Is the house of history built on foundations of sand? | Graham Hancock | TEDxReading

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2016
  • NOTE from TED: Please be aware that this talk contains outdated and counterfactual assertions, and should not be understood as a representation of modern scholarship on ancient civilizations.
    If ancient civilizations interest you, TEDx Talks contain many fascinating and well-researched talks such as:
    Sarah Parcak's talk on space arachaeology at TEDxYale:
    • TEDxYALE - Dr. Sarah P...
    Leslie van Gelder's talk on cave art at TEDxQueenstown:
    • Cave art and enduring ...
    Sarah Kenderdine's talk on museums of the future at TEDxGateway:
    • How will museums of th...
    Since 2007, compelling evidence has been published in leading scientific journals confirming that fragments of a disintegrating giant comet struck the earth around 12,800 years ago. The impacts set in motion a mysterious 1,200-year global deep freeze that caused worldwide extinctions of species. Established theories about the emergence of civilization cite the invention of agriculture and monumental architecture some 11,600 years ago-immediately after the freeze. In this controversial presentation, best-selling author Graham Hancock argues that archaeologists, by not accounting for the cataclysm, have gravely misinterpreted history. What the record attests to is not the sudden invention of technology, but a transfer of technology to hunter-gatherers from a more advanced civilization.
    British writer and journalist, Hancock specialises in unconventional theories involving ancient civilisations, stone monuments or megaliths, altered states of consciousness, ancient myths and astronomical/astrological data from the past. One of the main themes running through many of his books is a posited global connection with a "mother culture" from which he believes all ancient historical civilisations sprang.
    Graham sees himself as a journalist who asks questions based upon observation and as someone who provides a counterbalance to what he perceives as the "unquestioned" acceptance and support given to orthodox views by the education system, the media, and by society at large.
    His books have sold more than five million copies worldwide and have been translated to 27 languages.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 6K

  • @stcroixatlast
    @stcroixatlast Před 3 lety +2898

    We’re not here for TED. We’re here for Graham.

    • @davidleomorley889
      @davidleomorley889 Před 3 lety +8

      Sucker.

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +27

      If you really are open minded you’ll probably come out the other end of this. Don’t feel too bad when you realize he’s full of bs. Anyone can be fooled. Nobody realizes what cults they are in till they leave them. I used to believe in ancient aliens. Embarrassing I know, but it makes me appreciate how silly we are as humans.

    • @davidleomorley889
      @davidleomorley889 Před 2 lety +4

      @@AIenSmithee Exactly.

    • @davef00te
      @davef00te Před 2 lety +46

      @@AIenSmitheeokay, so elaborate. What did Graham say that you disagree with. I feel he made excellent points to contemplate.

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +17

      @@davef00te If you presuppose that there was a great advanced civilisation, this talk would seem convincing to a regular person who has never spent much thought on the subject. That's not how science works, you dont presuppose the answer 12 steps down the road. He isnt letting the asteroid lead him to atlantis he is trying to connect Atlantis to the asteroid. Even if you dont beleive this, you cant deny in the very least it looks like this.
      Any thing he said about the meteor/asteroid is fine. I think its healthy that scientists research this and understand why there are those that doubt it. But he does sneaky things throughout. He frames it as if there was almost a cover up to the Alvarez hypothosis. What happened was, Alvarez had a theory. This theory did not have enough evidence or crater to support it to be unanimously supported by wider science community. Some scientists had vehemet oppositions to this theory based on their evidence. The crater was discovered and so the theory picked up more traction as a plausible theory and is more widely supported in the scientific community. Sounds pretty much how any scientific discovery occurs. this is not the impression Hancock gives. He uses language to evoke a sense of a conspiracy. Instead of saying that scientists were not convinced of the evidence prior to the craters discovery he says they "refused to accept the evidence". now it almost sounds the same except that the later evokes a sense of denial. He doesnt say that Alvarez proved his theory but rather "revealed the truth". The second sentance makes it sound like his discovery was a self evident fact only held back by something nefarious. he also states that the Asteroid impact "turned Shrews into Humans and Dinosaurs into Chickens" and beleives this statement is satisfactory because of the weak disclaimer "At risk of oversimplification". Its not and oversimplication, its a purposeful emotive description to put the idea into the audience that asteroids that something mighty might have come before the asteroid he will later describe. he is trying to make the mental for the audience between mighty dinosaurs and advanced civilistaions. Its very clever the way he tries to position himself to place where he is implying that if an ancient advanced civ existed it had to be wiped out by asteroid, therefore if this impact exists, civilisation is real. Its a cool idea but its not based on any evidence. The best he can do is claim that Atlantis is real because of a singular story by Plato who was told this sory by his grandfather, who was told by Solon (300 years before Plato apparently) who was told by a preist, who said it was inscribd on a temple that was 9000 years old. This one story he is trying to connect to this asteroid. if that doesnt feel like a huuuugggeee stretch, you will not be able to doscern between what seems ture or plausible and what you want to be true.

  • @richardvanerven1941
    @richardvanerven1941 Před 5 lety +598

    NOTE TO TED: Please be aware that this talk does NOT contain outdated and counterfactual assertions, and should be understood as a representation of modern scholarship on ancient civilizations.

    • @kevink.7597
      @kevink.7597 Před 4 lety +9

      It seems as if the good people at TED do not approve of our desire that they respect the theories of Graham Hancock. Wonder what they think of Randal Carlson over at GeoCosmicRex, and his classes showing the impact sites that resulted from the meteors hitting the 2-3 mile thick ice-sheet?

    • @dougcollum6653
      @dougcollum6653 Před 4 lety +9

      Richard van you hit the nail right on the head..........come on TEDx you still haven't taken your disclaimer down......don't you think it's about time!

    • @Gilmaris
      @Gilmaris Před 4 lety +1

      A representation of modern scholarship on ancient civilizations? According to whom?

    • @morts3451
      @morts3451 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Gilmaris to the many scholars who have now done the research at multiple sites around the globe, proving what Graham is saying here.

    • @theendoftheline
      @theendoftheline Před rokem +2

      @@morts3451 gotta feel for those guys still not having any evidence.

  • @ollieholden333
    @ollieholden333 Před rokem +185

    Give this man 100 mil, 5 large boats, 5 teams of experts, top equipment, 5 mini subs and let’s rap this thing up shall we.

    • @bunch_o_racket
      @bunch_o_racket Před rokem +14

      not to mention a team to explore under the pyramids and sphinx in Egypt, and then Antarctica.... I'd trust his opinions on those too

    • @thefuture1892
      @thefuture1892 Před rokem +14

      the name that comes to mind is Elon musk ;)

    • @selwynr
      @selwynr Před rokem +5

      @@bunch_o_racket Science is not based on trust. OMG, that's the most unintelligent statement I've seen on this video full of unscientific BS.

    • @ollieholden333
      @ollieholden333 Před rokem +4

      @@selwynr ever heard of following your gut, but you probably don’t believe that human beings can have hunches, unexplainable thoughts and feeling that guide you towards awnsers.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před rokem +4

      Hows about we give him nothing.
      FFS you've already made him stinking rich from book sales - why does he need more?!
      He certainly hasn't spent any of that on excavations.
      He only takes from archaeologists, he gives nothing back.

  • @Superdada
    @Superdada Před 2 lety +1999

    Ted: “Ideas worth spreading”
    Also Ted: “unless your ideas don’t align with ours, we’ll limit the spread”.

