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Michael Cremo presenting "Forbidden Archaeology" lecture at 'Talks at Google'
Published 7 October 2014
Michael A. Cremo, Historian of Archeology
Abstract:
Over the
past two centuries, archaeologists have found bones, footprints, and
artifacts showing that people like ourselves have existed on earth for
many millions of years. But many scientists have forgotten or ignored
these remarkable facts. Why? Primarily because they contradict the now
dominant evolutionary views about human origins and antiquity. According
to these views, humans like ourselves have existed for only about
100,000 or 200,000 years, and before that there were only more primitive
human ancestors. This evolutionary paradigm, to which influential
groups of scientists are deeply committed, has acted as a "knowledge
filter." And the filtering, intentional or not, has left us with a
radically incomplete set of facts for building our ideas about human
origins. Recovering the complete set of facts takes us on a fascinating
expedition, across five continents to various archaeological sites, some
long forgotten, some the center of ongoing controversy. On the other
hand, the complete set of facts is consistent with the accounts of
extreme human antiquity found in the Puranas, the historical writings of
ancient India.
Bio:
Michael A. Cremo is research associate in
history of archeology. He is a member of the World Archaeological
Congress (WAC) since 1993. His WAC3 paper "Puranic Time and the
Archaeological Record" was published in the Routledge One World
Archaeology series volume Time and Archaeology (1999), edited by Tim
Murray. He is also a member of the European Association of
Archaeologists (EAA). In 2004 Cremo's paper "The Later Discoveries of
Boucher de Perthes at Moulin Quignon and Their Impact on the Moulin
Quignon Jaw Controversy," presented at the XXth International Congress
for History of Science, Liege, Belgium, was published in a conference
proceedings volume of this congress, by the scientific publisher
Brepols.
Cremo is the principal author of the book Forbidden
Archeology, a comprehensive historical survey of archaeological
anomalies. In a review in British Journal for History of Science, Tim
Murray said the book "provides the historian of archaeology with a
useful compendium of case studies in the history and sociology of
scientific knowledge, which can be used to foster debate within
archaeology about how to describe the epistemology of one's discipline."
Cremo
is particularly interested in examining the history of the archeology
from the standpoint of alternative worldviews, particularly worldviews
with foundations in ancient Indian thought. He has given invited
lectures on his work at the Royal Institution in London, the
anthropology department of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow,
the archeology department of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, and many
other scientific institutions. He has also lectured on his work at
universities throughout the world.
Michael Cremo's website: http://www.mcremo.com/
Michael Cremo on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MichaelCremoItsReallyMe/
Science is not infallible. Science is about constant change, theory and discoveries that change daily. When science makes revolutionary discoveries that challenge old theories, science must embrace and look at the new evidence, not ignore it then shut down the scientist only doing what scientists do. Ironically science can be blinded by dogma, just like religion. This blog exists to promote Hueyatlaco and the extraordinary work by Virginia Steen-McIntyree.
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