So
Lifer
- Jul 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: So
Originally posted by: bsobel
Just because he works at Columbia doesn't mean he's competent.
Well she got her BS at MIT and her MS and PHD in Marine Geology from Columbia. But, I'm sure you know more than she does, you're on the internet so that clearly makes you an expert in every topic.
Look, argument from authority is not a valid argument tactic. Just because this individual has degrees from reputable institutions does NOT mean she's right. IIRC, Fred Phelps was a reputable attorney at one time. Many professors hold some really silly ideas.
Look, this isn't some PHD trying to find Noah's ark and claiming its in Turkey. This is someone who's research suggests that impact events are more common than we thought they were. For some time it was believed they were 100k year events, then 10k year events. A group of people is suggesting it could be as low as 1k year events.
As I posted, I personally believe much more research is needed here. When I see valid studies finding impact events, the large chevrons (remember, the crater was found from triangulating the the chevrons). No one is really arguing if an impact occurred, the debate is more around when it occurred. I find the impact event fits Occam's best. It accounts for why widely dispersed populations have a similar mythological story. It also (at least to me) accounts for why the last 5k years of human societal evolution has been much more distinct than the last 50k years. This is the first good run we've had at it in awhile![]()
You're right, it's not totally crazy like "there's a physical ark in Turkey" *but* it still strikes me as a lot less likely than:
1. People live near water
2. Water floods periodically
3. People talk about floods for a long time
4. "A long time ago" == Your grandparent's time to a preliterate culture.
5. ~6k yrs ago is when writing began to appear
6. Writing fixes the time of events.
7. Therefore, events that happened before the advent of writing are culturally estimated to be ~100 years in the past, or, still around ~6k years ago.
That explanation doesn't require me to posit any phenomenon or event that is not already thoroughly established and understood.
And the rise of technology seems much more easily explained by the logarithmic growth of population density and technology.