    • @PedroFerreira-ze5yp
      @PedroFerreira-ze5yp Před 2 lety +33

      perfectly put!

    • @jimmyrosa2030
      @jimmyrosa2030 Před 2 lety +60

      Example: corona virus origin and interests within

    • @johnnyruuskanen6143
      @johnnyruuskanen6143 Před 2 lety +3

      😂😂😂💯

    • @loremipsum720
      @loremipsum720 Před 2 lety +1

      LOL!!!!

    • @ennuiii
      @ennuiii Před 2 lety +24

      how do you explain the lack of genetic evidence, migration of food stuff, and complete lack of any archaeological record of an apparent metallurgic and sea bearing civilization?

  • @tiscayea5000
    @tiscayea5000 Před 6 lety +576

    Lol you'd think Graham was proposing that greek myths are historical fact based on the lengths to which TED goes to diminish/separate themselves from him and his views. I feel like people have made much more outlandish assertions with much more welcome from TED.

    • @1MarkKeller
      @1MarkKeller Před 6 lety +4

      Interestingly enough ... the myths of yore are probably more truth than fever dreams or magic mushroom induced visions.

    • @dionhenderson
      @dionhenderson Před 5 lety

      Like excusing paedophilia.

    • @JRobbySh
      @JRobbySh Před 5 lety +6

      Well, until the digs on the site of ancient Troy, scholars though that Homer was mere fantasy.

    • @serket2588
      @serket2588 Před 5 lety

      Adam was the 1st person in TIME, because he came up with the plan to map The Stars, & hence create time. You know this is the 'Papyrus of Hunefer', but they called it the inception & completion of the marriage of time & light. Basically the invention of time. Have more if interested. @Nephthy14216684 Osiris could not sit on his throne until it was complete

    • @FarSeeker8
      @FarSeeker8 Před 5 lety +9

      Yes, this "falls outside TEDx's curatorial guidelines" but talks about the Universe being a giant computer simulation are within those "guidelines"? **

  • @mohammadlevy9668
    @mohammadlevy9668 Před 7 lety +2509

    As a geologist, I see little wrong with Graham's suggestion to consider these facts. A nice line of evidence and thought if you ask me. The censorship of this talk is, well frankly, pretty shame full.

    • @dasvwill
      @dasvwill Před 6 lety +27

      You should complement his opinion with what you think.

    • @James-tc6nv
      @James-tc6nv Před 5 lety +29

      Thanks for speaking out!

    • @MARLEYDIDIT
      @MARLEYDIDIT Před 5 lety +45

      look up his seminars with Randall Carlson, i think you'll find them very intriguing as a geologist

    • @L98fiero
      @L98fiero Před 5 lety +17

      Mohammad Levy, the video was presented, ergo, not censored but they *did* disavow any connection or association with him or his hypotheses.

    • @lewisj.9903
      @lewisj.9903 Před 5 lety +23

      @@L98fiero Although It is arrogantly targeting credibility of objective facts dude

  • @halliemarie5453
    @halliemarie5453 Před rokem +127

    Wild how Plato is one of, if not the most widely respected and accredited philosophers of all time, but then when he talks about Atlantis, the explanation is “he made it up.”

    • @Mogwai786
      @Mogwai786 Před rokem +10

      Just because you respected doesn't mean you are 100% reliable 100% of the time. The use of what *only* Plato wrote about a lost island are tenuous and convenient at best.

    • @dallasclark3973
      @dallasclark3973 Před rokem +9

      @@Mogwai786 Yes because Plato is the only one who had the idea of an ancient civilization being lost in a great deluge..

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před rokem +8

      Wilder still how you take a format which has remained consistent across his output INCLUDING the Atlantis containing Dialogues and assume that it could not possibly be just another philosophical work.
      Pro tip - Herodotus was a contemporary of Plato.
      Why would Plato have written about Atlantis as a REAL historical place while maintaining the exact same philosophical dialogue format of this earlier works when he already had a format from Herodotus to write about a separate subject matter to philosophy?
      The answer is simply that he didn't.
      Atlantis is 1 part fabrication, 1 part Greek legend/myth, and 1 part philosophical parable rolled into one and transmitted through the medium of a dialogue to obscure his hand in sparking any debate from it.
      Atlantis is a utopian ideal created by Plato to make a point to the Athenian elite - the perfect place for Socrates to have lived and practiced undisturbed by judgement.
      The Athenian army discussed in the story is basically the representation of that Athenian elite of Plato's era.
      This army attacks the Atlanteans and BEATS them - only for the gods to turn around and destroy them both.
      This is Plato outlining the trial of Socrates and his being forced to die by poison - the gods judgement is Plato trying to make the Athenian elite see that their hubris and decadence will come back to bite them.

    • @Mogwai786
      @Mogwai786 Před rokem +2

      @@dallasclark3973 just like there isn't "only one" person who believes the earth is flat. Fallacy of popular opinion.

    • @dallasclark3973
      @dallasclark3973 Před rokem +1

      @@Mogwai786 My comment wasn't directed toward you. fallacy of being a jackals.

  • @jacobjacob4139
    @jacobjacob4139 Před 2 lety +6

    I only came here because TED took this talk down and due to public pressure had to take it back. Thanks Graham for your service.

  • @chasduran4160
    @chasduran4160 Před 5 lety +581

    Should probably remove the disclaimer now that NASA and National Geographic have located the 12 mile wide impact crater, that's 12,000 years old in Greenland.
    The likely source of the impact proxies he's speaking of.

    • @lawrenceworrell591
      @lawrenceworrell591 Před 4 lety +4

      It has yet to be proven to be 12,000 years old. You're just as bad as TED.

    • @blznft9513
      @blznft9513 Před 4 lety +16

      @@lawrenceworrell591 Already been proven

    • @kevink.7597
      @kevink.7597 Před 4 lety +14

      @@blznft9513 Yes, you are right on the money. It has been proven, and still, the 'requiem' academics are trying to fuzzy this into the bad-science hall of blame. I literally had one back and forth with me about 6-7 times trying to dissuade me of my faith in Graham Hancock and Randal Carlson.

    • @kevink.7597
      @kevink.7597 Před 4 lety +11

      And Randal Carlson at GeoCosmicRex classes has found several other sites that fit the time, place, and geology of those meteor impacts. North East of the tip of Vancouver Island on the mainland you will see that the mountains show where a huge impact on the ice-sheet took place. It is one of those things that jumps out at you, once you know why it is, as it is. But, yes... that disclaimer is the least that they should do for the man that saw the writing on the megalithic polygonal stone walls. Peace,

    • @Gilmaris
      @Gilmaris Před 4 lety +1

      @@blznft9513 Proven to be of an age possibly as high as 3 million years. So doesn't really help Hancock's case.

  • @mattduhm6717
    @mattduhm6717 Před 5 lety +213

    May want to update this TED. Scientists found the crater in Greenland for the Younger Dryas Impact.

    • @Alienami
      @Alienami Před 5 lety

      Yup!

    • @darlingimscared
      @darlingimscared Před 5 lety

      It's nog been dated yet but yeah probably

    • @Carolevw
      @Carolevw Před 5 lety +5

      @@darlingimscared Actually, they are pretty sure it's recent. A jagged base found by ice-penetrating radar has determined it is much more recent, as ice would have eroded that over time. Sediment has also matched the discoveries.

