It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by SOXMIS
Perhaps it's okay for an academic to make ridiculous claims and be unable to prove them but not an amateur just giving his opinion?
There is a lot about our history we don't know and a lot that is known and kept from us by academics, too keen to maintain their own arse scratching careers and paradigms.
I say again I don't agree with some of Von Daniken's opinions but who am I to say he's wrong?
Another book that might interest you OP is Forbidden Archeology by Michael Cremo. He takes a slightly different approach in that he believes humans have been here from the beginning and many civilisations with advanced technology have been and gone. He theorises time is cyclic, what goes around comes around!
Academe is like any other institution JC, you rock the boat you get a slap, you try and tip the boat and your career ends. A post grad is like any other "young turk" out of training, they soon realise that your funding dries up when you do things that threaten the status quo. So the ones who continue to question disappear and the remainder do what most people do when faced with the option of work or poverty, they sell out. Which type are you?
Originally posted by SOXMIS
Academe is like any other institution JC, you rock the boat you get a slap, you try and tip the boat and your career ends. A post grad is like any other "young turk" out of training, they soon realise that your funding dries up when you do things that threaten the status quo. So the ones who continue to question disappear and the remainder do what most people do when faced with the option of work or poverty, they sell out. Which type are you?
The Daniken books could be described as 'intellectual potty training.'
Originally posted by SOXMIS
Well I googled Tom Dillehay and had a look but he hardly seems to be tipping the boat, pushing the arrival date back a couple of thousand years is not really the maverick academic action you suggest so I dont think my argument goes to crap.
Originally posted by SOXMIS
Of course JC if you do come from an academic background, as you implied, you are going to defend it.
Originally posted by SOXMIS
I see you have an itch you can't scratch JC, ok I'll play. To which scientific opinion are you referring to? Lehner's claim of proving the technique of building the great pryamid and failing miserably, yet still claiming he proved his theory? Or that I dont think the one example you gave of an academic questioning the party line a little warranted my trust of the whole institution?
Originally posted by SIEGE
It's a damned shame that this thread has to be de-railed so that some can
express themselves as "educated" critics.
You are so filled with yourselves . . . aren't you ?
It's really not about you and your "intellectual" innuendos.
It's about possibilities, puzzles, propaganda, . . . and proof.
Originally posted by Truth1000
When I first read "Chariots of the Gods," I probably re-read it 4 or 5 times in the first month. I was really hooked by the information presented.
I was just wondering, how many of you would say that this book had an impact on your perceptions of what was going on in history?
Originally posted by SIEGE
I believe it had a very positive effect on me.
Questions I had . . . were now turning up publicly . . . asked by an author
who believes that past mysterys . . . have answers.