T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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154.1 | What's in a belief? | BRAT::WALLIS | | Tue Jun 24 1986 15:16 | 14 |
|
< current stat of Atlantis literature a marvaleous reaffirmnation
of Sturgeon's Law.....
A belief is a belief is a belief! I submit that Sturgeon's Law
is only a belief, as is 'miricles happen to those who believe'.
I'm continually amused at the universe and it's paradoxes.
Especially the way it presents apparent contradictory
yet verifiable data vs. imperical data to test our free will.
Lora
|
154.2 | A rose, whatever your belief... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Jun 24 1986 17:32 | 53 |
| <<POSTED FOR STEVE KALLIS, JR.>>
<sigh> [anybody out there know how to un-hex a LAT? I _can't_ write to
this or any other Notesfile since they installed the cursed thing!]
Many, many thanks for Topher for posting this and the previous
INK::KALLIS
Re .1:
Ah, we're nibbling around the edges of the metaphysical question of what
reality is, aren't we? :-)
The point isn't Sturgeon's Law (which is observational, not Holy Writ);
just that most of what has been written about Atlantis is twaddle.
A seeming digression (it isn't, really):
There were myths of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table. Some
of these have become very complex and worthy of a lot of serious study
for their poetic and symbolic content.
Most people dismissed Arthur as a myth. However, fairly recently, it's
been determined that there was a real King Arthur, and the information on
him has been accepted by Debrett's Peerage, hardly a fly-by-(k)night
[:-)] outfit.
However, the _real_ King Arthur has little resemblance to the literary
figure that Mallory wrote about. _That doesn't invalidate the merit of
the stories_, but it does put them in proper perspective.
The same's true with Atlantis. If you want to look at Atlantis
mythopoetically (as say Knight does), that's one thing. But if you want
to believe in an actualized Atlantis a la Donnelley, Churchward, or the
Theosophists, then you're eschewing fact for fantasy. As someone said in
the "Magic" note, the Mary Poppins School of Reality.
My concern here is that people who accept as fact that knowledge, etc.,
they are reading is ostensibly coming from writings of a superscientist
or wizard who lived in ancient Atlantis is almost certainly being gulled.
(Unless, of course, it's written in very early Minoan; and anybody with
that level of documentation would probably get at least one Nobel.)
On the general idea of beliefs, as I "noted" several places elsewhere,
one can always take the "faith healer" argument about reality or
whatever: if you believe _hard enough_, it'll happen; if it doesn't, why,
then, you just didn't believe hard enough.
The universe isn't really paradoxical; it's just that we don't understand
it all that well yet.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
154.3 | A little diff perspective | BRAT::WALLIS | | Wed Jun 25 1986 11:39 | 17 |
|
.2
It's interesting to note how you've set up a polarity between
fact and fiction when in fact they may be the same thing!
With time, wisdom & understanding fiction has sometimes become fact and
fact fiction.
< on the gerneral idea of beliefs....one can always take the "faith
healer" argument.....
One could if one was inclined to - on the other hand one could look
at it from a broader perspective. The self-fulfilling prophecy
has been validated you know.
Lora
|
154.4 | A Bit Sharper Focus | INK::KALLIS | | Wed Jun 25 1986 13:00 | 33 |
| Re .3:
>It's interesting to note how you've set up a polarity between
>fact and fiction when in fact they may be the same thing!
Definitionally, they can't be. Either they're one or the other,
though either may contain elements borrowed from bthe other.
I cited in .2 King Arthur and Camelot. The historic king was one
thing; the poetic/literary king another.
Homer composed _The Iliad_ as a celebration of the Trojen War.
Troy was condidered literary invention until the 19th Century, but
then it was found be archeologists. Does that mean that you buy
_every element_ of Homer's epic? Highly unlikely.
Atlantis, as mentioned in the base note, is a particularly bad case
since people are convinced that something that scholarship indicates
very strongly didn't exist had been "real."
As a _model_, it's okay to postulate-for-argument an Atlantis, but
to believe that the type of Atlantis you read of in, say, Donnelley
actually did exist will act as a bar for acquisition of knowledge
of the historic world. And that can be a shame.