    • @radjalomas8854
      @radjalomas8854 Před 4 lety

      @@Carolevw cool, was wondering about that

  • @elizabethkinnison7180
    @elizabethkinnison7180 Před 2 lety +598

    What a closed-minded note from Ted. If new ideas are not seriously considered, how are we to expand?

    • @JesseP.Watson
      @JesseP.Watson Před 2 lety +5

      Come and check out a theory I've lain put in a recent video on my channel: 'STONE AGE COMMON SENSE: DEFINING PRINCIPLES of the MEGALITHIC CRAFT', which may go some way to shed light on those lost memories Graham touches upon here. I propose the house of history is indeed built on foundations of sand but in an unexpectedly literal sense.
      Be pleased for a chance to share these thoughts.

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +15

      Nothing wrong with new ideas if they are presented as just that. Hancock doesn’t do this though. He implie that it is more than an idea. He has made a career of getting offended when you point out that it that his ideas are flimsy.

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety

      @Derone Cerrone lol. totally. He tries to have it both ways also. If you brush him off, you're a dogmatic sheep of some cabal of mainstream scientists who are trying to silence him. But, if you ask pointed questions about the "evidence" he provides then suddenly he's "just a journalist/writer".

    • @gibbs677bg
      @gibbs677bg Před 2 lety +1

      @Derone Cerrone which theories? I would like to check It out.

    • @jaso7839
      @jaso7839 Před 2 lety

      @@AIenSmithee Then what parts are the truth and how do you know? I'm trying to learn more about ancient history.

  • @pigsnott
    @pigsnott Před 2 lety +135

    The note from Ted in the description makes me believe Graham more and now I'm searching for more of his work.
    Anytime the "establishment" tries to dissuade someone, you know you're over the target on something they don't want you to know.

    • @raimesey
      @raimesey Před rokem +12

      I love the old WW2 bomber quote that goes ‘You know you’re over the target when you start taking flack!’ You know you’re onto something when the establishment comes after you, and they’re definitely after Graham.

    • @object1ion
      @object1ion Před rokem +7

      Same! The more I see "them" go out of the way to discredit certain narratives, the more i dig in to learn more.

    • @danf4447
      @danf4447 Před rokem +7

      you should see graham hancocks talk with joe rogan . its excellent

    • @georgeson1161
      @georgeson1161 Před rokem +1

      Ah the Classic “everyone says I’m wrong so they must be hiding a global conspiracy” argument. The note from Ted is just letting you know this guy blatantly ignores evidence that detracts from his hypothesis. He doesn’t follow any standard of historiographical practices, that’s why he’s ignored and why there is a disclaimer. Because he LIES.

    • @object1ion
      @object1ion Před rokem

      @@georgeson1161 trust me, hes not ignored.

  • @rogerfurer2273
    @rogerfurer2273 Před 5 lety +2713

    Since crater was discovered in Greenland, TED's note contains outdated and counterfactual assertions, and should not be understood as a representation of modern scholarship.

    • @tarantulady8565
      @tarantulady8565 Před 5 lety +42

      Roger Furer YES!!! 😂

    • @str20025
      @str20025 Před 5 lety +25

      Indeed!! :-D

    • @roxannesumners5039
      @roxannesumners5039 Před 5 lety +59

      Roger Furer: ha ha, Amen, Roger. Maybe TED will remove that silly “WARNING” now. When “America Before” comes out, please have Hancock back, TED!!!

    • @Alienami
      @Alienami Před 5 lety +78

      Yup. If people want some great videos on it, *Bright Insight* channel has some with cited sources.

    • @sarsarsvintagejewelry
      @sarsarsvintagejewelry Před 5 lety +15

      Alien Ami I love Bright Insight!

  • @catsforhire9116
    @catsforhire9116 Před 4 lety +694

    The work of Graham Hancock, Randall Carlson, John Anthony West (RIP) and Robert Schoch has opened my eyes to fantastic worlds of knowledge.

    • @bobspizza7444
      @bobspizza7444 Před 3 lety +21

      Watch the Joe rogan podcast with Graham and Randall. It's awesome

    • @yourdaddy.956
      @yourdaddy.956 Před 2 lety +5

      I agree but I think alligators are more related to Dinosaurs instead of chickens but I also see his perspective because we've been lied to for a millennium that dinosaurs didn't have feathers until that information got leaked to the media at a far later date.

    • @FreeSpeechXtremist
      @FreeSpeechXtremist Před 2 lety +6

      @@yourdaddy.956 crocodiles had reptile ancestors who were very similar before the dinosaurs and haven't change much since.
      Birds are definitely dinosaurs they have the same adaption for hollow bones we see in dinosaurs, we find some extremely well feathered small dinosaurs that could glide well and we have the missing links in early birds that looked much like dinosaurs. Birds being dinosaurs is pretty indisputable if you look at the evidence with educated eyes.
      We have known some dinosaurs had feathers for a long time we just didn't realize most dinosaurs had feathers.

    • @damirserban
      @damirserban Před 2 lety +4

      those are the modern heroes of Mankind

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +5

      Robert Schoch willingly and knowingly appears on Ancient Aliens...how does this not hurt his credibility in your eyes?

  • @craigweaver8542
    @craigweaver8542 Před 2 lety +71

    I wish professors where like this. Intelligent yet remains open. Doesn't bully people with their intellectual politics

    • @chrisdeason4904
      @chrisdeason4904 Před 2 lety +3

      Our supposed intellectual class have been programmed ..

    • @Colourcourt
      @Colourcourt Před 2 lety +1

      @@chrisdeason4904 were^

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety

      Why do you think they are? Surely you cant say that you have experienced this personally. I am happy to be corrected but what makes you say this and apart from saying something like "its just a known fact" or "I wont waste my time with sheep like you" tell me what makes you say this apart from hearing it from Hancock.

    • @orlamcmanus9019
      @orlamcmanus9019 Před 2 lety

      Yeah I like he is so inquisitive and disasstified by our neatly packaged histories. He predicted we will find older than Sumer, he wasn't wrong, I think more will be revealed with time

    • @Dimebag_Darrell
      @Dimebag_Darrell Před 2 lety +2

      Graham Hancock does have a short fuse, however, when he is put in the same room with skeptics like Michael Shermer. He gets irritable easily too; probably because he no longer smokes weed all day long anymore.

  • @richmeister1960
    @richmeister1960 Před 2 lety +395

    NOTE to TED: I disagree with your notice, your notice is erroneous and not scientific, we must not stand in the way of historical, archaeological and scientific research and evidence. When science breaks ground we have no choice but to follow the science and not TEDx's opinions. Thank you.

