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220 pages of results. 321. The Coming Cosmic Debate in the Sciences and Humanities: Revolutionary Vs. Evolutionary Primevology [Articles]
... primevology, a new concept of the first ages of nature and mankind: Grave catastrophes have befallen planet Earth. The evidence of geo1ogy. oceanography. meteorology pa1eomagnetism, and archaeology are continuously bringing forward new evidence, and rediscovering old evidence, that in times past the Earth suffered repeated devastation by quakes, floods, fires, and winds whose ... connect with common centres that were obliterated in catastrophes, leaving behind many puzzling connections between the Orient, America, and the Mediterranean. All such problems extend beyond history into anthropology and other fields, of course. III. A third large area of fuel for debate would be the humanities. There are many fields here and my breakdown of ...
322. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Review]
... ,000 carved circular engravings. Recent datings show the art to date back 75,000 years and associated tools to an incredible 176,000 years, causing uproar in archaeological circles. Man was not supposed to have reached Australia until 60,000 years ago and the art is more than twice the age of the previous earliest known from ... of life but now it seems they evolved from almost limbless marine predators, a case of preadaptation to a specialised mode of locomotion during an aquatic phase - like humans? ANTHROPOLOGY Neanderthal, early and late Sunday Times 29.9 .96, 3.11.96, 31.12,.96, Science Frontiers 104 Mar-Apr 96 ...
323. Letters To The Edttor [Journals] [Aeon]
... sky, and so bright that stars likely could not have been seen even if sunlight reflected from it were in a crescent form. I would guess that the pseudoscience of astrology is as old or nearly as old as many of the myths that are utilized in Talbott's presentation. He should know how far back in time that astrology has been ... conference also made similar references to his polar model. There was no intended malice in any of these frivolities, including mine, but do admit that I owe Talbott an apology for trivializing his model with this appellation- despite the fact that it was indeed descriptive of the model that he had originally presented to the readers of AEON. It ...
324. "Worlds in Collision" and the Prince of Denmark: II. Hamlet and Meso-American Myth [Journals] [SIS Review]
... then, are we to explain the similarities? The first body of evidence which will help us unravel the knot comes to us from two rather hostile quarters - recent Mesoamerican archaeological research and Worlds in Collision. From the first, we learn that the origins of early Mesoamerican culture, which until recently were not thought to begin much before 1500 ... action corresponds to a universal pattern of archetype and myth which "goes far back into tribal prehistory, and emerges in varying but interrelated forms in many different societies. This anthropological universality enables us to look at Hamlet as the heightened manifestation of an incredibly basic story." [7 ] Critical attitudes toward myth have varied widely in the last ...
325. On Mars and Pestilence [Journals] [Aeon]
... , almost without exception, emphasize the forbidding phase of his nature, and the myths associated with him deal with destruction, pestilence, and death...In Babylonian astrology, he is identified with the planet Mars, and the omen-literature shows that Mars in ancient days, as still at the present time, was regarded as the planet ... in times of crisis, such as an eclipse of the sun, to sacrifice hunchbacks and other grotesquely deformed victims. (170) This scapegoat-like rite appears to find its aetiology in the myth surrounding the god Nanahuatl, who offered himself as a martyr in order to resuscitate the missing sun: It is said that in the absence of the ...
326. Year Two Thousand and One [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... identify uniquely open-minded researchers with the highest qualifications in these areas of interest: cosmology, astronomy, physics and mathematics, geology, history and philosophy of science, anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, comparative mythology, and comparative religion. We would particularly like to hear from readers who are in a good position to assist us in liaison with such ... seeking to identify uniquely open-minded researchers with the highest qualifications in these areas of interest: cosmology, astronomy, physics and mathematics, geology, history and philosophy of science, anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, comparative mythology, and comparative religion. We would particularly like to hear from readers who are in a good position to assist us in liaison ...
327. The Green: Mythological Booklist [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... like alt.mythology. The criteria for inclusion on this list is simple - the work needs only to have some mythological content. Some sources listed are more anthropological or archaeological in nature, but it is sometimes difficult to draw lines around where mythology ends and some other topic picks up. As the list grows, additional criteria may be ... Usenet newsgroups like alt.mythology. The criteria for inclusion on this list is simple - the work needs only to have some mythological content. Some sources listed are more anthropological or archaeological in nature, but it is sometimes difficult to draw lines around where mythology ends and some other topic picks up. As the list grows, additional criteria ...
328. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... SIS Review Vol II No 4 (Spring 1978) Home | Issue Contents Focus Ebla, the Plain Dealer Professor Noel David Freedman, editor of the American journal The Biblical Archaeological Review, gave a lecture on January 5th to the Anglo-Israel Archaeological Society at Burlington House on the recent discoveries at the site of the ancient civilisation of Ebla, in ... . Still required reading. PENSÉE. Available to British members through Roy MacKinnon and in America from the Research Communications Network. An indispensable archive. PHENOMENA, The Bulletin of Astrological News and Information, Box 6228, Toronto A, Canada. One year (six issues): $12 everywhere, airmail included. British members inquire to Roy ...
329. Solomon's Temple: An Astronomical Observatory [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... 20th century- some after 1950. To Gordon these matters, supported by recent scholarship, preclude the work of a clever forger a century ago who could anticipate these later archaeological discoveries. Frank Moore Cross, on the other hand, in no uncertain terms interpreted the Paraiba inscription as a blatant forgery. His main argument is that the forger ... of the alphabet ran in the same order as those of the zodiac. The assumptions of Moran and Kelley are essentially those of the uniformitarianist. Moran presents a case for astrological dualism in early writing which has a substantial degree of validity. But, I submit, the original particular divisions of the sundry zodiacs deal with rather accurate movements of ...
330. On Method [Books] [de Grazia books]
... ). Most scientists, led by an authoritative English group, assigned to the discovery an age of half a million years and Piltdown, England, became a sanctuary of anthropology for a long generation. Harry Morris was a bank clerk and amateur archaeologist. he collected "eoliths", artifacts of the Neolithic period. But his finds were ... seem to be able, on good evidence, to demonstrate that Jupiter is not isolated, but has certain fearsome transactional capabilities, which may be exercised upon occasion. An astrologer would say that he has known this all along. Most ancients were obsessed with many "Jupiter effects". We say that these astrological fossils go back to real ...
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