
Like
you, the
Krell
forgot one
deadly
danger:
their own
subconscious
hate and
lust for
destruction.
The beast.
The
mindless
primitive.
Even the
Krell must
have
evolved
from that
beginning.
And so
those
mindless
beasts of
the
subconscious
had access
to a
machine
that could
never be
shut down.
The secret
devil of
every soul
on the
planet…all
set free
at once to
loot and
maim…and
take
revenge
and kill!
—MGM’s
Forbidden
Planet[i]
Some
of you may
recognize
the above
quote as a
conversation
from the
ending to
MGM’s
1956
science
fiction
film, Forbidden
Planet.
This cult
classic
movie
centers on
a rather
eccentric
but
brilliant
scientist
named Dr.
Edward
Morbius
(played by
Walter
Pidgeon)
and his
innocent
teenage
daughter
Altaira
(Anne
Francis).
Morbius is
the only
surviving
original
member of
a doomed
expedition
from earth
sent to
discover
whether
life
exists in
the Altair
solar
system.
Commander
John Adams
(Leslie
Nielsen)
leads a
rescue
mission to
Altair IV,
but his
team is
attacked
by an
unseen
“force”—the
same
monstrous
“force”
that
killed all
but
Morbius,
including
his wife (Altair’s
mother).
Morbius is
a
linguistics
expert,
and he has
uncovered
ancient
instrumentation
and
records
that
reveal
clues to a
long-extinct
Altair IV
race
called
“the
Krell,”
who died
after
inventing
massive
machinery
that fed
off energy
within the
Krell
minds.
However,
this
marvelous
invention
proved to
be their
downfall,
for the
Krell
minds—once
joined to
the
machine—had
given
birth to a
great and
terrifying
monster.
Of
course,
this is
all
fiction,
right?
Humans
could
never
produce an
unseen
something
that would
one day
destroy us
all.
Perhaps
it’s
best that
you not
read this
chapter
when alone
or at
night,
because
such a
monster is
developing—even
as I type
these
words,
and, as
with the
Krell on
Altair,
this
monster—this
ravenous
and very
wicked
Beast—may
soon
awaken and
pit
Christian
against
Christian,
Jew
against
Jew, and
all who
worship
this Beast
against
all who
refuse to
do so. To
paraphrase
the Second
Witch from
Shakespeare’s
infamous
“Scottish
Play”:
By the
typing of
our
thumbs,
something
wicked
this way
comes.[ii]
Need
convincing?
Let’s
begin with
a few
terms.
Intelligence
One
might
assume
this to
refer to
problem-solving
skills,
particularly
those
required
for
abstract
reasoning.
The term
is derived
from the
Latin verb
intelligere,
which
means
“to
comprehend,
perceive,
or
understand.”
In 1994, a
group of
fifty-two
researchers
penned
their
collective
definition
of
intelligence:
A
very
general
mental
capability
that,
among
other
things,
involves
the
ability to
reason,
plan,
solve
problems,
think
abstractly,
comprehend
complex
ideas,
learn
quickly
and learn
from
experience.
It is not
merely
book
learning,
a narrow
academic
skill, or
test-taking
smarts.
Rather, it
reflects a
broader
and deeper
capability
for
comprehending
our
surroundings—“catching
on,”
“making
sense”
of things,
or
“figuring
out”
what to
do.[iii]
I
would add
one
additional
modification
that
intelligence
is based
on
freewill
as given
to mankind
by God the
Creator,
this being
the
ability to
make
choices
based upon
any given
set of
options.
Sentience
This
term is
based on
the Latin
present
participle
sentiens, which means “feeling or perceiving.” In some ways,
intelligence
implies
action,
externalization,
decision-making,
and
choices,
while
sentience
evokes
passion,
internalization,
thoughtfulness,
and
evaluation.
Sentience
serves and
informs
intelligence.
Theologically,
intelligence
relates to
the mind,
while
sentience
relates to
the heart.
Though
technically
incorrect,
sentience
has come
to mean
“self-aware.”
Thus, a
sentient
entity
understands
that he or
she is a
separate
being
within a
complex
system. Cogito
ergo sum:
“I
think,
therefore,
I am.”[iv]
Theologically
speaking,
sentience
is a gift
from God,
as mankind
is created
in His
image. God
is a
sentient
being; in
fact, He
is the
Great I Am
(the
singular,
superlative
form of
Rene
Descarte’s
“Thinker”).