    • @davidleomorley889
      @davidleomorley889 Před 2 lety +4

      There's a sucker born every minute" was a saying in the 19th century about P.T Barnum being able to trick people into believing in nonsense.....and the ability continues into the internet age. The “alternative history” videos on CZcams by Graham Hancock, Brien Foerster, UnchartedX and others like them are the proof.
      1. The "q" cult people got scammed using the internet because they had faith in what they were being told.
      2. Mega-churches and televangelists scam people out of their money using their faith as the main tool.
      3. Politicians lie and scam the public over and over and over...and yet they keep getting voted back into office.
      4. In the movie The Wizard of Oz, the traveling elixir salesman that Dorothy meets just before the tornado hits her house becomes the wizard in her dream, scamming the people of Oz to maintain his power over them.
      5. Back in the mid to late 1800s, scammers were selling fake medicinal elixirs to inexperienced people. There is one of them portrayed in the movie The Outlaw Josey Wales.
      6. Fake Indian call centers scam inexperienced people on the phone every day.
      7. Scammers from Nigeria scam old people using phone calls also.
      >>>>The world is full of scammers…and inexperienced people getting scammed by them.
      My advice: Get yourself a passport, travel to see the sites in person...and watch what actual educated scholars have to say about ancient history and ancient sites such as in Egypt.
      If you still have an open mind and the intellectual courage & curiosity to challenge yourself and what you think you already know...you might surprise yourself by listening to them.
      Most of you guys who fall for the "mystery mongers" on CZcams are simply more interested in the feeling of excitement you get out of believing in the "unsolved mysteries" and "lost civilizations" you are told about. You can't bring yourselves to watch anything that might spoil the fun...and so you will look away or attack me.
      However, for those who actually want to know more and still have your ability to open your mind intact...on my own CZcams page is an ongoing list of lectures on ancient Egypt... right now it's at 117 lectures...weeks worth of listening, learning and watching....and each one delivered by educated scholars who have actually studied Egypt's history in universities for many years...which is more than I can say for the people like Graham who survive financially off of inexperienced people who buy their books...most of whom don't even own a passport.
      >Believers in Santa Claus have faith in the words of their parents.
      >Those who follow the Abrahamic religions have faith in ancient texts.
      >Mormons have faith in the written words of an American scam artist, Joseph Smith.
      >Scientologists have faith in the written words of L. Ron Hubbard.
      >Charlie Manson’s cult had faith in Charlie Manson.
      >Those who believe what Graham Hancock tells them have faith in Graham Hancock.
      >Those who believe what Brien Foerster tells them have faith in Brien Foerster.
      >Those who believe what the guy on Uncharted X tells them have faith in what he tells them.
      >Those who believe in Edward Casey’s miracles have faith in the words of those who claim those miracles happened.
      >Those who believe in "advanced ancient technology" and a “worldwide pre-flood culture” have faith in the book authors they heard that information from…whether it was on CZcams, Facebook, TV or in a book.
      >Ancient Astronaut theorists have faith in the words of people like Zecharia Sitchin and the words of TV personalities like Giorgio A. Tsoukalos.
      >Those who believe in an ancient race of giants have faith in the people claiming they once existed.
      >Those who believe in the things being said on the CZcams channel known as "Mudfossil University" have faith in the words of Roger Spurr.
      “Religion is a culture of faith; science is a culture of doubt.”
      ― Richard Feynman
      Science actually claims very little. Science is simply a method of discovery that uses peer reviewed experiments and evidence to examine theories and determine truths.
      When new experiments produce new found truths, science moves to support those new truths. That’s all science really does.
      I rely on the method of science, because I am a rational human being.
      Good Luck.

    • @CARPB147
      @CARPB147 Před 2 lety +5

      @@davidleomorley889 - What does ancient *HISTORY* have to do with the Younger Dryas? History begins with *written* texts. Your rant is one that does not directly address the topics described here and attempts to attack the people asking questions. It is an Ad-Hominem attack. That is *not* the "method of science."

    • @davidleomorley889
      @davidleomorley889 Před 2 lety

      ​@@CARPB147
      Today, there are two basic ways to come to "believe" in things. One is by being rational and the other is by acting simply on faith in someone.
      >Being rational means examining the available evidence about the subject and listening to the educated professionals in the specific field of study who have examined it in detail and who have conducted experiments on it.
      Theories are usually presented first by writing a paper explaining their theory and the specific experiments they used to make it. Once the paper has been presented, their peers examine it and replicate the experiments which were used. New experiments are conducted and sometimes people disagree about issues for long periods of time. However, if a theory does survive everyone’s scrutiny, it eventually moves forward and is accepted by more and more of the rational people in that society.
      This process is called science.
      This is how Einstein's theory of relativity was presented…and how it survives yet today.
      >Acting on faith requires no real evidence, only the belief in one person’s idea or the beliefs and ideas of a small group of people, who are making a specific claim. Their claims can’t stand up to their peer's scrutiny or experiments, but it doesn't matter to those of faith who still believe and defend them.....because that IS the essence of what faith is.
      Like the opinions spoken by the ancient oracles, the words they are speaking are seen as being unquestionably true by the faithful.
      Again, that’s how faith works.
      The people who believe what Graham Hancock tells them...have faith in Graham Hancock.

    • @davidleomorley889
      @davidleomorley889 Před 2 lety +4

      @@CARPB147
      You: "What does ancient HISTORY have to do with the Younger Dryas? "
      Me: The Younger Dryas is a scientifically recorded period in the earth's history in which the northern hemisphere suddenly became cold again, like the ice ages that preceded it, lasting for about 1000 years before quickly warming back up again.

    • @CARPB147
      @CARPB147 Před 2 lety +3

      @@davidleomorley889 - Does anyone need any more "truisms" here? Platitudes and banal rants are uninteresting and not particularly compelling. Anything *specific* about the *content* (rather than Ad-Hominem attacks and innuendos) that you have an issue with?

  • @addrage7475
    @addrage7475 Před 5 lety +386

    This talk does NOT contain outdated and counterfactual assertions.

    • @giakon1
      @giakon1 Před 4 lety

      AD Drage maybe you didn't listen to....
      there are several archeological and geological evidence that show civilazed culture before the typical Sumerian Egyptian Incas etc...

    • @roylavecchia1436
      @roylavecchia1436 Před 4 lety +6

      @@giakon1Maybe you missed the part where he discussed Gobleki Tepe, which is now proven to predate the typical Sumerian, Egyptian, Inca, etc. Do try to catch up.

    • @giakon1
      @giakon1 Před 4 lety +3

      Roy Lavecchia ?
      I said so...
      the question is how far we can put forward human civilazation?

    • @nobodyimportant7567
      @nobodyimportant7567 Před 3 lety

      Ted Note can kiss it.

  • @matfieldgreen4533
    @matfieldgreen4533 Před 5 lety +904

    I almost didn't watch this due to the TEDx note. I'm glad I watched. As a geologist I found his research and presentation credible.

    • @McShag420
      @McShag420 Před 4 lety +52

      Graham may not be a traditionally educated scientist of any kind, but he does work with plenty of tenured and level-headed scientists, because he knows it is necessary to explaining these hypothesis. I am glad to see your comment and those of other scientists that can find no fault in what he represents. Graham definitely has some hypothesis that do not agree with modern science, but he only presents them as his own fantasy. This talk was purely data.

    • @harveysmith100
      @harveysmith100 Před 4 lety +23

      Try reading his books, they are more than you could imagine.

    • @elohellol8481
      @elohellol8481 Před 4 lety +12

      You are not a geologist. Nobody believes you

    • @harveysmith100
      @harveysmith100 Před 4 lety +50

      @@elohellol8481 When you say "Nobody." You mean, yourself. You cannot know the minds of others.

    • @sbkarajan
      @sbkarajan Před 4 lety +15

      @@elohellol8481 I must be "nobody". Lol!

  • @dazgreensmoker669
    @dazgreensmoker669 Před 2 lety +589

    Love this guy even if u don't believe his theory he at least pushes for investigation which is what science is all about

    • @YingTou1
      @YingTou1 Před 2 lety +17

      Best comment.

