I don't know where I read it (or maybe I'm threading a bunch of shit together), but my favourite theory of Atlantis is that it is an ancestral memory of Doggerland, which was washed away by the tides, and could have also been responsible for various flood myths.
@CL-we8tn Жыл бұрын
We debated it once in class, however instead of doggerland we argued that it was passed down as oral history among the peoples around the black sea, which started filling quite recently, anyone living there would gradually have kept moving up against the growing sea. But this is years ago, and with notes 🤣, i cannot remember the particulars like when about the sea started filling.
@michaelbedford8017 Жыл бұрын
'Philosopher Kings'. A great name for a brand of cigarettes.
@ripricsaw Жыл бұрын
There’s a Greek brand of Cigarettes called George Karelias and Sons, they sell superkings that come with an Aristotle quote on the inside of the box, only just realised the connection!
@michaelbedford8017 Жыл бұрын
@@ripricsaw Hi Kafka (or may I call you Franz?), there was a time when many cigarettes had the word 'Kings' after the brandname to indicate they were 'kingsize'. This mundane witicism seems to have gone over the heads of everyone but your goodself. Perhaps I should restrict my dad-jokes to 'hoi poloi' in future.
@sohara.... Жыл бұрын
... hoi polloi ... 😅
@launiesoult3248Ай бұрын
What's the name of a pale ale too
@michaelbedford8017 Жыл бұрын
Graham Hancock, the P.T. Barnum of Archaeology. A canny Brit who eventually realised that the USA was the natural market for his wares and became a millionaire.
@giespouwen8091 Жыл бұрын
I really think Graham hancock believes his own narrative and doesn't want to fool anyone.
@sazajac77z8 ай бұрын
There has been a long battle between the gradualists and cataclysmicists. Didn't start with him. Read up on the Velikovsky affair. Or "punctuated equilibrium" debate. Science quite often circles the wagons. "Trust the Science"? Fuk dat.
@gomey708 ай бұрын
@@sazajac77z Circling the wagons = consensus. Without science we're back to fairy-tales and myths.
@MusicEnjoyerSLSАй бұрын
If Hancock were a grifter he wouldn't bother to debate and defend his position, since he clearly doesn't need to to maintain popularity. He does so because he thinks he's right. The proper conclusion to draw here is not that Hancock is a fraud but that scientists are fragile and egocentric megalomaniacs who are completely intolerant of heterodox ideas, going so far as to slander the people who hold them as white supremacists.
@Terinije Жыл бұрын
Not going to lie, when I read the Republic in college, it took me forty pages or so before I realized "oh, he's not being sarcastic and setting up a gotcha turnaround?" and had to restart the book. A bunch of snobbish dickery.
@sohara.... Жыл бұрын
An extraordinary book. I have yet to read Popper's critique of Plato, as an authoritarian. The idea of separating people into classes or groups according to ability (as decided by some arbiter group) is in novel & film *Divergent*
@kaloarepo2882 ай бұрын
Could the legend have been sourced from Phoenician and Carthaginian explorations and colonization in the western Mediterranean and indeed in north west Africa - the Carthaginians had territories on the Atlantic in south western Spain and indeed in Morocco where the Atlas mountains are and there are famous reports of Carthaginian explorers even circumnavigating Africa. Plato himself spent some time in Sicily an island contested between Greeks and Phoenicians.Carthage itself was a major sea power and even had a circular artificial port where its fleet was docked.
@francislankester80510 ай бұрын
Hapgood's Maps of the ancient sea kings promoted the Piri Reis map showing Antarctica ice free and so a candidate for Atlantis. It even appears in Gunter Lulling's work on the Quran.
@richcole1578 ай бұрын
Guys I think Hancock says there was meteorite impact and resulting floods and climate change beyond reasonable doubt and cites scientific papers I haven’t read. He then describes myths and speculates on what they might represent.
