Caleb Jones
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And so all I'm going to do is give you a coherent framework about how you can fit all of these things together based on what you read in the Bible and what you also hear in places like the Joe Rogan podcast.
So the places that if you want to see a longer sort of geography, not a history, but more of a geography and geology take on it,
Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson.
I think Doug Van Doren's talked about Randall Carlson.
Yeah, he's great.
He's kind of a Pythagorean.
He's got a very weird sacred geometry view, which I just don't get.
I'm not a math guy, but he's definitely like the very well-read, he knows what he's talking about when it comes to geography and geology.
And of course, Graham Hancock, you got to give credit where credit's due.
This is the man who's really...
really brought Atlantis into, I guess, a serious conversation in our age.
And he's got things that need to be talked about.
But the myth of Phaethon was the thing that was mentioned in the Timaeus.
And that Egyptian priest says there is a story which even you Greeks have preserved that once upon a time Phaethon, the son of Helios, yoke the seeds of his father chariot, but he was not able to drive them in the path of his father and he burnt up all that was on the earth and was himself destroyed by a thunderbolt.
We have a lot of, this is a famous story.
It's been written many, many times, but the version that we have really comes from Ovid in about 8 AD.
And it's one of the later treatments of this story.
But what we know from that story is that there's a man whose father is a God, that's a Nephilim.
And because he is ashamed, he wishes to know his father, who's a God.
And upon meeting his divine father, he tries to take up the mantle of his father, who is a God, and he destroys the earth in the process.