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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

unidentified high civilization which passed through the same epoch?<br />

And could the myths be attempts to communicate?<br />

A message in the bottle of time<br />

‘Of all the other stupendous inventions,’ Galileo once remarked,<br />

what sublimity of mind must have been his who conceived how to communicate<br />

his most secret thoughts to any other person, though very distant either in time or<br />

place, speaking with those who are in the Indies, speaking to those who are not<br />

yet born, nor shall be this thousand or ten thousand years? And with no greater<br />

difficulty than the various arrangements of two dozen little signs on paper? Let<br />

this be the seal of all the admirable inventions of men. 3<br />

If the ‘precessional message’ identified by scholars like Santillana, von<br />

Dechend and Jane Sellers is indeed a deliberate attempt at<br />

communication by some lost civilization of antiquity, how come it wasn’t<br />

just written down and left for us to find? Wouldn’t that have been easier<br />

than encoding it in myths? Perhaps.<br />

Nevertheless, suppose that whatever the message was written on got<br />

destroyed or worn away after many thousands of years? Or suppose that<br />

the language in which it was inscribed was later forgotten utterly (like the<br />

enigmatic Indus Valley script, which has been studied closely for more<br />

than half a century but has so far resisted all attempts at decoding)? It<br />

must be obvious that in such circumstances a written legacy to the future<br />

would be of no value at all, because nobody would be able to make sense<br />

of it.<br />

What one would look for, therefore, would be a universal language, the<br />

kind of language that would be comprehensible to any technologically<br />

advanced society in any epoch, even a thousand or ten thousand years<br />

into the future. Such languages are few and far between, but mathematics<br />

is one of them—and the city of Teotihuacan may be the calling-card of a<br />

lost civilization written in the eternal language of mathematics.<br />

Geodetic data, related to the exact positioning of fixed geographical<br />

points and to the shape and size of the earth, would also remain valid<br />

and recognizable for tens of thousands of years, and might be most<br />

conveniently expressed by means of cartography (or in the construction<br />

of giant geodetic monuments like the Great Pyramid of Egypt, as we shall<br />

see).<br />

Another ‘constant’ in our solar system is the language of time: the<br />

great but regular intervals of time calibrated by the inch-worm creep of<br />

precessional motion. Now, or ten thousand years in the future, a message<br />

that prints out numbers like 72 or 2160 or 4320 or 25,920 should be<br />

instantly intelligible to any civilization that has evolved a modest talent<br />

for mathematics and the ability to detect and measure the almost<br />

3 Galileo, cited in Hamlet’s Mill, p. 10.<br />

263

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