@dannydore803811 ай бұрын
Randall Carlson has the true story of Atlantis
@renep.1435 Жыл бұрын
There is a weirdness and a distinctiveness about Plato's story that, for many people including myself, makes it very hard to believe that he just made it up.
@ripricsaw Жыл бұрын
There’s a weirdness and distinctiveness to Harry Potter, do you find it hard to believe that JK Rowing made that up too?
@renep.1435 Жыл бұрын
@@ripricsaw Actually the weirdness and distinctiveness of Harry Potter is explained by the presence of archetypes and mythical patterns that Rowling is drawing on. So also in the case of Harry Potter, this proves that there is more to the story than just the desire to create a political allegory.
@ripricsaw Жыл бұрын
@@renep.1435 You've just proved my point there. The weirdness and distrinctiveness of the story of Atlantis is explained by the presence of archetypes and 'mythical patterns', or, real world examples such as the Spartans. Atlantis is simply a story :)
@henkvandergaast3948 Жыл бұрын
God that intro synopsis was waffle
@francislankester80510 ай бұрын
Luce The End of Atlantis is well worth a read as he basically says that Plato made it up as a reproof to Athens.
@annielloyd8177Ай бұрын
Love these podcasts but a little less snarking at Mr. Hancock would make it more sympathetic.
@natecanavanar4696 Жыл бұрын
Atlantis is a fun enough idea in a story, but I don't think it should be taken seriously or literally. Sadly, not everyone sees it like that. As for GH not being entirely wrong, isn't it suspected to be Crete? Maybe Crete did have a better grade of bronze or pottery, but I can't imagine there's *that* much to it. Next ep will be an interesting listen.
@FartCoffin Жыл бұрын
Why not take Plato at his word? There isn’t enough evidence to dismiss his claim
@michaelbedford8017 Жыл бұрын
@@FartCoffin 'Why not take Plato at his word'. If, as many believe, Plato's Atlantis is a parable, a work of fiction, then to regard it as fact is decidedly NOT 'taking Plato at his word'. It would be like believing Lord of the Rings. The only reason why people don't as yet is because it was created too recently to be plausible. Mind you, there are people who believe The Holocaust to be fiction, so there's no accounting for some people's either stupidity or wickedness.
@Dude000010 ай бұрын
Santorini is often given as a possibility for obvious reasons.
@metacomet101 Жыл бұрын
An other podcast funded by “big dirt”
@sohara.... Жыл бұрын
What does this mean?
@RainFall21123 ай бұрын
@@sohara.... JOKES
@CL-we8tn Жыл бұрын
I think Atlantis did exist.
@adrianseanheidmann45596 ай бұрын
why?
@maggiesimmons108410 ай бұрын
These 2 are misrepresenting the actual arguments and assertions of Mr. Graham Hancock. Thus I downvote, and leave before the end of this dishonest vid
@eughrologh9 ай бұрын
Hancock is a fantasist.
@adrianseanheidmann45596 ай бұрын
How can you "misrepresent" the actual arguments?
@TheMatthew9201 Жыл бұрын
More modern historians have found evidence that Atlantis might’ve been proof of an utopian African kingdom, likely around North west Africa
@tomcrawford6360 Жыл бұрын
Well they haven't
@ripricsaw Жыл бұрын
@@tomcrawford6360 haha
@adrianseanheidmann45596 ай бұрын
öööh. Nope. More Afro-Centrist bullshit, simple.
@kaloarepo2882 ай бұрын
Evidence that a mountain slid into the Atlantic ocean in the Canary Islands area - underwater beaches are detectable.
@notsomeanmark2 ай бұрын
Hancock isnt a historian. Love his premise though.
@chrisbromley6739 күн бұрын
Historian is defined as a person whos studies and writes about history (in several versions of a "dictionary") i wonder why you dont think Hancock qualifies, what else can he do to attain credit for his work in the field of history... Maybe its a lack of a history PhD, like all those PhD egyptologists who think civilisation is only as old as the pyramids...