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 AfterInfinity
reply to post by 1questioner
When you say human, do you mean modern Homo Sapiens?
No, they are expected to prove it, and universities are constantly producing bright young sparks that want to make their marks (and thereby careers) in their fields by doing just that.
Originally posted by rickymouse
If someone challenges what they were taught here they will be discredited by their peers.
Originally posted by JohnnyCanuck
No, they are expected to prove it, and universities are constantly producing bright young sparks that want to make their marks (and thereby careers) in their fields by doing just that.
Originally posted by rickymouse
If someone challenges what they were taught here they will be discredited by their peers.
Look at the whole Clovis debate, where the paradigms are changing as we watch.
I'm not going to suggest that no academic has ever dug in their heels to protect their pet theory. Having worked in the trades at a university has given me a unique perspective on whether or not having a PhD precludes one from being an arse. But in spite of entrenched mindsets, be they academically or religiously or otherwise dogmatically inspired, we regularly witness new discoveries in the sciences. These discoveries are entirely based upon those exercising their common sense and by advanced thinking.
Originally posted by rickymouse
I try to use common sense, lack of evidence does not mean that it is not true, it just means that there is no evidence yet. I have kept tract of science for many years and denial based on lack of accepted evidence has been used to discredit a lot of reality. We cannot allow deceit or misconceptions to rule the world either but what happened to advanced thinking? Common sense should be allowed to be an influence and not completely denied because of lack of evidence that exists but has not been allowed because of consensus of the time.
Not much here for me to disagree with. You'll note that archaeology can also be politically charged, especially when attached to land claims. Look at the middle east, as well as locally.
Originally posted by rickymouse
It's good that these things here are buried between two and three feet deep otherwise I would have destroyed everything with my tractor with it's bucket loader. How many years does it take to get two feet of clay loam on top of things on top of a hill?
Originally posted by Flavian
Originally posted by AfterInfinity
reply to post by 1questioner
When you say human, do you mean modern Homo Sapiens?
Actually, though, we are not Homo Sapiens. We are the sub genus, Homo Sapiens Sapiens (don't know if that makes us twice as evolved!).
Could be a side of the family we never previously knew about (like Denisovians or Hobbits) or the one we directly descended from (which would be majorly interesting).
Whatever the outcome, well spotted to the OP.