1955) The Twelve Blessings (1962) The Nine Freedoms (1963) George King (January 23, 1919, Wellington, Shropshire – July 12, 1997, Santa Barbara, California) was a British author, esotericist, and spiritual figure who founded the Aetherius Society, a new religious movement, [ 1] during the mid-1950s.

  7. UFO religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_religion

    The Aetherius Society was founded in the United Kingdom in 1955. Its founder, George King, claimed to have been contacted telepathically by an alien intelligence called Aetherius, who represented an "Interplanetary Parliament". According to Aetherians, their society acts as a vehicle through which "Cosmic Transmissions of advanced metaphysical ...

  8. Mount Wakefield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Wakefield

    Mount Wakefield. Mount Wakefield is a mountain in Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park, South Island, New Zealand. It is 2,058 metres (6,752 ft) high. [1] The Mountain is named after Edward Gibbon Wakefield. [2] Māori named the slopes and fans of debris of the mountain kirikiri katata, kirikiri means stones or shingle; katata means split open.

  9. Raëlism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raëlism

    [15] Most other UFO religions, such as the Aetherius Society, Ashtar Command, and Heaven's Gate, use many of the beliefs of the late-19th-century religion Theosophy; Raëlism does not. [16] Raëlists have also been characterised as having a "belief in ufology", [17] but Raëlians often stress that they do not regard themselves as ufologists. [18]