God gave
man
intelligence,
freewill,
and a
compassionate
heart. We
can choose
to react
and act
within the
parameters
of any
given
construct—be
that
reaction
and or
action
good or
evil; it
is our
choice.
Life
The
traditional
definition
of life
taught to
all
Biology
101
students
is that an
organism
is
considered
alive when
it
possesses
and
exhibits
the
capacity
to grow,
metabolize,
respond to
stimuli,
adapt to
changing
conditions,
and
reproduce.
Recent
revisions
of this
definition
suggest
that the
organism
must be
RNA- or
DNA-based.
The
National
Aeronautics
and Space
Administration
(NASA) has
proposed
adding a
caveat
that true life
must
demonstrate
the
ability
and/or
potential
to evolve
along
Darwinian
guidelines.
Of course,
biologists
don’t
have the
luxury of
observing
a
candidate
for
“life”
over
millions
of years
to prove
it has
evolved,
which is
why the
“potential”
to evolve
is
included.
This
merely
requires
inclusion
of
transposons
(transposable
elements
that can
jump to
different
positions
on a
chromosome)
within a
genome to
qualify,
and all
genomes
have these
as just
one
component
of a
process
called
epigenetics.
Some
biologists
have even
suggested
the
creation
of an
entire
field of
study with
a single
mission:
to define
life. Some
say life
is based
only on
carbon,
others
that life
is cell
based
(excluding
crystals).
However,
without a
firm
foundation
in Christ,
no
scientist
can truly
appreciate
the
beautiful
design
within
carbon-based
life
forms.
Synthetic
Biology
According
to
distinguished
(and very
sentient)
researcher
Dr. Steven
A. Benner,
founder of
the
Westheimer
Institute
of Science
and
Technology
and
the
Foundation
for
Applied
Molecular
Evolution,
synthetic
biology
must be
considered
a viable
contender
for
“life”
as we know
it:
The
goal of
synthetic
biology is
to get, in
the
laboratory,
a chemical
system
that can
support
Darwinian
evolution.
Our
activities
as
synthetic
biologists
need not
be
constrained
by any
particular
model for
how life
might have
emerged on
Earth. Any
system
will do,
including
one based
on a
biopolymer,
or a
collection
of
metabolic
processes,
or a
mineral
assembly.
Further,
the system
need not
be
self-sustaining;
we
would be
happy if
it were
able to
evolve and
adapt,
even if it
needed
continuous
attention
from a
sentient
being.
Any
synthetic
molecular
system
that
reproduces
with
error, if
those
errors are
themselves
reproducible,
should be
able to
adapt to
environmental
changes,
at least
to the
degree
that its
fundamental
molecular
capabilities
allow.
Various
efforts
are
underway
to obtain
such
systems.
These
include
work with
DNA-like
molecules
that are
built from
six
different
nucleotide
“letters”…artificial
genetic
systems
that can
be copied,
with
errors,
where
those
errors are
replicable.
Should
artificial
Darwinian
chemical
systems be
obtained,
they
present a
direct
test to
the
definition-theory
of life.
They
should be
able to
produce, in
vitro, features
that we
value from
living
systems.
Should
they fail
to do so,
they will
be
analyzed
to learn
why they
fail. This
might lead
to the
identification
of
chemical
features other than
a
polyelectrolyte
that are
needed to
support
Darwinian
evolution.
Or they
may
challenge
the
centrality
of
Darwinian
evolution
in any
theory-definition
of life.[v]
(emphasis
added)
Artificial
Life
This
includes
software
designed
to evolve,
robots
intended
to emulate
humans or
animals,
and
synthetic
biology
that
involves
an
artificially
designed,
nucleic
acid-based
“life
form”
such as
Craig
Venter’s
“Synthia.”[vi]
Evolutionists
believe
that all
life on
earth
“evolved”
from
nonliving
matter,
which
(either
spontaneously
or after
being
acted upon
by an
outside
force)
gave rise
to
self-replicating
molecules.
These then
self-assembled
into
complex
organic
structures.
This
theory is
called
abiogenesis
(no-egg-required
thinking—thus,
the
chicken
comes
first; of
course, it
takes this
proto-chicken
many
millennia
to spring
forth and
therefore
a very
long time
to cross
the
Darwinian
road).
Internet
A
global
system of
interconnected
computers,
based upon
ARPAnet
(Advanced
Research
Projects
Agency
Network),
a military
network
created by
the
precursor
to DARPA
(Defense
Advanced
Research
Projects
Agency).