A philosopher once said that the jewel of truth has many facets,
and to move away from one can mean you move closer to another.
But what he didn't say is that if you move away from one the geometric
probabilities are much greater that you'll move away from all of
them than that you'll approach a second.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
154.5 | Misc. trivia | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jun 25 1986 18:27 | 43 |
| <<POSTED FOR MYSELF, THIS TIME>>
Some random thoughts on Thera and Atlantis:
The modern Greek name for Thera is Thi'ra (the ' is over the i). It is
frequently referred to by its Italian name Santorin or Santori'ni. It's
most ancient known name is Calliste, which means "Most Beautiful".
Early theories credited Thera as being the major force in the destruction
of Minoan civilization. This has been shown quite clearly to be false.
Minoan culture survived and flourished after the eruption. It was left,
however, a little bit less able to recover from the next disaster.
Thera seems to have been only the first in a series of disasters which
collectively destroyed Minoan civilization.
The case for Thera being the inspiration of Plato's Atlantis is less
certain than Steve makes out. There are some interesting parallels
between Thera and the description of Atlantis, but it's unlikely that
we'll *ever* have enough evidence (barring the invention of time travel)
to equate the two with any great assurance.
The biggest discrepancy, by the way, is that Atlantis was 10 times bigger
and "sunk" ten times as long before Plato's time as Thera. Part of the
hypothesis is that this was the result of a mistranslation of number units
at some point. Or Plato may have felt it made a better story that way.
...Because Plato's accounts of Atlantis (in Timaios and Kritias) are
clearly intended to be fictions with a message -- parables or fables if
you will. He (or his mentor) simply chose to place them in an
"interesting" and remote location, just as a modern writer might chose
to place a story in Plato's Greece.
I strongly recommend L. Sprague de Camp's scholarly yet readable book,
"Lost Continents: The Atlantis Theme in History, Science, and Literature."
Even if you believe in the historical reality of Atlantis I think you will
find this interesting for the exoteric information it contains. The book
was originally published in 1954, but de Camp updated it some for a Dover
Books edition in 1970. Since Dover rarely lets things go out of print,
I suspect you can still get it from them, or even find it on the shelves
of a bookshop.
Topher
|
154.6 | The Power of Invention | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu Jun 26 1986 09:34 | 15 |
| There was an ancient trading city (Tartessos? I forget the name)
somewhere on the coast of Spain that slowly sank into the mud and
had to be abandoned. Some folk have claimed this as the historical
inspiration for Atlantis.
Since Plato had the talents of a great fiction writer as well as
those of a philosopher (he wrote plays in his youth, then burned
them when he decided they were beneath the dignity of Philosophy),
I would not put it past him to make up Atlantis out of whole cloth.
Last I heard, there was NO known mention of Atlantis prior to Plato,
nor of any culture much like Atlantis. It's perfectly possible
that Atlantis has as much to do with real ancient history as George
Lucas's "Star Wars" has to do with real astronomy.
Earl Wajenberg
|
154.7 | Literature and History | 15744::TILLSON | | Mon Jun 30 1986 13:17 | 22 |
|
re .4:
Steve, thanks for bringing up "Illiad" and Homer's Troy in this
context. In the past few weeks I have devoted my Monday evenings
to watching the very fine documentary "In Search Of The Trojan War"
which has been broadcast in several parts on PBS stations. It provides
a fine example of what historians and archaeologists go through
to reconcile historical fact with literary reference, and of how
literary reference can be used as a guide to uncovering and
understanding ancient history. It was fascinating! I suspect it
will be rebroadcast, as it was lavishly expensive to produce, and
was exceptionally well done. There is also a companion pictorial/text
which is available for about $20 at some bookstores and through
your local PBS stations.
Do you know if there have been similarly reputable documentaries
based on literary references to Atlantis?
Rita
|
154.8 | Atlantians and Negative Karma | HUDSON::STANLEY | It Must Have Been the Roses | Thu Nov 06 1986 14:37 | 10 |
| People that I have talked to recently have spoken of Atlantians corrupt
use of their powers and it's affect on the demise of Atlantis.
