How Accurate is Graham Hancock in His Theories?

in #hive-10450017 days ago

Fortunately, Graham Hancock has become better known over the last few years. I knew about him since my childhood and I have read and watched a great deal of content from creators from many different countries and cultures. One of the more well known incidents was Graham Hancock's debate with what I consider to be the archaeologist version of Vaush.

Flint Dibble Was Full of Lies

The amount of archaeological evidence for anything ancient is going to be very rare to find. I suggest everyone to take a look at r/AbandonedPorn for pictures of what happens to human constructions when abandoned for a very short amount of time.

If you like Graham Hancock or at least interested in ancient archaeology, I highly recommend the following people. You may already know some of them:

https://www.youtube.com/@RealPraveenMohan/videos
https://www.youtube.com/@BrightInsight
https://www.youtube.com/@NileshOak
https://www.youtube.com/@TheRandallCarlson/videos


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There are a lot of things I agree with him on. I don’t know of one thing in particular I could say he’s wrong about but I am not sure about all the topics.

What I think is most important about people like him - we need to question the way things are! We shouldn’t just take interpretations as law in things like archeology. We have no clue about so many things! I think the amazon jungle is a clear example of this - there have been DNA evidence of people that came from Australia, the aboriginals, found in ancient South American tribes! It could be the other way around but the point is, we have no clue how those people traveled such great distances when we assume that people only did ocean voyages back in rhe 1400’s. It’s absolutely preposterous to think we have been exploring for only that long.

I appreciated what flint brought to the table - he had the discussion with Graham that many people refused to from the archeological community. They are a little arrogant when it comes to people who haven’t paid lots of money for college courses on topics they write books on. It’s really annoying!

Biggest thread we have now is IVC. Their script was decoded. Turns out it's post vedic sanskirt. So vedic texts have been around for at least 6K years. IVC is at least as old as 9K years. That's 1000 years after Göbekli Tepe was abandoned. We have a continued civilization with stories and many traditions intact till present day!

That's awesome thanks for sharing I will have to see if I can find more stuff to dig into this.

I was listening to the Easter island stuff and that was sad - the elders that remembered their history were killed and people isolated so we lost a lot of their tradition. It could have been a lot older than we realize.

Sanskrit is definitely a fascinating language, I dont hear enough about it.

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Amazon is a great place for archaeological exploration. They had massive civilizations unlike most places, cities did not get built over them. instead they were covered by the forest.

One of the most underrated fields IMHO is astro-archaeology. When you keep seeing a civilization mentioning some events that happened thousands of years before the accepted origin of civilization, we have to accept that either they had astronomy that was many millennia ahead of rest of the world or someone was there to see these things happen and it was passed down over the ages.

He should seriously focus on Indus Valley Civilization. The script got decoded. Turns out it's post vedic sanskirt. Vedas are now confirmed to be older than IVC.

This is some amazing discovery. It could be the biggest discovery in linguistics in a century!