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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 />

The King is a flame, moving before the wind to the end of the sky and to the end<br />

of the earth ... the King travels the air and traverses the earth ... there is brought<br />

to him a way of ascent to the sky ... 10<br />

Is it possible that the constant references in archaic literatures to<br />

something like aviation could be valid historical testimony concerning the<br />

achievements of a forgotten and remote technological age?<br />

We will never know unless we try to find out. And so far we haven’t<br />

tried because our rational, scientific culture regards myths and traditions<br />

as ‘unhistorical’.<br />

No doubt many are unhistorical. but at the end of the investigation that<br />

underlies this book, I am certain that many others are not ...<br />

For the benefit of future generations of mankind<br />

Here is a scenario:<br />

Suppose that we had calculated, on the basis of sound evidence and<br />

beyond any shadow of a doubt, that our civilization was soon to be<br />

obliterated by a titanic geological cataclysm—a 30° displacement of the<br />

earth’s crust, for example, or a head-on collision with a ten-mile-wide<br />

nickel-iron asteroid travelling towards us at cosmic speed.<br />

Of course there would at first be much panic and despair.<br />

Nevertheless—if there were sufficient advance warning—steps would be<br />

taken to ensure that there would be some survivors and that some of<br />

what was most valuable in our high scientific knowledge would be<br />

preserved for the benefit of future generations.<br />

Strangely enough, the Jewish historian Josephus (who wrote during the<br />

first century AD) attributes precisely this behaviour to the clever and<br />

prosperous inhabitants of the antediluvian world who lived before the<br />

Flood ‘in a happy condition without any misfortunes falling upon them’: 11<br />

They also were the inventors of that peculiar sort of wisdom which is concerned<br />

with the heavenly bodies, and their order. And that their inventions might not be<br />

lost—upon Adam’s prediction that the world was to be destroyed at one time by<br />

the force of fire, and at another time by the violence and quantity of water—they<br />

made two pillars, one of brick, the other of stone: they inscribed their discoveries<br />

upon them both, that in case the pillar of brick should be destroyed by the Flood,<br />

the pillar of stone might remain and exhibit these discoveries to mankind; and<br />

also inform them that there was another pillar of brick erected by them ... 12<br />

Likewise, when the Oxford astronomer John Greaves visited Egypt in the<br />

seventeenth century he collected ancient local traditions which attributed<br />

the construction of the three Giza pyramids to a mythical antediluvian<br />

king:<br />

10<br />

The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, p. 70, Utt. 261.<br />

11<br />

The Complete Works Of Josephus, Kregel Publications, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1991,<br />

p. 27.<br />

12<br />

Ibid.<br />

468

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