Supposedly there was a great deal of negative karma associated with
this corruption. Could someone elaborate on the corruption and/or
the negative karma that it brought on? I have heard that this is
a time that alot of Atlantians are reincarnating and I am interested
in what form this negative karma is taking. Please excuse any
ignorance in the preceding statements.
Dave
|
154.9 | Hope This Helps | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Thu Nov 06 1986 14:58 | 30 |
| Re .7:
Sorry for having taken so long before replying.
I think the deCamp book is the best place to look. Topher's given
it high marks; so do I.
Re .8:
Depends upon what you mean by Atlanteans. There are three basic
schools of thought on the subject, per the previous replies:
1) Such a place existed as an ancient land, complete with a high
civilization and all that implies.
2) The Atlantis story is a distortion of an actual historical
event or events, distorted mightily by legend and storytelling across
many generations (as per King Arthur).
3) It was made up out of whole cloth.
The "corruption of Atlanteans" story came from the Platonic dialogues,
where the philosopher was telling a story that vaguely paralleled
the story of the Tower of Babel (i.e., Man stepped over certain
bounds and was struck down for it) and even more closely, Noah's
Flood (Man was corrupt; the Great Flood killed all but a few of
'em).
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
154.10 | I'll take door #1 please... | HUDSON::STANLEY | It Must Have Been the Roses | Thu Nov 06 1986 16:00 | 9 |
| I guess I'm looking for info from people who go along with your
category 1).
> 1) Such a place existed as an ancient land, complete with a high
> civilization and all that implies.
Thanks,
Dave
|
154.11 | More on #1 Atlantis | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Thu Nov 06 1986 20:19 | 8 |
| Try "Edgar Cayce on Atlantis." According to him, it experienced three
partial sinkings. The third one put it completely under. The
refugees from the sinkings supposedly wound up in Egypt, the Basque
area of Spain, and Central and North America. Another interesting
book is "Atlantis" by Otto Muck. He takes an entirely different
approach and barely mentions Cayce at all.
wmb
|
154.12 | Probably not corruption as we now understand it .. | CYCLPS::BAHN | Well yes, I DO live on an island ... | Thu Nov 06 1986 21:42 | 10 |
|
Dave,
My sense is that our sin was more one of arrogance than corruption. We pushed
at nature too hard ... and lost a world. Perhaps that's why so many of us are
reincarnating in the here and now. Maybe we've learned enough in 10,000+ years
to prevent a repeat of that {foolishness. If not, we've plenty of time and
plenty of universe ... 10,000 years is a tiny fraction of eternity.
Terry
|
154.13 | FROM THE SCHOOL OF SCEPTICISM | EDEN::KLAES | Welcome to Olympus, Captain Kirk! | Fri Nov 07 1986 09:34 | 21 |
| Atlantis is a myth - an ideal society which Plato used to describe
his idea of a utopian world.
If you read Plato, you will find that he used many allegories
to explain his concepts.
In any event, where is the physical proof for Atlantis? I have
seen a few tabloid-type books out on the subject, with "sources"
claiming to have seen relics on the bottom of the Atlantic, but
of course they had no physical proof, only murky pictures at best.
Modern science was able to find the TITANIC, and that is just a
speck of metal compared to how huge Atlantis was supposed to be;
so how come nothing has been found?
I hope that several millenium from now, our literature is still
recognized for what it is, and not misinterpreted as Plato's (and
many other ancient writers) has been today.
Larry
|
154.14 | | HUDSON::STANLEY | Jack Straw | Fri Nov 07 1986 10:50 | 8 |
| I've never seen anything physical from Atlantis either. As far
as the Titanic goes, modern science was trying to find it. How
many modern scientists are trying to find Atlantis? Also, alot more
sediment and growth would have built up on Atlantis in 10,000 years
than on the Titanic since it sunk, making it (Atlantis) harder to
find anyway.