    • @lostpony4885
      @lostpony4885 Před 2 lety +9

      True but you should believe his theory as well because it as also true.

    • @dazgreensmoker669
      @dazgreensmoker669 Před 2 lety +16

      @@lostpony4885 oh I'm pretty certain his theory is sound I wouldn't be surprised if civilisation is much older

    • @lostpony4885
      @lostpony4885 Před 2 lety +18

      @@dazgreensmoker669 mainstream archeaology agrees our species has been around 200k years. I do not believe we laid around all that time without any civilization just waiting for today so we could get started.

    • @JesseP.Watson
      @JesseP.Watson Před 2 lety +2

      Come and check out a theory I've lain put in a recent video on my channel: 'STONE AGE COMMON SENSE: DEFINING PRINCIPLES of the MEGALITHIC CRAFT', which may go some way to shed light on those lost memories Graham touches upon here. I propose the house of history is indeed built on foundations of sand but in an unexpectedly literal sense.
      Be pleased for a chance to share these thoughts.

  • @76djt
    @76djt Před rokem +22

    When I watch and hear things like this it makes me feel so much more connected to Who We Are, and how we got here

    • @syyylvo
      @syyylvo Před rokem +4

      It's the gut feeling, because inside yourself you feel and perceive this as a truth. And it's the right way.

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 Před rokem

      WHOO! MYSTERIOUS!

  • @RICHIEGAITHER
    @RICHIEGAITHER Před 5 lety +325

    HEY TED! HAVE YOU HEARD OF THE GREENLAND CRATER YET?

    • @Alienami
      @Alienami Před 5 lety +12

      Yup! *Bright Insight* channel has great videos on the topic and others.

    • @satatik21
      @satatik21 Před 5 lety +5

      @Nick Nack This is false. Everyone, don't take this guy's word at face value. There are quite a few scientific papers, that show the opposite is true, including a much earlier year being possible. There have been a series of papers released by diehard critics in the academic community that are not based on sound science and cannot be reproduced. Just like Monsanto and Cantox collaborated successfully to get glyphosate labeled as non-cancerous with ghostwritten papers based on junk science (we have their internal emails to prove this), so too are these papers expressly written for the purpose of demolishing evidence supporting this theory, published by those whose whole careers would fall apart if they were wrong.

    • @Singulating_Entropic_Abyss
      @Singulating_Entropic_Abyss Před 4 lety

      Have you heard of the crater which created the Sahara and the Himalayas?

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 Před 4 lety

      Its included - go to the credits under the title.

    • @onlyrick
      @onlyrick Před 4 lety

      @Nick Nack - Too much ancient use of Roundup in the Sahara, maybe? No need to be too dogmatic on either side. Studies and evolution are proceeding apace. Patience, Grasshoppa.

  • @handlenotprovided
    @handlenotprovided Před 7 lety +1264

    Outdated? More like cutting edge

    • @christineveazey4345
      @christineveazey4345 Před 5 lety +21

      The only person who can out date Graham Hancock's great information is Graham Hancock.

    • @dellingson4833
      @dellingson4833 Před 5 lety +6

      Yes Nick Nack but no name provided has 217 thumbs up.

    • @L98fiero
      @L98fiero Před 5 lety +8

      @@dellingson4833 argumentum ad populum, just because many people believe something doesn't mean it's true.

    • @crazycutz8072
      @crazycutz8072 Před 5 lety +3

      @@L98fiero and just because one man belive in his own theories does not make it truth

    • @L98fiero
      @L98fiero Před 5 lety +4

      @@crazycutz8072 Absolutely agree, just because Hancock comes up with a cockamamie hypotheses with nothing to support the claims does not mean it's true or has any basis in reality.

  • @JS-ob4oh
    @JS-ob4oh Před rokem +22

    Graham Hancock has always struck me as a man devoted to seeking the truth unlike many in the establishment scholars who are more interested in protecting their ivory tower and their overblown ego.

  • @xanderunderwoods3363
    @xanderunderwoods3363 Před rokem +20

    This man is a treasure to humanity, it breaks my heart how cruel the academic community treats him. We owe it to ourselves as a species to always ask questions, embrace being open to being wrong like we once did with a universal Earth centric orbit, and to welcome any knowledge about where we came from.
    The Yunger Dryas impact is in the great lakes and the icebergs it ejected in a circle from the Carolinas to Utah created thousands of secondary craters. It 100% happened. The lesson should be that a globalized civilization was lost and it could happen again.
    We should embrace with open arms discovery and exploration into this lost historical civilization for it is part of the story of us as a species. They seemed like truly incredible people.

  • @natec7453
    @natec7453 Před 4 lety +423

    I came to the comments to complain about the disclaimer in the video and description but it seems like everyone else has done it lmao. Glad to see that everyone is with Graham and his brilliant research.

    • @suomenmegamanzero
      @suomenmegamanzero Před 4 lety +3

      I'm not.

    • @deanwest2076
      @deanwest2076 Před 3 lety +9

      He's a threat to status quo. He's getting us closer to our true history.

    • @mattysee24
      @mattysee24 Před 3 lety +10

      @@deanwest2076 god forbid people think for themselves. Having your own brain and opinions seem to be witchcraft in this day in age.

    • @theendoftheline
      @theendoftheline Před 3 lety +5

      CZcams is a safe haven for nuttos for sure, science takes a back seat to your entertainment here so hancock survives, far outside any scientifc work.

    • @ruthiematteson6827
      @ruthiematteson6827 Před 3 lety +2

      Luckily... we still prefer to think for ourselves.... pretty much all of the world's informal dissemination is controlled by a left leaning, global elite group of dictstors. The truth about our history is hidden from everyone deliberately.. so we can be controlled and doing only the things we are instructed to do. The problem is... we are the majority and we refuse to be ruled by deception.

  • @einargulbrandsen9564
    @einargulbrandsen9564 Před 7 lety +43

    I always think of Galileo Galilei when I hear Graham Hancock.
    Keep up the good work Graham

    • @granthurlburt4062
      @granthurlburt4062 Před rokem

      Galileo's work was scientifically and mathematically based. it wasnt rejected by scientists. It was rejected by the Church because it was inconsistent with their views that the Earth is the centre of the universe. The Church utterly rejected anything based on actual measurements because they considered the Earth to be a fallen realm and that therefore any earthly measurements wre meaningless. There is no parallel between Galileo and modern-day crackpots like this guy and his speculations.

  • @oslogutt80
    @oslogutt80 Před 2 lety +121

    As an academic myself,
    I find The cencorship from TED embarrasing and unsientific...

    • @syyylvo
      @syyylvo Před rokem

      Ted talks is as well about money, if they allow what the elite doesn't want, they won't get the funds anymore and therefore are silencing Graham just for the money

    • @BumpTune8462
      @BumpTune8462 Před rokem

      @HanCock your pfp is graham and so is your channel name. Wtf is wrong w you dude?

    • @BumpTune8462
      @BumpTune8462 Před rokem +1

      @Jonnhy vanzwevezele you must be a worldwide archaeology/geologist legend . Whats your side of the story you genius?

  • @Trex531
    @Trex531 Před 5 lety +96

    TED: you should be impartial on every talk presented. As sponsor, you shouldn’t give opinions and let the listeners judge by themselves.

