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Did Erich von-Daniken have a point????? Rate Topic: -----

#1 pretender 


Meson
If you take away the problems with some of his books. Did this man have a point and itn time will this point come to light. I happen to like his books>>>
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#2 pretender 


Meson
I was sure someone would pick up on this topic. This man wrote about "was God an astronaut" etc.I believed in some of things he said. So hey all of you out there give it your best shot..
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#3 JohnB 


Hello? Is this thing on?
Von Daniken's biggest fault is that his theory assumes that our ancestors were too dumb to do anything by themselves, they need some do-gooder alien to do things for them.

Yes, some ancient artwork does indeed look like rockets. So what? You can't use rockets for interstellar travel. At least not if you want to go somewhere in under a thousand years or so.

The Nazca lines are landing strips for aliens? What, they come all this way and forget to bring a radio beacon?

How the Crystal skulls were made and who made them is a mystery but that doesn't mean aliens made them.

He's simply showing up some of the holes in the conventional history and inserting an alien explanation. It is far more likely that an earlier, currently unknown human civilisation was responsible.
There are two rules for being successful in life.
1. Never tell everything you know.
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#4 pretender 


Meson
I get some of your points, not all his ideas were wrong. Ancient man did not know how to interpret what he saw. Therefore he just drew his idea of what he saw. Therefore not a true interpretation.
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#5 Phi for All 


Icon
Electric Chairman

pretender said:

I get some of your points, not all his ideas were wrong. Ancient man did not know how to interpret what he saw. Therefore he just drew his idea of what he saw. Therefore not a true interpretation.
Drawing doesn't have to be literal, either. Ancient man could have drawn what they imagined.
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#6 Royston 


Señor Butt Monkey
Pretender, have you heard of a guy called Graham Hancock...I think you'll enjoy his work. He's another that tries to make links with gaps in historical knowledge, but is not nearly as far out as Von Daniken. There's some very interesting finds that he brings to light, and does raise questions on how advanced ancient civilizations were, compared to our almost arrogant portrayal of them.
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#7 pretender 


Meson
Snail, I will look into this, thank you.....
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#8 JohnB 


Hello? Is this thing on?
Snail, that's exactly what I was getting at. In many areas Hancock has at least as much proof for his theories as conventional archaeology does for theirs.

(How to annoy an Egyptologist. Ask him to show his evidence that the Sphinx is actually 4th Dynasty.;) :-) )

Looking at the remains we have left to us, I think we've been selling our ancestors short for quite some time.
There are two rules for being successful in life.
1. Never tell everything you know.
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#9 Royston 


Señor Butt Monkey
The maps of Antarctica are a particular favourite of mine...ice-free. I'm not sure if these have been debunked yet, might have to look into that.
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#10 JohnB 


Hello? Is this thing on?
The "Piri-Reis" maps. They are an anomaly. AFAIK they have yet to have an adequate explanation. The general tactic is to ignore them and attack Hapgood. (Not that he doesn't sort of deserve it.)

However no-one has yet decided to call the USAF a bunch of idiots.

6, July, 1960
Subject: Admiral Piri Reis Map
TO: Prof. Charles H. Hapgood
Keene College
Keene, New Hampshire


Dear Professor Hapgood,
Your request of evaluation of certain unusual features of the Piri Reis map of 1513 by this organization has been reviewed.
The claim that the lower part of the map portrays the Princess Martha Coast of Queen Maud Land, Antarctic, and the Palmer Peninsular, is reasonable. We find that this is the most logical and in all probability the correct interpretation of the map.
The geographical detail shown in the lower part of the map agrees very remarkably with the results of the seismic profile made across the top of the ice-cap by the Swedish-British Antarctic Expedition of 1949.
This indicates the coastline had been mapped before it was covered by the ice-cap.
The ice-cap in this region is now about a mile thick.
We have no idea how the data on this map can be reconciled with the supposed state of geographical knowledge in 1513.