Dave
|
154.15 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Fri Nov 07 1986 11:37 | 31 |
| Re .14:
If there were a reasonably large "continent" in the Atlantic, there
probably would have been significant traces of it by this time --
probably at the close of the 19th Century when people were trying
to lay the Atlantic Cable. And, indeed, there have been a few
scientific expeditions looking for traces of such a place.
More importantly, if "Atlantis" sunk, it still would be in fairly
shallow water -- the same waters that some of the Costeau expeditions
have visited and explored, while studying ocean-floor life.
In short, the _physical_ reality of a mid-Atlantic "continent" seems
extremely doubtful.
On the other hand:
There is the viewpoint that _individual consciousness_ at its highest
levels is a relatively recent development; before that, there was
something more on the order of a group mind. Some occultists suggest
that this group-mind phenomenon (which is vestiegally[?] the
"collective subconscious" or "racial memory) pervaded the people
living then; these were "the Atlanteans." As _individual higher
consciousness_ developed, through the early equivalent of chieftans
(also explained as something forced on the early hominids by these
same occultists) or other leaders, the group-mind effect was
"submerged"; i.e., "sank." This is one possible basis of the psychic
version of the Atlantis legend.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
154.16 | One soul's prespective | AKOV68::FRETTS | | Fri Nov 07 1986 13:46 | 71 |
| re: .8
I am currently reading a book called RAMTHA. Ramtha is the spirit
who communicates through trance medium J.T.Knight - she is mentioned
in Shirley MacLaine's book "Dancing in the Light".
This is going to run a bit long, for I want to quote right from
the book.
"I am here to remind you of a heritage which most of you forgot,
long, long ago. I have come to give you a loftier perspective from
which you may reason and understand that you are, indeed, divine
and immortal entities who have always been loved and supported by
the essence called God.... I have brought with me the winds of change
upon your plane. I and those who stand with me are preparing mankind
for a grand event that has already been set in motion. We are going
to unite all the people of this plane by allowing man to witness
something great and brilliant, which will cause him to open up and
allow knowledge and love to flow forth.
Why is this being done? Because you are loved - greater than you
have ever considered love to be. And because it is time for man
to live a grander understanding than that which has plagued him
into dark ages, taken away his freedom, divided peoples, and caused
hatred between lovers and war amongst nations. It is time for that
to be finished. It is time for man to realize his divinity and
immortality of being, and cease groveling for survival upon this
plane.
I was born in ignorance in your understanding of time 35,000 years
ago. I was born in ignorance and desperation to an unfortunate
people, pilgrims from the land called Lemuria living in the slums
of Onai, the greatest port city of Atlatia ('the land you call
Atlantis') in its Southern sphere..... Because of the Atlatians
great involvement with technology, they worshiped the intellect.
Thus intellectual science became the religion of the Atlatians.
The Lemurians were quite different from the Atlatians. Their
social system was built upon communication through thought. They
had not the advancement of technology, only a great spiritual
understanding, for my forefathers were grand in their knowingness
of unseen values.... They loved an essence that could not be
identified. It was a power they called the Unknown God. Because
the Lemurians worshiped only this God, the Atlatians despised them,
for they despised anything that was not "progressive"....During
the hundred years before all of Atlatia was submerged, the
southernmost region was a primitive Atlatia that had degenerated
into the rule of tyrants... the Lemurians were considered the dung
of the earth, less than a dog in the street.
Contemplate for a moment being spat upon, urinated upon, and allowed
to wash it away only with your tears. Contemplate knowing that
the dogs in the streets have greater nourishment than you, who hunger
for anything to kill the agony in your belly... it was common to
see brutalization of children and the beating and raping of women."
He goes on to say that he saw his mother dragged away, only to come
back to the streets pregnant. He saw his mother die as she nursed
her baby daughter, and then witnessed the death of his baby sister.
What he was telling this background for was to explain his growing
hatred for the Unknown God, and then his journey back to Him/Her.
It sounds like the "Atlatians" weren't the greatest, and certainly
humanity hasn't learned a whole lot in all this time. We're still
doing this to one another! Maybe that's why those who supposedly
lived in Atlatia are reincarnating now ... to assist in the changes
that Ramtha speaks of, and to take this opportunity to heal their
souls, and ours.
