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Yes, it's a higher standard than a lot of people around here use, but that IS the standard and has been for a century. Misuse of the word "civilization" is rampant on boards like this. And that's okay sometimes.
But not when somebody tries to compare an ancient culture to an ancient civilization, thinking they've "disproven the experts."
If a person wants to claim the experts are wrong about the rise of civilizations and which are the oldest, that person is obligated to use the same standard as anthropologists use.
If they don't, it's like saying "My chicken is a horse, and that proves that not all horses have four legs."
I understand it's frustrating but it shows the need for a clear definition. The average person, like Tim and Heatherlee Hooker, doesn't understand the difference.
If you are a researcher, exact definitions are a necessary tool to make sure you are comparing two things that are alike. The definition I use comes from researchers... specifically anthropology and archaeology.
If an English speaking person was asked today and presented part of Beowulf's manuscripts, will that person recognize that it was Old English? How about manuscripts of The Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer or a specimen of Shakespeare's handwritting?
I think that we can all agree that it is a contentious topic but can't we at least agree that there might be some artifacts out there that could be older than what is presently generally accepted? If not from the Ukraine, maybe in Iran, Turkey or even China?
The awl suggests people in the area started using metals as early as 5100 B.C., several centuries earlier than previously thought.
Certainly people will recognize these examples as related, yet dissimilar, languages. Importantly, it is clear that the alphabet in use (Latin) is the same. This does not compare appropriately to the "proto-Sumerian" claim, wherein the symbols are neither clear nor the same as what we know to be proto-Sumerian.
I have yet to meet an archaeologist who is against the idea that history can be "pushed back", so to speak. However, the people typically promoting this idea are neither scholarly archaeologists nor anthropologists. They tend to be authors looking to make a quick fortune by pandering to an audience craving mystery.
In reality objects are found relatively frequently which change notions of development.
Discovery of oldest metal object in Middle East
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
What I find highly intriguing in the presentation of the husband and wife team, granting their misuse of the word "civilization"... not that I'm passing the buck to them, is the unlikelihood that the word Inanna is an accidental bear-claw mark when several coherent sentences were presented as examples. How can one disprove this unless it was faked?
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Harte
I have to admit that they look different but if it's a matter of millennia apart, does being different necessarily means not related? Again, going back to my inept analogy... don't worry, this will be the last time, if we take for example the very first word in Beowulf Hwæt from an old manuscript and Lo from a contemporary English translation, both means listen or pay attention... this might initially seem like a head scratcher. Language evolve over time and the places it was spoken and written.
bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts
I will concur with your insightful diagnosis of Sumeritis, not to avoid to get my butt kicked again but to move on to the prognosis and maybe the treatment... if there is a cure or at least a way contain this disease. I'll be willing to be your lab rat for experimental treatment.
Should we alert the whole ATS of an outbreak and recommend a quarantine?
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Harte
I have to admit that they look different but if it's a matter of millennia apart, does being different necessarily means not related?
Nah. The outbreak was over with years ago.
I'm just going around pissing on the ashes, making sure.
Looks like somebody counting sheep or goats or something.
Yes. And your example looks more like Ogham (a script that wasn't invented until 400 AD (not BC... AD)
There's a couple of assumptions about language that you might want to be aware of:
* if a language is dead, we're guessing at the pronunciation. What we call a deity/person/etc is not necessarily what they called the deity (example: "Anubis" is actually a Greek pronunciation of what appears to be "Anpu." "Isis" is actually "Aset." Our modern pronunciation is actually a new English version of an ancient Greek name (pronunciation was different) of an even older name from Egyptian. So it's far removed from the original.)
* most of the early ancient alphabets didn't include vowels. "PR" could be "perr" or "purr" or "par" or "pear" or "appear", etc, etc. * Cuneiform and other early writing systems develop from pictures/chop marks. Of all the ones we've seen, this seems to hold true in the early stages. In later constructed alphabets, this is not true...but it is for the first ones.
Lines can appear anywhere as the result of many things.
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Harte
Nah. The outbreak was over with years ago.
I beg to disagree, you should visit the threads at the Conspiracy Theory Forums... not your cup of tea? There are regular outbreaks there specially on threads about Mars and the moon... I might have acquired it there... or maybe I have the gene that makes me predispose to acquire it?
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
I'm just going around pissing on the ashes, making sure.
I love that expression "pissing on the ashes," thanks, it's been a long time since I heard it... could be a catchy song title, maybe a painting, a poem or even a potential thread title.
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
I'd rather err in trying to see more about things rather than less or none at all.
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Blue Shift
Looks like somebody counting sheep or goats or something.
Yes, and to think that we still use it. I still use the tally marks, not to count sheep or goats but to make a semblance of order to my primitive hard copy files.
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
If a script was found in the Ukraine that looks like Ogham regardless of the claim of the time it was dated, wouldn't that be still an item of interest for the experts to look into?
No, those people don't count. They're part of a permanent cadre of the purposefully ignorant.
I understand this, and I also understand your belief that I am trying to see less. However, that's exactly the opposite of how I came to the conclusion I've posited here.
Trying to see more, I actually saw more. When you see more, you see that the whole Anunnaki thing is a scam invented by a con man who wanted more than he could get as a second-rate economic historian/journalist.
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Harte
Day-o, day-ay-ay-o!... that's funny, catchy song.
No, those people don't count. They're part of a permanent cadre of the purposefully ignorant.
Again, I beg to disagree. I think curiosity is a sign of intelligence, even if it is regarded as purposeless.
I understand this, and I also understand your belief that I am trying to see less. However, that's exactly the opposite of how I came to the conclusion I've posited here.
Trying to see more, I actually saw more. When you see more, you see that the whole Anunnaki thing is a scam invented by a con man who wanted more than he could get as a second-rate economic historian/journalist.
It's not a belief but a preference, you know, like I prefer to wear cargo pants even if it's not in fashion than wear those skinny jeans.
Granting that the petroglyphs was a scam, does the stone mound in Shu Nun and other burial mounds in the Ukraine deserve a fresh second look?
... Worked all night, I think I'm going to have a drink a'rum. Cheers to you and Harry!
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Byrd
Yes. And your example looks more like Ogham (a script that wasn't invented until 400 AD (not BC... AD)
If a script was found in the Ukraine that looks like Ogham regardless of the claim of the time it was dated, wouldn't that be still an item of interest for the experts to look into?
No worries... thank you for bumping the thread and reminding me of the butt kicking I received from Harte and Byrd.
Did I also contracted Sumeritis, a classic case of seeing what I want to see and not seeing what I don't want to see?
What Tim and Heatherlee Hooker said makes a lot of sense to a layman like me, that all proto-Sumerian scripts will look different in varying degrees from one another depending on the place where it was found and the time it was dated.
Shouldn't these scholarly academic experts be above all the frills and side issues of nationalist and personal agendas and deal directly with Kifishn's petroglyphs and examine it?
Shouldn't they be excited and curious about this find? Don't they have any responsibility of warning the public precisely from these "authors looking to make a quick fortune by pandering to an audience craving mystery?" Are these unreasonable expectations from the experts? Are these things beneath them and not worth their time?... see the pun there?... nevermind.