PDA

View Full Version : Civilization One


FranzJoseph
09-22-2004, 05:35 AM
NOTE: There is a PDF download available at the below link for a free chapter of the book.

http://www.world-mysteries.com/gw_cknight.htm

Civilization One began as a forensic investigation into the viability of a little known linear measurement from the European Stone Age. In the end, it became a rediscovery of two complete and utterly staggering world views, so old it was impossible to say exactly when they had originated. Together, they will change our view of prehistory forever.

Two writers and researchers, Christopher Knight and Alan Butler, previously worked together to crack the mystery of the Megalithic Yard. This linear unit had been rediscovered by the late Professor Alexander Thom, an Emeritus Professor of Engineering at Oxford who, over five decades, had measured meticulously literally thousands of Megalithic structures in Britain and France. Thom's data showed conclusively that the Megalithic Yard - 82.966cm in length - had been used in the construction of almost all of them. This flew in the face of the establishment which claimed that the invention and retention of such a finely tuned basic measurement from such a remote period of history was impossible.

In its early chapters, Civilization One relates the story of Alexander Thom and shows how plausible the Megalithic Yard was and just how easy it was to replicate on any site using a weighted pendulum, while observing the specific path travelled by an observed star.

These discoveries act as a key, opening a locked door on the remote past. Knight and Butler go on to realize that within the Megalithic Yard lies an integrated measuring system that defined the 'exact' dimensions of the Earth.

This system was used to measure length, area, mass, volume, time and geometry in one complete and absolutely integrated way, creating a system far more advanced than anything in use today.

Once they had mastered this calculation, Knight and Butler quickly uncovered a second measuring system, one that originated far from the Megalithic monuments of the West, in Sumeria. Using known and accepted archaeological examples as their guide, the authors realized that the Metric system, supposedly created in the 'age of reason' at the end of the 18th century, is actually many thousands of years old. What is more, in its original form, the Metric system also shows a stunning grasp by its instigators of our planet and the part it plays in the solar system.

Knight and Butler are able to explain, probably for the first time, exactly what a 'second of time' actually represents; why it was invented and how crucial this tiny 'scrap' of time actually is, not only to the Earth but to physics throughout the universe. One by one they overthrow a host of previously accepted paradigms, completely changing our perception of the abilities of these ancient people.

Reviewing as much evidence as possible, Knight and Butler show that other free thinkers in periods before our own struggled to recreate the design of the prehistoric world view. Amongst these was one of the founders of the United States, Thomas Jefferson. With only a little more evidence, Jefferson may have reached the same conclusions that lie at the heart of Civilization One.

The book finishes in the most thought-provoking and explosive way possible, by demonstrating exactly what, at least some, prehistoric peoples really knew. They understood the absolute dimensions of the Earth and could measure its mass at least as well as we can today. They knew the exact dimensions of the Moon and the Sun and devised a linear measurement that was applicable to the Earth, Moon, Sun relationship. These remarkable people understood that light has speed and measured it accurately.

Using cast-iron proof, illustrated by the easiest of maths, Civilization One proves conclusively that, no matter how clever we think we are today, greater minds have existed in the remote past. The implications of Civilization One are unthinkable and contrary to all accepted paradigms but, in the final analysis, they can be verified by anyone.

FranzJoseph
02-01-2005, 12:53 AM
BTW,

I just reread parts of this along with Edo Nylan's quirky Odysseus and the Sea Peoples. Makes wonderful reading.

Despite the fact that the ideas and discoveries recounted in these books have reduced our ordinary "4004 BC" notions of history to hash, they remain very much obscure. My current thought is that people only want/desire a "usable" amount of history and rebel at the thought of any additions.

The current historical frame might be called "The Three H Paradigm" (3HP) for Hesiod-Homer-Hebrews. That is between say 800 and 600 BC history "begins" for most people despite the fact we can now reliably date and weigh information from very much earlier.

The 3HP is equipped with a formidable barrier against earlier cultures: Liguistics. Even bright classical scholars balk at the idea of learning Bronze Age languages. Face it, Linear B, Egyptian or even diplomatic Akkadian are not going to net you anything like the rewards of a more familiar later language.

3HP obviously is also bolstered by religious/cultural considerations. The Hebrew bible starts by saying "In the beginning" despite the fact that entire civilizations had risen and fallen before Genesis was cobbed together in Babylon. In this sense 3HP is a reward system for both stasis and mediocrity which has ever been oxygen to the tepid flame of religious scholarship.

None of this should be seen as an attack on the actual merits of Hesiod, Homer or the Hebrew bible, which should be seen as good honest folklore. What makes the paradigm unfortunate is that HHH are seen as "humankind in the beginning" when they are actually writing from the depths of the dark period between the fall of the Bronze Age and the rise of whatever you call the current mess.

Did Il Ragno really get banned & what for?

robinder
02-01-2005, 07:22 AM
Welcome FJ.

Il Ragno was banned, there are some threads about it around here, if you really want to know the sordid details.

FranzJoseph
02-01-2005, 08:41 AM
Shucks, robinder.

I was hoping he just put that by his name like people do at a certain other forum for status.

Just as long as it ain't permanent. The guy's a genius, face it. I got this awful cold (last 3 days) so I can be impertinent a bit and look around. But all this internet politics is probably not good for colds either.

Hydrocodone cough syrup really loosens your mind up but the penalty is lots of typos and forgetting things from one minute to the next. :|