Carole
|
154.17 | Past life memories? | HUDSON::STANLEY | Jack Straw | Fri Nov 07 1986 15:37 | 6 |
| If anyone has any past life memories of Atlantis (Atlatia), would
you enter them here if you feel comfortable doing it. I would if I had
any (at least I think I would), but I have trouble remembering what I
did last week. :-)
Dave
|
154.18 | IF IT CAN PASS THE SCIENCE TEST FIRST, THEN... | EDEN::KLAES | Welcome to Olympus, Captain Kirk! | Fri Nov 07 1986 16:46 | 26 |
| I guess my patterns of thinking are just too scientific, but
I cannot believe there was ever any REAL Atlantis, except in the
imaginative mind of Plato.
I knew a Classics professor in college, who said they found
a manuscript of Plato written originally in his time - many manuscripts
of ancient writers come from Medieval monks' copies - and they
discovered it (Plato's REPUBLIC) did not match the "modern" copy.
In other words, the monks (or whomever) changed the meanings of
Plato down through the centuries, no doubt to conform to Christian
beliefs, and to "explain" to themselves concepts they could not
understand; and scholars are afraid this has happened to many ancient
works of literature.
The Medieval writers also, no doubt, took Plato literally, and
therefore began the myth of Atlantis, of which some have unknowingly
believed, and others purposely used to deceive others (as in to
buy their "true" books on the topic).
I'm not arguing whether reincarnation exists or not - I'm arguing
whether or not you can get a soul from a non-existant person of
a non-existant culture on a non-existant continent (Steve Kallis
was particularly correct when he said that Atlantis would be in
shallow water if it had sunk, and been easy to find today).
Larry
|
154.19 | Something real, but garbled? | COLORS::HARDY | | Fri Nov 07 1986 21:41 | 48 |
| I am inclined to believe that Atlantis reflects an ancient, real event,
but one which is distorted if recounted in our current context without
adjusting for the difference in perspective between ourselves and that
of the contemporaries of Atlantis.
We know that the Mediterranean basin and surroundings has been the
scene of violent natural disasters, such as the volcanic eruption that
buried the people of Pompeii in burning, choking ash. And we know that
sophisticated races of seafaring traders were setting out from the
Middle East and northern Africa -- the Minoans, the Phoencians and even
earlier groups, bearing the lore of Egypt and other civilizations.
Imagine yourself a stone-age peasant living on the warm shores of the
Mediterranean, or even in the British Isles. One day, the great ship of
brilliant purple-and-gold sails is late. You know it is late, for you
have tied a knot in a leather thong every day since the last ship.
They were magic ships. They were steered by wizards, who gazed at the
stars and consulted marks on lambskin. The ships brought subtle
strangers, whose sharp eyes saw everything, who asked questions about
things *everybody* knew, but talked freely of things *nobody* knew, and
maybe even things man was not meant to know!
Sometimes they said impious things, or chuckled at your folk ways. But
nobody could turn them away -- they had too much to offer -- rare
medicines, bronze tools, marvelous glazed pottery, bewitching silks,
every type of cunning craftwork. And the incredible secret of
creating wealth -- mysterious indeed, in a time when most people
figured the way to acquire things was to steal them from the neighbors.
Whenever the strangers came, a few of the warriors would give
contemptous or even speculative looks -- but the clan elders would
brook no interference with them. If they could master the ocean,
harness the spirits of the wind, speak with the stars -- why, it would
be madness to anger these wizards!
Yet one day, all the amazing strangers disappeared. In a hundred
little ports, the fishermen, the miners and farmers and tanners look
out to the ocean, but no ships come. Maybe a handful recall the day
the warm sea roiled and thrashed, and the moon came up blood-red and
ominous on the far horizon.
Maybe, a few months later, a band of nomadic tribesmen find a half-dead
survivor who babbles deliriously of a city -- a city crushed in a
single blow -- the wrath of gods. And the bards sing the tale,
suitably embellished, over thousands of years. By the time of
Plato it may have dwindled to an obscure fragment.
|
154.20 | Atlantis/Lemuria | NEXUS::MORGAN | going where no Pagan has gone before | Sat Nov 08 1986 02:07 | 6 |
| I think Atlantis is a myth. But myths are "collective dreams"
that give us guidence and faith in our continuance upon the planet.