  • @AnimusZen
    @AnimusZen Před 7 lety +515

    Hey TED! I can make up my own mind on what I think is factual. Hancock does excellent work. Mainstream science wants to maintain the status quo.

    • @fukmybut
      @fukmybut Před 6 lety +20

      Science disproves itself constantly that's is how science works. But only based on solid evidence. Even Stephen hawking now disproves a lot of his earlier work with no embarrassment, that proves his credentials. There is no such thing as status quo in science just evidence based theories peer reviewed and debated. This one failed countless debates so gets a disclaimer not censorship. You make your own mind up.

    • @auroramedina4060
      @auroramedina4060 Před 6 lety

      AVIAN ACADEMY awards and

    • @fukmybut
      @fukmybut Před 6 lety +2

      ?

    • @andreasluschin2563
      @andreasluschin2563 Před 5 lety +16

      @@fukmybut So you say the statement, that slaves built the Pyramids with hammer and meisel so they could bury fancy people in them, is "evidence based theories peer reviewd and debated"? Because thats what they teach in school till today. Lets debate on that bro go ahead.

    • @andreasluschin2563
      @andreasluschin2563 Před 5 lety +6

      @@fukmybut Lets just put a disclaimer on all schoolbooks then

  • @allanhastings7688
    @allanhastings7688 Před rokem +33

    Open minds open doors to knowledge, exercising wisdom to see through them. Closed minds close doors to knowledge, with the foolish keys of arrogance & ignorance blindly locking them tight. Thankyou for your knowledge & wisdom Graham.

    • @waynemyers2469
      @waynemyers2469 Před rokem

      Your pseudo-philosophical rhetoric shines a light (although, not willingly) upon the one thing that is clearly missing from both your post and the whole subject of Graham Hancock, generally: WISDOM.

    • @waynemyers2469
      @waynemyers2469 Před rokem

      Well, it's obvious where you got your dime-store wisdom from, I mean, you claim that "open minds open doors" but then go on to say "exercising wisdom to see through them." Care to explain why you would need to see through an open door? Your second sentence implies that Hancock is somehow "open minded and a seeker after knowledge" but if that was true he'd take a little time out of his globe-hopping and tropical scuba-adventures to return to college and actually learn something about the subjects he preaches on...
      I find it remarkable that the flaws of ignorance, foolishness and arrogance that are so often pointed out by Hancock and his sycophants when whining about mainstream researchers and Academia are precisely the attributes Hancock displays every-time he opens his mouth.
      Shame on you for putting financial gain above the pursuit of knowledge, Graham Hancock.

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Před rokem +19

    Trying to make Plato out as a fantasizer is a fools errand. You just need to read his other works. I have and I'm very grateful to know these writings.

    • @prince-solomon
      @prince-solomon Před rokem +2

      Yes, myths are the history of our ancestors. To dismiss them as fantasy stories is pure arrogance & ignorance. There is a core of truth to them.

  • @Mat1481
    @Mat1481 Před 5 lety +165

    TED, this disclaimer makes you part of the problem many professionals face when trying to inform others of the facts of history. If you like this talk, also look for talks by Randell Carlson, his talks are not on TED and are not subject to this kind of censorship. Great talk Graham Hancock, thank you

    • @FaileX2
      @FaileX2 Před 4 lety +1

      They still haven't changed the disclaimer and it's been a year.

    • @Zcilverstar
      @Zcilverstar Před 4 lety

      Hancock and Carlson both have some great podcast appearances on the Joe Rogan Experience...several in fact. Very good.

  • @elonewalker
    @elonewalker Před 7 lety +123

    pretty sure the idea of a preflood civilisation is worth exploring further. underwater ruins will be what new achaelogists of 21st centuries need to be exploring.

    • @1MarkKeller
      @1MarkKeller Před 6 lety +6

      Satellites could do the majority of the pinpointing of sites to explore too. We have the technology ... we just need the will to use it.

    • @Alan62651
      @Alan62651 Před 6 lety +4

      Sadly, the best underwater ruins are in India, where discovery was begun and mysteriously ended quickly.

    • @Margaret709
      @Margaret709 Před 5 lety

      See the late December 2018 news story google: 80 pyramids Pico Azores

  • @vinny9708
    @vinny9708 Před 2 lety +50

    As a expert on Egyptian pyramids, the sphinx, and a leading geologist i fully agree with Mr Hancock

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +3

      As the foremost expert of ancient Egyptian geology I thoroughly disagree.

    • @Aninkovsky
      @Aninkovsky Před 2 lety +3

      You know, you should put an not a before expert

    • @HxThomison
      @HxThomison Před 2 lety

      Ah, yes of course; "Vinny". Your work is well known!

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 2 lety

      Try Robert Sepehr channel and his Atlantean Gardens channel -you will not be disappoinTED

  • @williamjamessmithwaynerona6404

    This excellent, smart and intellectual human being has been voicing this for years. It must be such a extraordinary feeling for him to see the evidence recently about a crater in Greenland. So many write him off, yet every year new evidence comes out to prove what he is saying is right. I hope he sees the day when the dogma shifts and he is truely recognised for his brilliant work as a researcher

    • @kerringautrey1375
      @kerringautrey1375 Před 2 lety +3

      I came to this TEDtalk by accident immediately after watching a video about NASA's dicovery of the 30km diameter impact crater under the Greenland ice sheet.

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 2 lety +2

      Me too I hope he does too. Another under rated person
      Try Robert Sepehr channel and his Atlantean Gardens channel -you will not be disappoinTED

  • @tmt4768
    @tmt4768 Před 5 lety +53

    Note to TED: It is obvious through the disclaimer and previous sensoring of alternative thinking guests, you are truly part of an old paradigm of thinking.

  • @phoboskittym8500
    @phoboskittym8500 Před 7 lety +451

    we do not need a warning TED Hancock is a writer not a pack of cigarettes

  • @suchitabhat5051
    @suchitabhat5051 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I have been talking about his Netflix ancient apocalypse documentary to everyone I know. 😂 I am so impressed! ❤

  • @balayadav88yahoo
    @balayadav88yahoo Před rokem +19

    Dwarika city off the cost of Gujrat(India) was submerged in a great flood , it was a island city established by lord Krishna ,
    Some evidence point this event happened around 12000 years back.
    Some remains of city has been found underwater but government not investing money in archaeological survey to explore more .
    Also ancient Indian text mention of similar civilization wiping floods in the past .

    • @skimmins
      @skimmins Před rokem

      The fact that whenever evidence is uncovered that could put these debates to bed once and for all, the powers that be simply refuse to investigate it. We see this repeat alot, so based on that alone why wouldn't the default logical response, right or wrong, to be they are hiding history for some reason? The vigor against those that say there may be more to the story than is accepted today, should be looked at as a smoking gun of wrongdoing.

    • @sandormccann2546
      @sandormccann2546 Před rokem +3

      THere is a strange wall in New Zealand that may or may not be a natural rock formation. If it is natural, that's fine but it is straight and vertical so it looks, superficially at least, like a megalithic wall. The problem is that the government has forbidden any excavations at the site. If it DID turn out to be a massive wall constructed of polygonal blocks as found at other megalithic sites around the world, it would push back human occupation of the New Zealand archipelago to thousands of years prior to the arrival of the Maori people who are supposed to be the first modern humans to live on that land mass. Can't have anything upsetting the time line now, can we?