Harold Z. Ohlmeyer Lt. Colonel, USAF Commander


It's sort of hard to argue with.:D
There are two rules for being successful in life.
1. Never tell everything you know.
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#11 Royston 


Señor Butt Monkey
Thanks for that JohnB, I guess it's one of those anamolies that's been swept under the carpet...very interesting.
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#12 sunspot 


Suspended
Ancient cultures were indeed smarter than we believe. If we look at the Roman army, the soldiers were also skilled craftmen and engineers. This allowed them to live off the land without the need of a supply line. They did not just live off the land but transformed it into civilization. Their army corp of engineers made aquaducts that are still operational 2000 years later with ingenuity and hand tools in a time when horsepower was measured in horses.
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#13 pretender 


Meson
Its like all things, ideas are proved and disproved with new technologies. This is why we should keep an open mind to ideas that may seem out of sync with modern thought as they may be proved correct one day..
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#14 Realitycheck 


Protist
I have not so far found any reasonable explanations for how or why the Nazca lines were made (including the animalia inscribed, as well.) Erecting monolithic construction is one thing, but mile-wide monkeys?
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#15 JohnB 


Hello? Is this thing on?
agentchange, are you going for the "Lazarus Thread Award"?

Damn thing's 3 years old.

Anyhoo, you probably won't find a "reasonable" explanation for the Nazca lines. The problem is that the society that made them has gone and left basically nothing behind. (Except the lines.)

Because of this lack of information, we don't know how they thought.

In a similar vein, we know the early Mayans bound their heads with boards to give that distinctive sloping forehead. We know they did it, but due to lack of other information, we have no idea why.

Because of this, it's almost as valid to say that the Nazca lines were offerings to the Gods as to say that the local king had them done as an "art" project for unemployed artists.

Without some supplementary information, we are trying to use 21st century thinking to understand the reasons for doing something 1,000 + years ago. Very difficult and prone to problems.
There are two rules for being successful in life.
1. Never tell everything you know.
0

#16 Realitycheck 


Protist
Just as long as they were't aliens that made them. I put a lot of stock in that choice not to believe in aliens anymore. It would be a shame if, all of a sudden, we could not explain how they were built, but I have to say that it is feasible. The scale involved just makes this tribe even that much more insane.
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#17 JohnB 


Hello? Is this thing on?

Quote

The scale involved just makes this tribe even that much more insane.

That's the point though. From their POV they were quite sane and reasonable. From the effort expended, I would say that they had what they thought of as very good reasons.

Just because we can't work out why they did it doesn't make their reason invalid.
There are two rules for being successful in life.
1. Never tell everything you know.
0

#18 phantom 


Quark

JohnB said:

Anyhoo, you probably won't find a "reasonable" explanation for the Nazca lines. The problem is that the society that made them has gone and left basically nothing behind. (Except the lines.)

Because of this lack of information, we don't know how they thought.

Because of this, it's almost as valid to say that the Nazca lines were offerings to the Gods as to say that the local king had them done as an "art" project for unemployed artists.

I can provide another “unreasonable” explanation for the Nazca lines. These lines represent a road map of the human ‘soul’ (or mind if you don’t like the word: ‘soul’). One feature that stands out is the spirals found in the Nazca lines which one can also be found in Paolo Uccello’s “St. George and the Dragon” in the upper right:

http://www.paolouccello.org/

which also has some similarity to the NDE tunnel:

http://en.wikipedia....eath_experience

Another feature is the Nazca “flower” which could also be similar to Robert’s Fludd’s “Mundus Intellectualis” or “Deus” in his Collectio Operum, and may be also represented in the “rose window” of cathedrals.

This might be something more than ‘ just another art project’
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#19 JohnB 


Hello? Is this thing on?

Quote

I can provide another “unreasonable” explanation for the Nazca lines. These lines represent a road map of the human ‘soul’ (or mind if you don’t like the word: ‘soul’).

And if they were Atheists? That's what I'm getting at, we know so little about the line makers that any meaning we ascribe ATM is nothing more than guessing.
There are two rules for being successful in life.
1. Never tell everything you know.
0

#20 phantom 


Quark

JohnB said:

And if they were Atheists?

I don’t think belief in anything is a prerequisite for any experiences, but one’s personal beliefs and cultural bias may effect the interpretation. Actually there may not be any such thing as a ‘clean experience’ in this realm of inner space (The real final frontier?).

Spiral structures and other geometric forms are quite common in this other realm but may have been expressed differently in various cultures. One can describe a spiral as a mere geometric form, a tunnel, a cornucopia, a cave, or a ram’s horn, etc., depending on how it is viewed, its contents interpreted, and how it is symbolically or literally expressed.

I was merely providing some ‘educated guessing’ and an alternative explanation based on limited reading along with some personal experiences which provided a different interpretation of the Nazca lines.
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