Mainstream astronomy holds that the Solar System has remained stable
and essentially as we see it today for billions of years, cycling with
regular, repeating motions that can be extrapolated backward to
reliably reconstruct conditions in the remote past. The assumptions
upon which this belief rests date back over three centuries to the
times of Kepler, Newton, and Laplace, which see a cosmos consisting of
electrically neutral bodies moving in a vacuum under the sole influence
of gravity. Yet space is now known to be pervaded by electrical plasma,
and there is strong evidence that the planets and other bodies carry
electric charge. Charged objects immersed in plasma spontaneously form
double-layer isolating sheaths around themselves that contain their
fields and prevent mutual electrical interaction. For as long as
planets move without their "magnetospheres" coming into contact,
quiescent conditions like those that exist today will prevail, which
are indeed accurately modeled by gravitation. But should some
disturbance or instability occur that causes magnetospheres to
intersect, the bodies involved will experience sudden complex forces
immensely more powerful than gravity, accompanied by-if they are at
different potentials-colossal electrical discharges between them. In
Thunderbolts of the Gods, David Talbott and Wallace Thornhill present a
compendium of evidence from diverse sources showing that not only have
such events affected the Earth, but they have done so within the time
of recorded human history! From as far apart as China, Mesopotamia,
Egypt, and the Americas, peoples of ancient times have left records in
their myths, legends, religions, and art forms, of skies vastly
different from those we see today, alive with spectacles of light,
violence, and seeming heavenly deities in conflict that not only
battled each other but brought widespread death and devastation to
Earth.