There are all sorts of fascinating theories and information circling at the moment – I’ve been loving the sense of possibility that they engender!

From Flat Earth models to urine therapy to ‘real mermaids’ to questions about our origins… An Egyptologist I watched insisted that the pyramids were not built by slave labour. There are amazing images doing the rounds about ‘Tartaria’: how cities all around the world have exactly the same architecture, which was possibly designed that way to access free energy, and the great mud floods that saw an end to that era… I don’t know how much of this is true but I suspect that where there is smoke, there is fire, as a very apt saying goes. 

Another video I saw challenged the Theory of Evolution and said that Darwin himself had serious doubts about the soundness of his proposition. Apparently his doubts hinged on the fact that no intermediate species had been found (and still haven’t). In other words, the gradual changes from one species into another are a fallacy because the more primitive and the more advanced versions of these species have been found co-existing at the same time or occurring without apparently necessary ‘intermediate steps’. 

There’s a book by that title currently out of print (Darwin’s Doubt by Stephen Meyer), but he has also just published a book called Return of the God Hypothesis, and I’ve ordered that one to learn more about his thoughts about intelligent design – which Wikipedia classifies as a ‘pseudoscience’ (along with so much else, these days!).

I’ve always been certain that we are divinely designed, and, as you know if you’ve been following me, Dr John Demartini is one of my teachers. He, in turn, was inspired by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, a German philosopher who was one of the leading thinkers of his time. Leibniz believed in divine design: that there was an order to creation. Dr Demartini teaches this Divine Order in his program, The Breakthrough Experience, and I address it in my novels, The Mastery Club and The Hidden Order.

I decided I would ask Dr Demartini about his thoughts regarding evolution and creationism, and, as you can expect, his response landed firmly in the centre: a bit of this and a bit of that! You can watch the interview here.