The Lemuria/Atlantis dicotomy could really tell us something about
our present world; but only if we listen.
Mikie?
|
154.22 | RE 154.21 | EDEN::KLAES | Welcome to Olympus, Captain Kirk! | Mon Nov 10 1986 10:04 | 14 |
| Objective? How can anyone be more "objective" than trying to
find out whether Atlantis exists or not than by science?
What is needed for proof is either physical evidence or verifiable
documentation. Modern-day people claiming to have visions of living
in Atlantis and Lemuria (which I find even more doubtful, as most
Western peoples were unfamiliar with the Pacific Ocean in ancient
times - note that I say WESTERN, where the Atlantis legend comes
from) cannot be proven; they might be lying, or they may be
misinterpreting dreams and/or mental visions as reality, or they
may be misguided in their interpretations by others.
Larry
|
154.23 | Today's science is yesterday's religion | VAXWRK::NORDLINGER | In a GALAXY far, far away | Mon Nov 10 1986 13:59 | 17 |
| > Objective? How can anyone be more "objective" than trying to
> find out whether Atlantis exists or not than by science?
Boy did you hit a nerve...
Claiming something is objective because it is scientific is
like claiming something is just because it is Christian.
Science, like religion, is based on faith, value systems ect.
It is no more objective than any other set of beliefs.
See Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
I didn't really believe that until I read a scientific
appraisal of astrology (which I consider Hogwash) and realised
astrology is as valid as biology, geology and (of course :^)
phyics.
|
154.24 | Knowledge doesn't equal Method | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Tue Nov 11 1986 08:08 | 24 |
| Re .23:
"Science" isn't a monolithic Thing; it's a discipline to reach
approximations of truth for the physical world. Thast it has branches
such as biology, chemistry, and physics is a demonstration that
no one Great Truth is achieved by consulting an oracle labeled
"Science." Such an oracle doesn't exist.
However, the scientrific method has _great_ merit. It was through
this methodology that, to use an overused example, men were carried
to the moon: the cornerstone for every piece of engineering that
went into the venture was that all elements were derived from
scientific investigation.
Now what of Atlantis? Either it existed once, with physical reality,
or it is either a parable or legend. _If it existed_, its remains
can be detected by using some form of scientific measure; it not,
it can't.
Sorry: today's _knowledge derived from scientific inverstigation_
might be tomorrow's "religion"; however, the methodology isn't.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
154.25 | Addendum | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Tue Nov 11 1986 12:08 | 26 |
| I see we could well go down a rathole here, so let me do a slight
"reset" and try over...
Forget "science." What's important here is _technology_. Logic
tells us that either Atlantis existed or it didn't. If it did,
it would leave traces.
Current _technology_ enables us to explore and map by various means
regions of the ocean's surface we couldn't before. The _Glomar
Explorer_ was able to locate and retrieve [about half of] a Soviet
submarine from the bottom of the Pacific. _Glomar Explorer_ also
detected metallic nodules on the sea bottom; these are approxmately
fist-sized.
Now Atlantis was supposed to be a small continent located between
Europe and North America. If anything as large as a small continent
sank out of sight, it would probably be in very shallow water and
_some_ trace of it would exist [treasure-seekers have found sunken
galleons; the _monitor_ was found in the mud of the Potomac, and
here we're talkiong about a whole continent]. Current _technology_,
not "science" ought to be able to locate some of that.
I hope this staves off the philosophical digression here.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
154.27 | RE 154.26 | EDEN::KLAES | Welcome to Olympus, Captain Kirk! | Tue Nov 11 1986 13:21 | 14 |
| And you seemed to have missed my comment in 154.18.
I was NOT arguing against reincarnation - I was arguing against
whether you could have lived a past life in a place that does not
really exist in the physical sense; and yes, they will have to show
me verifiable physical evidence for me to believe that Atlantis
(and Lemuria) existed as a civilization and continent.