  • @psyvana
    @psyvana Před 5 lety +668

    You might want to take back your disclaimer now that the Greenland crater has been confirmed. Correlating all this evidence Hancock presented XD

    • @localsymbiosis
      @localsymbiosis Před 5 lety +32

      Pretty hilarious. Anything with disclaimers like this makes me more interested in the info though, because it must be good! haha.

    • @yusufbukhari6962
      @yusufbukhari6962 Před 5 lety +12

      So true they cant keep hiding the truth from the general public

    • @Alienami
      @Alienami Před 5 lety +3

      Yup!

    • @darlingimscared
      @darlingimscared Před 5 lety +2

      Someone needs to get a date on that crater asap

    • @are3287
      @are3287 Před 5 lety +2

      It is a mark of true science that it can predict future findings like this.

  • @CuteCritters
    @CuteCritters Před 3 lety +313

    PROTECT THIS MAN.

    • @rubentus1980
      @rubentus1980 Před 2 lety +3

      From extinction by comet?

    • @vazken9178
      @vazken9178 Před 2 lety

      Dinosaurs, then we know Armenians came after. Perhaps Armenians invented dinosaurs just to hunt them lol ;) jk
      Google things Armenians invented.

    • @vazken9178
      @vazken9178 Před 2 lety

      @Rupprecht Kurt Hasselbuttelmann-Fitzmeisterjaeger this research is in accurate. Unless you invite Armenoligsts to research Gopeke humanity will NEVER understand the treasure they find. Never.

    • @lostpony4885
      @lostpony4885 Před 2 lety +1

      From chickens. Now they know they cant be stopped

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +1

      …said his disciples.

  • @vladghelu516
    @vladghelu516 Před rokem +45

    So compressed, so much vital information in 18 minutes!
    Love you Graham, truly!

    • @adammchugh5456
      @adammchugh5456 Před rokem +2

      Actually it was all lies.

    • @notreally2406
      @notreally2406 Před rokem

      ​​@@adammchugh5456 Wrong. None of it was. Give me a timestamp of ONE single lie. Take as much time as you need. You won't find 1. Not 1.

  • @rolla_kostas2771
    @rolla_kostas2771 Před rokem +3

    Graham is the most humble and honest man ever. BTW they misspelled archeology "arachaeology"...

    • @waynemyers2469
      @waynemyers2469 Před rokem

      This is a PERFECT example of the pompous and self-congratulatory fans that idolize Hancock: "Archaeology" is spelled incorrectly in a post pointing out that someone else had misspelled "Archaeology"! Seeing this, aren't you inclined to take the rest of the post with a grain of salt, especially the part about Hancock being "humble and honest"?

    • @rolla_kostas2771
      @rolla_kostas2771 Před rokem

      @@waynemyers2469 touche on correcting me. We use the word in Greek, which is where it's derived from Αρχαιολογία Having said that, spelling does not take away from the fact his theory makes sense; or that he comes off as an honest hard working and passionate person. Nothing he says is completely outside of what could be the truth. Definitely more believable than the current story of our history, very linear and materialistic

  • @karloli9455
    @karloli9455 Před 8 lety +47

    Graham back on TED? About goddamn time.

  • @jppakman233
    @jppakman233 Před 7 lety +614

    Graham has a really good argument about this subject. Most of all, it would explain the extinction of all of the North American mega fauna, the disappearance of the Clovis culture, the extinction of Flores Man, and many sunken cities around the world. It also would explain the 'Great Flood' stories from cultures around the world. The lack of archaeological sites would easily be explained by the sea level rise of the 2nd melting event, since most human cultures settle along waterways. When you get down to it, it just makes sense. At least 4 species of humans have had somewhat significant populations around the world for at least 25 thousand years, on every continent. After about 10 thousand years, natural forces would erase almost any trace of a civilization. Why is it so hard to believe that humans had to start over a few times?

    • @zerorez420
      @zerorez420 Před 4 lety +61

      Because then we would have to consider the possibility that we might have a reset button aswell

    • @tray7787
      @tray7787 Před 4 lety +9

      @@zerorez420 I put my cousin on to Graham the other day and he said the same thing lol

    • @user-jp2vj4cc6p
      @user-jp2vj4cc6p Před 2 lety +36

      @Derone Cerrone quite the contrary, that would be the job of mainstream archeology.

    • @user-jp2vj4cc6p
      @user-jp2vj4cc6p Před 2 lety +62

      @Derone Cerrone can you provide an example please, sir?
      Many of his arguments pertaining to the younger dryas impact hypothesis and its implications are based almost solely on available scientific evidence.
      Also, his arguments pretaining to ancient maps and sea levels are very valid, study some of the ancient maps yourself and I imagine you would come to similar conclusions.
      If not, explain how certain sites and islands that have been underwater for tens of thousands of years, are depicted above water on ancient maps? A certain level of advanced knowledge and the ability to traverse vast oceans and is required to perform accurate cartography. How were the ancient cartographers able to use incorporate accurate longitude into ancient maps , long before the 1800s when we were first able to measure accurate longitude?
      The maps speak for themselves and the implications they pose are yet to be explained scholarly.
      -
      I too, do not agree with everything Mr Hancock claims, but he is certainly asking the right questions and following a noble line of inquiry.
      Are we just supposed to exist in an echo chamber of agreement and not question anything that the archeologists tasked with interpreting our mysterious ancient past present to us as fact?
      Considering the all the megalithic sites that display precise stone cutting methods and astrological alignments, along with a myriad of other advanced and unusual feats, Is it really that preposterous to insinuate that an advanced civilisation may have existed at some point in time?

    • @user-jp2vj4cc6p
      @user-jp2vj4cc6p Před 2 lety +76

      @Derone Cerrone that was such an unbelievably lazy response, you brought up nothing that strengthens your point and we’re not able to explain or even discuss any of the unusual ancient feats I brought up. You could even just say “I don’t know” and that would be a perfectly reasonable response. Because the truth is, you do not know, nor do I, nor does Graham Hancock, nor does mainstream archaeology.
      Archeology itself is only the act of interpretation.
      But at least I am using what real evidence that the ancients have left behind as a guide to what might’ve been thousands of years ago, you’re just claiming I’m wrong and providing 0 evidence or sources to back up your claim. I asked many questions, you Weren’t able to answer any. Just say you don’t know if you don’t know, theirs no shame.
      My claim holds more weight than yours, i am directly referencing multiple real things that back up and strengthen it. You’re just saying “you’re wrong”
      People like you do not do a very good job of making others believe what you claim to be true. I provided a myriad of examples and that point to what im claiming to be true, all you did was essentially say “you’re wrong and I’m right because I say so”
      If you’re going to debate me, at least bring some legs to stand on.

  • @TerryB751
    @TerryB751 Před 2 lety +14

    We should never think that the knowledge that we've been taught is the absolute truth, but rather a springboard where we can change our minds when new information comes along.

  • @StelleenBlack
    @StelleenBlack Před rokem +1

    It is so refreshing that there are those out there that are making inquiries on what we can plainly see. A world wide civilization that was very similar in building techniques and was wiped out by cataclysm.

  • @atme365
    @atme365 Před 5 lety +535

    The like I left is for Graham NOT TED AND IT'S CENSORSHIP

  • @ShaiHulud1966
    @ShaiHulud1966 Před 5 lety +309

    Thanks, Ted, but I can think for myself.

