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Originally posted by Biliverdin
I really do wonder if you even know how to have fun
Originally posted by Hanslune
Originally posted by Biliverdin
I really do wonder if you even know how to have fun
I read your postings, which are remarkably funny
Originally posted by St Udio
well... we are in the same stadium (as it were)
because we are speaking of a large area & 10000 yrs before Plato or perhaps several 1000's before Salon passed on the info.
Originally posted by St Udio
see:Lost Civilizations: Atlantis: Timaeus and Critias
www.activemind.com/Mysterious/.../atlantis/timaeus_and_critias.html
Timaeus and Critias, two of Plato's dialogues, are the only existing written records ... of Plato's day,
the story of Atlantis was conveyed to Solon by Egyptian priests. ...
This elder Critias told the story of Atlantis to his grandson, Critias,...
Just Whom were these 'Egyptian Priests' ?
Originally posted by korathin
reply to post by daaskapital
This seems like nothing more then muslim thievery. They do it all the time when they discover Christian ruins or after they conquered a Christian nation(See Byzantine and the Hagia Sofia[which will eventually be liberated]).
Originally posted by Hanslune
However I would agree that 'crossaphobia' is, unfortunately, a factor in Islamic life and have seen myself deliberate destruction of prior Christian archaeological sites in Arabia.
Originally posted by Biliverdin
Originally posted by daaskapital
reply to post by Biliverdin
Thanks for the extra bit of knowledge
What is your opinion regarding Plato and Atlantis? Do you think he was influenced by the story of Iram, and it's demise?
I don't really have an opinion, and Plato's references are rather thin and vague, but I honestly feel that there are any number of possibilities of such 'disappearances' that he could have been referring to, and that it must have been quite common for settlements to seemingly disappear for one reason or another. I have always personally favoured a relationship with the tectonic activities in this region...
en.wikipedia.org...
Trillo explains the endurance of the myth by the fact the city disappeared off the map when it fell into decline in the 17th and 18th Centuries, after the Moors deserted it and trade went elsewhere.
"For 200 years it was a city living on the sand but completely disconnected from the rest of the world and that was why it has such a mythology.
"Imagine New York suddenly under water for 200 years, and people still talking about it.
"That's when this explorer race started and everyone wanted to be the first to get to Timbuktu."