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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 />

Then, thousands of years later, in the same place, pharaonic civilization<br />

popped up already fully formed, apparently out of nowhere, with all its<br />

knowledge complete. That much we can be certain of. But whether or not<br />

the knowledge that Ancient Egypt possessed was the same as the<br />

knowledge that produced the Sphinx I really can’t say.’<br />

‘How about this,’ I speculated: ‘The civilization that produced the<br />

Sphinx wasn’t based here, at least not originally ... It wasn’t in Egypt. It<br />

put the Sphinx here as some sort of a marker or outpost ...’<br />

‘Perfectly possible. Could be that the Sphinx for that civilization was<br />

like, let’s say, what Abu Simbel [in Nubia] was for dynastic Egypt.’<br />

‘Then that civilization came to an end, was extinguished by some sort<br />

of massive catastrophe, and that’s when the legacy of high knowledge<br />

was handed on ... Because they had the Sphinx here they knew about<br />

Egypt, they knew this place, they knew this country, they had a<br />

connection here. Maybe people survived the ending of that civilization.<br />

Maybe they came here. ... Does that work for you?’<br />

‘Well, it’s a possibility. Again, going back into the mythologies and<br />

legends of the world, many of them tell of such a catastrophe and of the<br />

few people—the Noah story that’s prevalent through endless<br />

civilizations—who somehow or other retained and passed on knowledge.<br />

The big problem with all this, from my point of view, is the transmission<br />

process: how exactly the knowledge does get handed on during the<br />

thousands and thousands of years between the construction of the<br />

Sphinx and the flowering of dynastic Egypt. Theoretically you’re sort of<br />

stuck—aren’t you?—with this vast period in which the knowledge has to<br />

be transmitted. This is not easy to slough off. On the other hand we do<br />

know that those legends we’re referring to were passed on word for word<br />

over countless generations. And in fact oral transmission is a much surer<br />

means of transmission than written transmission, because the language<br />

may change but as long as whoever’s telling the story tells it true in<br />

whatever the language of the time is ... it surfaces some 5000 years later<br />

in its original form. So maybe there are ways—in secret societies and<br />

religious cults, or through mythology, for example—that the knowledge<br />

could have been preserved and passed on before flowering again. The<br />

point, I think, with problems as complex and important as these, is<br />

simply not to dismiss any possibilities, no matter how outrageous they<br />

may at first seem, without investigating them very, very thoroughly ...’<br />

Second opinion<br />

John West was in Luxor, leading a study group on Egypt’s sacred sites.<br />

Early the next day he and his students went south to Aswan and Abu<br />

Simbel. Santha and I journeyed north again, back towards Giza and the<br />

mysteries of the Sphinx and the pyramids. We were to meet there with<br />

the archaeo-astronomer Robert Bauval. As we shall see, his stellar<br />

411

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