FORT’S THIRD COLLECTION OF “EXCLUDED DATA”
Charles Hoy Fort (1874-1932) was an American writer and researcher who specialized in anomalous phenomena. The ‘Fortean Times’ publication was inspired by his books.
He wrote in the first chapter of this 1931 book, “A naked man in a city street---that track of a horse in volcanic mud---the mystery of reindeer’s ears---a huge, black form, like a whale, in the sky, and it drips red drops as if attacked by celestial swordfishes---an appalling cherub appears in the sea---CONFUSIONS. Showers of frogs and blizzards of snails---gushes of periwinkles down from the sky---The preposterous, the grotesque, the incredible---and why, if I am going to tell of hundreds of these, is the quite ordinary so regarded?.... A naked fact startles a meeting of a scientific society---and whatever it has for loins is soon diapered with conventional explanations… Chaos and muck and filth---the indeterminable and the unrecordable and the unknowable… and yet… the underlying oneness in all confusions.” (Pg. 5-6)
He continues, “Wise men have tried other ways. They have tried to understand our state of being, by grasping at its stars, or its arts, or its economics. But, if there is an underlying oneness of all things, it does not matter where we begin, whether with stars, or laws of supply and demand, or frogs, or Napoleon Bonaparte. One measures a circle, beginning anywhere.” (Pg. 8)
He goes on, “Coffins have come down from the sky… But these things have come down at the time of a whirlwind… showers of living things are common. And yet the explanation by orthodox scientists who accept that showers of living things have occurred is that the creatures were the products of whirlwinds. The explanation is that little frogs, for instance, fall from the sky, unmixed with anything else, because, in a whirlwind, the creatures were segregated, by differences in specific gravity. But when a whirlwind strikes a town, away go detachables in a monstrous mixture, and there’s no findable record of washtubs coming down in one place, all the town’s cats in one falling battle that lumps its infelicities in one place, and all the kittens coming down together somewhere else, in a distant bunch that meows for its lump of mothers.” (Pg. 9)
He states, “I shall be scientific about it. Said Sir Isaac Newton… ‘If there is no change in the direction of a moving body, the direction of a moving body is not changed. But… if something be changed, it is changed as much as it is changed.’ So red worms fall from the sky, in Sweden, because from the sky, in Sweden, red worms fell. How do geologists determine the age of rocks? By the fossils in them. And how do they determine and age of the fossils? By the rocks they’re in.” (Pg. 11)
He explains, “I believe nothing. I have shut myself away from the rocks and wisdoms of ages, and from the so-called great teachers of all time, and perhaps because of that isolation I am given to bizarre hospitalities. I shut the front door upon Christ and Einstein, and at the back door hold out a welcoming hand to little frogs and periwinkles. I believe nothing of my own that I have ever written. I cannot accept that the products of minds are subject-matter for beliefs. But I accept, with reservations that give me freedom to ridicule the statement at any other time, the showers of an edible substance that has not been traced to an origin upon this earth, have fallen from the sky, in Asia Minor.” (Pg. 19)
He contends, “We hear much about the conflict between science and religion, but our conflict is with both of these. Science and religion always have agreed in opposing and suppressing the various witchcrafts. Now that religion is inglorious, one of the most fantastic transferences of worships is that of glorifying science, as a beneficent being. It is the attributing of all that is of development, or of possible betterment to science. But no scientist had ever upheld a new idea, without bringing upon himself abuse from the scientists. Science has done its utmost to prevent whatever Science has done.” (Pg. 21)
He observes, “It occurred to me that stories of flows of blood from ‘holy images’ are assimilable with our general expressions upon teleportations. Whereupon, automatically, the formerly despised become the somewhat reasonable. Though now and then I am ill-natured with scientific methods, it is no pose of mine that I am other than scientific, myself, in our expressions. I am tied down like any college professor or Zulu wise man.” (Pg. 44)
He adds, “I don’t know to just what degree my accusation, in these matters, is of the laziness and feeble-mindedness of scientists. Or, instead of accusing, I am simply pointing out everybody’s inability seriously to spend time upon something, which, according to his preconceptions in nonsense. Scientists, in matters of our data, have been like somebody in Europe, before the year 1492, hearing stories of lands to the west, going out on the ocean for an hour or so, in a row-boat, and then saying, whether exactly in these words or not: ‘Oh, hell! There ain’t no America.’” (Pg. 85)
He argues, “The astronomers can predict the movements of some of the parts of what they call the solar system. But so far are they from a comprehensive grasp upon the system as a whole that, if for a basis of their calculations, be taken that this earth is stationary, and that the sun and the planets, and the stars in a shell, move around this earth, the same notions of heavenly bodies can be foretold. Take for a base that the earth moves round the sun, or take that the sun moves around the earth: upon either base the astronomers can predict an eclipse, and enjoy renown and prestige, as if they knew what they were telling about. Either way there are inaccuracies.” (Pg. 167)
He suggests, “Newtonism is no longer satisfactory. There is too much that it cannot explain. Einsteinism has arisen. If Einsteinism is not satisfactory, there is room for other notions.” (Pg. 176) He adds, “I have to ask… Who, except someone who was out to boost a theory ever has demonstrated that light has any velocity?” (Pg. 177)
He clarifies, “our opposition is not so much denial of data, as assertions that the occurrences in which we see relationship were only coincidences. If I ever accept any such explanation, I shall be driven into extending it to everything.” (Pg. 221)
He acknowledges, “There is considerable in this book that is in line with the teachings of the most primitive theology. We have noted how agreeable I am to the most southern Methodists. It is that scientific orthodoxy of today has brutally, or mechanically, or unintelligently, reacted sheerly against all beliefs of the preceding, or theological, orthodoxy, and has reacted too far. All reactions react too far. Then a reaction against this reaction must of course favor, or restore, some of the beliefs of the earlier orthodoxy.” (Pg. 236)
He asserts, “Any pronouncement by any orthodoxy is to me the same as handcuffs. It’s brain cuffs. There are times when I don’t give a damn whether the stars are trillions of miles away or ten miles away---but, at any time, let anybody say to me, authoritatively, or with an air of finality, that the stars are trillions of miles away, or ten miles away, and my contrariness stirs, or inflames, and if I can’t pick the lock of his pronouncements, I’ll have to squirm out some way to save my egotism.” (Pg. 253)
He concludes, “Consequently, I concern myself with data for what may be a new field of enormous labors and sufferings, costs of lives and fortunes, misery and bereavements, until finally will come awareness that all this is unnecessary.” (Pg. 279)
Fort’s books are usually quite interesting; although his intention to simply gather together collections of ‘weird’ reported phenomena (many of which are simply taken from newspaper reports) and refrain from seeking any ‘explanations’ of them, will be ‘off-putting’ to some.