I was being objective about your right to discuss reincarnation.
Larry
|
154.28 | I'm a believer | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Tue Nov 11 1986 19:24 | 20 |
| Hope there is room for one more in this discussion. I believe in
Atlantis because I want to believe in Atlantis. Like St Anselm,
"I believe so that I may understand." Not having to worry about
whether it existed or not leaves me more time to puzzle over some of
the other interesting aspects. For example, Atlantis has been "found"
several times in several different places, this includes the Atlantic,
the Mediterranean, and the Pacific. Then there is the fact that no
one has produced a piece of it. (Can you imagine what a piece of
Atlantis would go for?) Not to mention the idea that the native
Americans might originally been native Atlanteans. Hey, if I'm going
to believe in something off the wall, why not something really with
so many interesting facets as Atlantis.
So why does it have to be in shallow water? If it did exist, and it
did sink, why couldn't it have sunk real deep? Maybe the thing was
resting on a massive karst region and an earthquake or whatever
collapsed everything all the way down to the bottom like a big sinkhole
in Florida.
Mike
|
154.29 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Wed Nov 12 1986 08:23 | 15 |
| Re .28:
"Believing because one wants to believe" is not unlike the scholar
who _refused_ to look in Galileo's telescope because he indicated
what he would see wouldn't tally with what he believed. Nice idea
but unusual approach to the exterior reality. [Many people believed
the Earth was flat, too.]
On your other question: a _continent-wide_ sinkhole structure surely
would have left some indications.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: The mythopoetic approach is certainly a good alternate, however.
|
154.30 | Intuition > Logic? | HUDSON::STANLEY | Sitting on Top of the World | Wed Nov 12 1986 09:42 | 12 |
| I also believe in Atlantis and I have no specific proof to support that
belief. I just have a very strong feeling about it and the feeling
has become stronger recently (even in the midst of all the reasons
listed here why it didn't exist). Some of my feelings have been
intensified by hearing other people's past life memories of Atlantis.
My scientific side sees the logic of why there is no Atlantis but my
intuitive side has been consistently overpowering it. I'm going
to continue to look until I'm satisfied that there is no more to
be learned. Also, I don't have any past life memories (that I
know of) ....yet.
Dave
|
154.31 | | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:42 | 32 |
| Just because I have decided to believe in something doesn't mean I'm
not open minded. I don't mind examining evidence that indicates
Atlantis never existed. Heck, there might be something to it. In that
case, I would change my mind and decide to believe something different.
I think it is good to have beliefs, good to question those beliefs, and
good to change them when they need it. I have trouble believing six
impossible things before breakfast so I try to do one or two in my
spare time.
You are beginning to sound like my geologist friend. When I started
talking about Atlantis, he started talking about plate tectonics,
mid-atlantic lava flows, etc. For every creative reason I came up with
for Atlantis, he had some mundane reason why it wasn't there. It was
a very interesting conversation.
I read a sf story once that took place in the future. A fellow claimed
that a large city once existed in America, was destroyed, and because
of some sort of mass amnesia or denial of reality, nobody remembered
that it was ever there. He was laughed at and ridiculed. At the end
of the story you found out that the name of city was Chicago.
Wouldn't it be interesting if something like this is what happened to
Atlantis. I read someplace that sometimes people who commit some kind
of horrible crime manage to wipe any memory of it from their mind. Not
just individuals but groups.
What if Atlantis did exist but we mostly just forgot about it. The
last I heard, no one was really sure where Tarot cards came from or
what country gypsies came from. If history can lose track of a deck
of cards or a group of people, how about a continent?
Mike Baker
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154.32 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Wed Nov 12 1986 13:32 | 7 |
| Re .30, .31:
Nothing that isn't absolutely impossible is, of course, "possible,"
though the statistical chance of its reality may be infinitesimal.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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154.33 | The Bicameral Mind | VAXUUM::DYER | Spot the Difference | Thu Jan 22 1987 14:22 | 13 |
| {RE .15} - There's a book called (get this) _The_Origin_of_Consciousness_in_the_
_Breakdown_of_the_Bicameral_Mind_, by Julian Jaynes. Its thesis is before con-
sciousness came on the scene, humans operated from a bicameral mind: auditory
hallucinations from one part of the brain directed the rest of the brain,
literally telling it what to do.
