Hancock's ideas aren't totally without merit. It is true that most human settlements are coastal and it is also true that everywhere which was coastal a few tens of thousands of years ago is now under ten or twenty metres of water. It follows that most of the evidence for the existence of pre-the-last-ice-age civilisations would now either be destroyed or very hard to find.Ludwig wrote:I don't believe Elvis is alive, no. But that's not because I consider the idea totally impossible, it's because the quality of the evidence (as far as I know, I haven't looked into it) is lousy.JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Sadly that 'I don't know 'cos i wasn't there' reasoning can be used for anything.
Elvis is apparently alive and well, millions weren't slaughtered by gas chambers that didn't exist and our Sun has a sister star that is always just out of sight.
I understand doubt and sceptical reflection but there are limits. Not that I'm suggesting you give any credence to the above absurdities but I'm sure you follow my reasoning.
I've looked into numerous theories that seemed off the wall. I'm not embarrassed to admit that I took some ideas seriously at first, but when I considered the evidence more deeply, I abandoned them. (One of them is the idea of a global ancient civilisation, expounded by Graham Hancock.)
However, he is also a bit bonkers and many aspects of his theories are about as believable as the moon landings having been faked...
Which is all well and good, but I think you've got your calculations wrong in this case.I'm interested in what goes on beneath the surface of things, historically, psychologically and metaphysically - I always have been. I think to arrive at any kind of understanding of deep subjects, you have to be prepared in the first instance to be led by your imagination, and then see if the facts justify an idea. More often than not, they don't. But it's better to arrive at that conclusion having looked into the subject seriously, rather than rejecting it from the start. Because some of the things I have looked into have proved genuinely fascinating and have changed my view of the world (and the universe) fundamentally.
Governments are quite capable of lying to us on mind-boggling scales, but scientists are not.I'll say this, however. I used to think pretty much all conspiracy theories were crap. I've come to the conclusion, however, that our governments are capable of lying to us on scales I never used to believe likely - not because I thought it was impossible, but because it didn't fit into my view of how democratically elected governments behaved.
The evidence of what, exactly? 9/11 was an Al-Qaeda attack and the Bush administration wasn't capable of organising a piss-up in a brewery.In the case of 9/11, I feel the evidence speaks for itself, regardless of how "likely" one believes the basic premise. If it quacks like a duck, walks like a duck, etc.