Graham Hancock
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And also that archaeologists would be willing to trust the general public to make up their own minds.
And also that archaeologists would be willing to trust the general public to make up their own minds.
It's as though certain archaeologists are afraid of the public being presented with an alternative point of view, which they regard as quote-unquote dangerous, because they somehow underestimate the intelligence of the general public and think the general public are just going to accept that much later.
It's as though certain archaeologists are afraid of the public being presented with an alternative point of view, which they regard as quote-unquote dangerous, because they somehow underestimate the intelligence of the general public and think the general public are just going to accept that much later.
It's as though certain archaeologists are afraid of the public being presented with an alternative point of view, which they regard as quote-unquote dangerous, because they somehow underestimate the intelligence of the general public and think the general public are just going to accept that much later.
Actually, by condemning those alternative point of view, archaeologists make it much more likely that the general public will accept those alternative point of view because there is a great distrust of experts in our society today. And behaving in a snobbish, arrogant way, we archaeologists are the only people who are really qualified to speak about the past.
Actually, by condemning those alternative point of view, archaeologists make it much more likely that the general public will accept those alternative point of view because there is a great distrust of experts in our society today. And behaving in a snobbish, arrogant way, we archaeologists are the only people who are really qualified to speak about the past.
Actually, by condemning those alternative point of view, archaeologists make it much more likely that the general public will accept those alternative point of view because there is a great distrust of experts in our society today. And behaving in a snobbish, arrogant way, we archaeologists are the only people who are really qualified to speak about the past.
And anybody else who speaks about the past is dangerous. That actually is not helpful to archaeology in the long term. There could be a much more positive and a much more cooperative relationship. And I can see that relationship with a gentleman like Ed Barnhart.
And anybody else who speaks about the past is dangerous. That actually is not helpful to archaeology in the long term. There could be a much more positive and a much more cooperative relationship. And I can see that relationship with a gentleman like Ed Barnhart.
And anybody else who speaks about the past is dangerous. That actually is not helpful to archaeology in the long term. There could be a much more positive and a much more cooperative relationship. And I can see that relationship with a gentleman like Ed Barnhart.
It was very much the case with archaeologist Marty Parsonin from the University of Helsinki and with geographer Alcea Ranzi, Brazilian geographer, very, very senior figure.
It was very much the case with archaeologist Marty Parsonin from the University of Helsinki and with geographer Alcea Ranzi, Brazilian geographer, very, very senior figure.
It was very much the case with archaeologist Marty Parsonin from the University of Helsinki and with geographer Alcea Ranzi, Brazilian geographer, very, very senior figure.
um who i worked with in in the amazon for season two of ancient apocalypse looking at these astonishing earthworks that have emerged from the amazon jungle and which more and more are now being found with lidar indeed we found some of them ourselves with lidar while we were there yeah that was an incredible part of the show that i got a chance to preview it's like there's all this earthworks yeah the traces of things built on the ground that probably you can only really
um who i worked with in in the amazon for season two of ancient apocalypse looking at these astonishing earthworks that have emerged from the amazon jungle and which more and more are now being found with lidar indeed we found some of them ourselves with lidar while we were there yeah that was an incredible part of the show that i got a chance to preview it's like there's all this earthworks yeah the traces of things built on the ground that probably you can only really
um who i worked with in in the amazon for season two of ancient apocalypse looking at these astonishing earthworks that have emerged from the amazon jungle and which more and more are now being found with lidar indeed we found some of them ourselves with lidar while we were there yeah that was an incredible part of the show that i got a chance to preview it's like there's all this earthworks yeah the traces of things built on the ground that probably you can only really
the sky with the sky yeah and and and a very good knowledge of geometry as well because these are geometrical structures and some of them even even seem to incorporate geometrical games almost of the kind like squaring the circle uh it's not quite that but you have a lovely square earthwork with a lovely circle earthwork right in the middle of it Whatever else they were, they were geometers.
the sky with the sky yeah and and and a very good knowledge of geometry as well because these are geometrical structures and some of them even even seem to incorporate geometrical games almost of the kind like squaring the circle uh it's not quite that but you have a lovely square earthwork with a lovely circle earthwork right in the middle of it Whatever else they were, they were geometers.
the sky with the sky yeah and and and a very good knowledge of geometry as well because these are geometrical structures and some of them even even seem to incorporate geometrical games almost of the kind like squaring the circle uh it's not quite that but you have a lovely square earthwork with a lovely circle earthwork right in the middle of it Whatever else they were, they were geometers.