Part of the argument for this is that very old Western literature does not de-
pict people as having consciousness or volition. They went and did something
because their god(s) told them to. According to Jaynes, this appears to be
the case in the Bible, up through Ezekiel.
This would be after Plato, though . . .
<_Jym_>
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154.35 | Is reality important? | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jan 23 1987 13:06 | 33 |
| RE: .34
I agree completely (well almost completely). The myth/legend of
Atlantis is important in understanding ourselves. Its "popularity"
seems to indicate that it relates to many people in our culture
(it may, of course, represent much more -- it may say something
about our culture as a whole, or about the human mind in general
-- but at the least, it says something about many individuals).
I think, however, that it *is* important to understand whether Atlantis
physically existed or not. Those who say "it is psychologically
important therefore it existed" effectively diminish their capability
to understand the legend's import to themselves. And I have seen
not a trace of evidence for Atlantis which didn't boil down to this
statement. Much closer to the truth would be the statement "it
is psychologically important therefore it *seems* to exist". If
you understand *this* statement than you understand a lot.
Ultimately what is important is that "Atlantis exists within us".
Attempts to project it without only diminish its power. It is perhaps
fortunate that Atlantis (almost certainly) never existed (I am of
course not refering to any non-Atlantean seeds to the story) since
this would make it much more difficult to distinguish the importance
of the Atlantis (legend) within from the Atlantis (history) without.
"As within so without" is a very important principle, but it should
not be misapplied. Atlantis within is a complex set of thoughts,
principles and emotions which have been clothed in a set of symbols
(story) about an ancient city in the Atlantic Ocean. If you look for
the *meaning* of Atlantis outside of you, you will find it. If you
look only for the city, you will have missed the point.
Topher
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154.36 | I for one, believe! But I won't tell why! | USADEC::CLOUD | Sharing time on the Zen Machine | Fri May 06 1988 15:51 | 13 |
| Pardon me, but I seem to remember reading somewhere that although
Atlantis sank, there was a reason for it. That reason being that
they were playing around with some apparently "ultropotent" crystals,
and that they lost control of the power within those crystals, which
resulted in it's destruction. For what it's worth, there's a side
note earlier in this conference referring to crystals, and a comment
made by Seth that these crystals still exist, but mankind is not
ready to handle that kind of resonate power, so they remain
undiscovered. Apparently, when we are ready, we will find them.
Phil
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154.37 | everybody's entitled to belief | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Fri May 06 1988 16:12 | 16 |
| Re .36 (Phil):
>Pardon me, but I seem to remember reading somewhere that although
>Atlantis sank, there was a reason for it. That reason being that
>they were playing around with some apparently "ultropotent" crystals,
>and that they lost control of the power within those crystals, which
>resulted in it's destruction. ...
The problem with "reading somewhere" something of that order is
that it becomes third-hand hearsay data. The two _origin_ stories
of Atlantis, the Platonic dialogues, don't even mention crystals.
Unless there's some cross-checking of the source that can be pertty
straightforward, then for _anything_ anybody reads, there may be
a hard time separating wheat from chaff.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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154.38 | Whether it is true or not is a different story | ALIEN::MELVIN | Ten zero, eleven zero zero by zero 2 | Fri May 06 1988 16:51 | 9 |
| > The problem with "reading somewhere" something of that order is
> that it becomes third-hand hearsay data.
I believe I once read something quite similar. It was an E. Cayce book
dealing with Atlantis. I cannot give the actual name of the book since
it was quite a number of years ago. It should be easy to find (the book,
not the crystals :-) ).
-Joe
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154.39 | | SCOMAN::RUDMAN | Hers,pron. His. | Sat May 07 1988 14:49 | 5 |
| Not having waded thru this one, my 2 cents recall the series
The Making of a Continent which, I believe, lent little credence
to the existance of Atlantis.
Don
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