World
Wide Web
A
system of
hyperlinked
documents
accessed
via the
Internet.
The World
Wide Web
(WWW or
W3)
provides a
user-friendly
interface
allowing
anyone to
join the
Internet
with a
personal
computer,
tablet,
smart
phone, or
other
connected
device
(this will
soon
include
appliances,
cars,
robots,
and even
external
and
internal
medical
and/or
personal
devices).
It is
interesting
to note
that the
numerical
value of
“www”
is 666.[vii]
Deep
Web

Also
called
Dark Web,
DarkNet,
the
Invisible
Web, and
the Hidden
Web, this
realm of
“stealth”
websites,
pages,
images,
files, and
other
documents
cannot be
accessed
by typing
in a .www
URL
(Uniform
Resource
Locator).
Lying
beneath
the
“Surface
Web,”
these
sites are
not
indexed by
search
engines
like Bing
or Google,
but
require
specific
web
crawlers
and/or the
manual
submission
of an
Internet
protocol
or
password.
The Deep
Web is
estimated
to be many
magnitudes
larger
than the
Surface
Web. These
murky
depths
provide
cover for
a shadowy
world of
illicit
trade and
criminal
activities
such as
drug
traffic,
pornography,
pedophilia,
pederasty,
snuff
films,
organ
trafficking,
and even
slave
trade, but
they also
provide
deep cover
for covert
operations
and
spying. If
you think
the
Surface
Web
contains
disgusting
imagery
and ideas,
you would
be shocked
at what
slithers
just
beneath
those
Facebook
“likes,”
selfie-ridden
Instagrams,
and idle
Tweets.
The
Internet
that you
and I and
find so
compelling
contains
both good
and bad,
but the
nether
regions of
the
DarkNet
never see,
nor do
they
benefit
from, the
light of
day.
Now
that
we’ve
unpacked a
few
definitions,
let me
offer a
short
history of
the
Internet,
since that
is where
Leviathan,
the
monster
from the Id now sleeps. ARPAnet was born from the vision of J. C. R.
Lidicker,
a
psychologist
cum
computer
scientist
and former
director
of
Behavioral
Sciences
Command
and
Control
Research
at DARPA
(then
called
ARPA, the
Advanced
Research
Projects
Agency
operated
by the US
Defense
Department).
During the
1950s,
Lidicker
was a
major
contributor
to
ARPA’s
“SAGE”
(Semi-Automatic
Ground
Environment)
project
that
sought to
create a
defense
system
based on
computer/human
responses.
Computers
fed data
to human
operators,
who then
made
decisions
for
action—hence
the term
“semi-automatic.”
However,
this
exposure
to the
possibilities
inherent
in
computers
stayed
with
Lidicker,
and he
eventually
proposed
what he
called the
“Intergalactic
Network,”
which
sounds
rather
far-fetched,
but with
this
vision, he
wrote and
discussed
concepts
such as
“point-and-click”
interfaces,
e-commerce,
digital
libraries,
and more.
His dreams
even
included
“cloud
computing.”[viii]
However,
before
ARPAnet
could
form, a
subnetwork
had to be
created as
a means to
provide
structure
and
connectivity
while the
“net”
formed.
This
subnet was
called the
Interface
Message
Processor
(IMP) and
conjoined
a variety
of
university
scholars
with the
IPTO
(Information
Processing
Techniques
Office) at
the
Pentagon.
Now, I
won’t
dwell on
this, but
it is
interesting
to note
that
ARPAnet is
an anagram
of “pan
tare.”
Pan, a
mythological,
goat-legged
creature,
was
reputed to
rape women
and commit
all manner
of
adulterous
and
lecherous
acts. Pan
has now
come to
serve as a
prefix
meaning
“everywhere
at once”
or
“worldwide,”
as in
“pandemic.”
Tares are
weeds and
were used
by Jesus
as
representing
the evil
that the
enemy has
sown in a
field:
Another
parable
put he
forth unto
them,
saying,
The
kingdom of
heaven is
likened
unto a man
who sowed
good seed
in his
field;
But
while men
slept, his
enemy came
and sowed tares
among the
wheat, and
went his
way.
But
when the
blade was
sprung up,
and
brought
forth
fruit,
then
appeared
the tares
also.
So
the
servants
of the
householder
came and
said unto
him, Sir,
didst not
thou sow
good seed
in thy
field?
from
whence
then hath
it tares?
He
said unto
them, An
enemy hath
done this.
The
servants
said unto
him, Wilt
thou then
that we go
and gather
them up?
But
he said,
Nay; lest
while ye
gather up
the tares,
ye root up
also the
wheat with
them.
Let
both grow
together
until the
harvest;
and in the
time of
harvest I
will say
to the
reapers,
Gather
ye
together
first the tares,
and bind
them in
bundles to
burn them,
but gather
the wheat
into my
barn.
(Matt.
13:24–30,
emphasis
added)
The
tares are
a type of
so-called
bastard
wheat
(actually
a dark
variety of
darnel
that
resembles
wheat but
lacks
nutrition,
i.e., a
weed).
Now, I
won’t
dwell any
more on
this other
than to
say that
the hint
about
tares
everywhere
riding on
the backs
of an IMP
are
metaphorically
irresistible
as relates
to my
theme of a
slumbering
Beast
about to
waken in
this
universal
“field”
we call
the
Internet.
Now,
back to my
short
history.
Once
the subnet
and basic
protocols
were in
place,
four
universities
(Stanford,
Utah, the
University
of
California
at Los
Angeles,
and the
University
of
California,
Santa
Barbara)
were
selected
to provide
feedback
in four
major
areas:
network
measurement,
network
information,
interactive
mathematics,
and
graphics.
These four
schools
received
an IMP,
and these
subnets
eventually
connected
as a
Network
Working
Group.
From these
humble
beginnings
arose
ARPAnet,
Usenet,
IRC
(Internet
Relay
Chat),
TCP/IP
(Transmission
Control
Protocol/Internet
Protocol,
the
protocol
that made
modems
possible),
and
eventually
HTTP
(Hypertext
Transfer
Protocol),
which even
now forms
the
backbone
of the
Internet
and
websites.
ARPAnet
grew from
a tiny
idea to
connect
computers
for use by
the US
military
into the
rapid
transit
system
deployed
by
citizens
and
soldiers
the world
over. This
system
permits
Christians
to share
joys and
sorrows,
cat
pictures,
triumphs,
cries of
despair
and calls
for
prayer,
sports
scores,
and family
memories.
But it
also
provides
the means
for sins
of all
shapes and
sizes—defiance
in the
face of
God, a
rising
anger and
hatred of
all things
Christian
that
threatens
to erupt
from out
of the
deep web
into the
sunlit
surface
any day
now. The
tares
among the
wheat are
beginning
to ripen.
TO
BE
CONTINUED...
[i]
Conversation
between
Commander
John
Adams
and
scientist
Morbius
in
final
scene
of Forbidden
Planet,
a 1956
science
fiction
film
from
MGM.
For
more
on
this
film,
see
Wikipedia
entry:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forbidden_Planet
(accessed
December
25,
2013).
[ii]
William
Shakespeare’s
MacBeth,
Act
IV,
Scene
I,
Lines
44–45.
“By
the
pricking
of my
thumbs,
Something
wicked
this
way
comes.”
[iii]
Linda
S.
Gottfredson,
Mainstream
Science
on
Intelligence:
An
Editorial
with
52
Signatories,
History,
and
Bibliography
(first
published
Wall
Street
Journal,
December
13,
1994,
but
accessed
online
on
January
6,
2014,
at
http://www.udel.edu/educ/gottfredson/
reprints/1997mainstream.pdf).
[iv]
Cogito
ergo
sum,
Rene
Descartes.
Descartes
was a
seventeenth-century
philosopher
who
strove
to sum
up
mankind’s
self-awareness
in Principles
of
Philosophy
(1644).
[v]
Steven
A.
Benner,
“Defining
Life,”
Astrobiology,
December
2010,
pp.
1021–1030.
Archived
at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3005285/
-
(accessed
January
6,
2014).
[vi]
Synthia,
also
known
as
Mycoplasma
laboratorium,
derived
from
Mycoplasma
genitalium.
See
more
at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycoplasma_laboratorium
(accessed
January
6,
2014).
[vii]
The
numerical
value
of a
letter
is
obtained
by
equating
a
sequence
of
letters
in any
language
(in
this
case,
English)
to the
numbers
1
through
9.
[viii]
“Intergalactic
Computer
Network,”
Wikipedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Intergalactic
_Computer_Network&oldid=602778300
(accessed
April
25,
2014).