  • @thevegandragon4676
    @thevegandragon4676 Před rokem +14

    GH totally make sense. Thanks GH for enlightening those who wish to be enlightened.

    • @pew32
      @pew32 Před rokem

      Or like to be lied to …

  • @guy9302
    @guy9302 Před rokem +5

    Fantastic presentation, right on the pulse, thank-you.

  • @indigojax7853
    @indigojax7853 Před 8 lety +82

    I don't know how many hours / days I've spent watching you speak on a whole variety of subjects Mr. Hancock. Every second was worth it. Thank you for your dedication and incredible attention to detail involved in your research.

    • @notreally2406
      @notreally2406 Před rokem

      ​​@Skinny, young and attractive 82 to 2 here, brother...and 1 of those might be you

  • @AndromedaImagination77
    @AndromedaImagination77 Před 7 lety +25

    "THOSE WHO ARE ABLE TO SEE BEYOND THE SHADOWS AND LIES OF THEIR CULTURE WILL NEVER BE UNDERSTOOD, LET ALONE BELIEVED, BY THE MASSES."
    PLATO 427-347 BC

  • @danielbwambale3438
    @danielbwambale3438 Před rokem +52

    I watched Ancient Apocalypse. He is a man that has been wronged and we may have to apologize to him or his estate in the future. Shed a tear when I saw how sad he was from being barred to get onto the grounds of Serpent Mount. At least, give the man a chance to complete his investigation.

    • @adammchugh5456
      @adammchugh5456 Před rokem

      hahahaha oh my god, you have been conned by a con artsist..... Did you also vote Trump?

    • @evansquilt
      @evansquilt Před rokem

      He's a scientific illiterate whose "ideas" are straight out Erich von Daniken's long-debunked ancient astronauts bullsh*t. TED never should have let him on the stage at all.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před rokem +1

      "He is a man that has been wronged"
      He's a frickin multi multi multi millionaire.
      So stop with the martyr act - he can cry into his frickin trays of $100 bills if he's really offended, which I know he isn't.
      PR like he got from Ancient Apocalypse will just get even more people to watch it for the wrong reasons - which he loves because they will buy his books and make him richer still.
      You need to get this through your head - he's a businessman.
      "he was from being barred to get onto the grounds of Serpent Mount"
      Ya, it's called getting a commercial filming permit - clearly he didn't, or his producers didn't.
      You just exemplified his lazy, entitled attitude showing that even when he is grifting he expects the basic rules not to apply.

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 Před rokem +1

      Hancock is NOT an archaeologist.

    • @evansquilt
      @evansquilt Před rokem +1

      @@busterbiloxi3833 - not much of a journalist, either.

  • @iansingsiansings2101
    @iansingsiansings2101 Před 2 lety +10

    "..we are obliged to contemplate the possibility that everything we have been taught.."
    Thank you Graham Hancock...

  • @hippygoat75
    @hippygoat75 Před 4 lety +390

    The recently discovered Hiawatha impact crater in Greenland contains ice dating back 12,000 years...making it the youngest impact crater on Earth. Is that enough evidence TED?

    • @falconrebgo3
      @falconrebgo3 Před 4 lety +6

      But that impact is not evidence of a lost advance civilization

    • @nafisdelacruz9703
      @nafisdelacruz9703 Před 4 lety +48

      @@falconrebgo3 i don't think that was his conclusion
      his conclusion was that provided these findings, it's possible everything we know about the start of civilization could be wrong
      this may, or may not, include Atlantis
      but if there were massive structures and agriculture, it's not crazy to hypothesize that there was at least some civilization of some level of sophistication higher than what we'd expect 12,000 years ago
      and that's not nothing

    • @ljgarrison6910
      @ljgarrison6910 Před 4 lety +5

      @@nafisdelacruz9703 Nice

    • @ChuckNorris-gu9pq
      @ChuckNorris-gu9pq Před 4 lety +15

      @@falconrebgo3 yeah but you ask yourself why there are so many tales of huge floods from civilizations all over the world
      If a comet hit Greenland huge amounts of ice would melt within seconds and that would roughly be a flood of up to 12 ft

    • @theresahemminger1587
      @theresahemminger1587 Před 4 lety +13

      Chuck Norris . Flood stories are the only universal story with two constant ingredients; complete inundation and somebody saved. The specifics and morals vary from Gilgamesh to India and America. Water levels are much higher now than in pre-flood times so evidence of an earlier advanced civilization may well be off the coasts under water.

  • @elaineweatherby1456
    @elaineweatherby1456 Před 4 lety +57

    “Science in the twenty-first century does NOT encourage scientists to take risks in their pursuit of “the facts”-particularly when those facts call into question long-established notions”
    ― Graham Hancock

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 2 lety

      Try Robert Sepehr channel and his Atlantean Gardens channel -you will not be disappoinTED

  • @SongWhisperer
    @SongWhisperer Před 2 lety +37

    “Is the house of history built on foundations of sand”? Ya, quicksand.

  • @itsolivier
    @itsolivier Před 2 lety +2

    here again 4 years later to fully absorbt this and listen again... 2012 and 2020 have past two years with significant meaning in the world of numbers... Congrats for Teds for keeping the faith , respecting free speech and keeping this up.

  • @Bobbidigi34
    @Bobbidigi34 Před 7 lety +11

    The scientific method: Breakthroughs and advances come from outsiders only after they are first ridiculed, and shamed, for long enough. Credit is then attributed to insiders.

  • @SW_investor
    @SW_investor Před 5 lety +94

    Bravo, Graham Hancock. 👏🏼👏🏼
    Thank you for sharing your work with the People. TedX, delete your senseless disclaimers. People are waking up.

    • @granthurlburt4062
      @granthurlburt4062 Před rokem +1

      If people were waking up, they'd get an education and not be taken in by con-artsts.

    • @notreally2406
      @notreally2406 Před rokem

      ​@@granthurlburt4062 hopefully will wake up. Best regards.

    • @waynemyers2469
      @waynemyers2469 Před rokem

      Not in your house, they aren't.

  • @xrxs1020
    @xrxs1020 Před 2 lety +83

    "NOTE from TED: Please be aware that this talk contains outdated and counterfactual assertions, and should not be understood as a representation of modern scholarship on ancient civilizations."
    Translation: Graham's ideas challenge orthodoxy, careers, acquisition of tenure, grants, and insecure academics.
    This above warning actually RECOMMENDS Hancock because it shows the smallness of the threatened academy. That's the trouble with ad hominem attacks. They usually say a lot about the attacker but little about the attackee.

    • @GreenfieldPortfolioResearch
      @GreenfieldPortfolioResearch Před 2 lety +2

      marvelous!

    • @sappy9320
      @sappy9320 Před 2 lety +2

      well said

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 2 lety

      Try Robert Sepehr channel and his Atlantean Gardens channel -you will not be disappoinTED

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před rokem

      Actually it's pretty accurate.
      Hancock is known to often put words into archaeologists mouths to assert positions they do not have, even as he plagiarises their work for profit.
      That aligns perfectly with the disclaimer - he's misrepresenting literally an entire profession for profit.

    • @dagnabbit
      @dagnabbit Před rokem +1

      If TED has identified counterfactual assertions, it would most helpful if you would identify them. Then we can do our own research.

  • @LADYGURRLL
    @LADYGURRLL Před 2 lety

    Thank you Mr. Hancock for your perspective. Thank you TED for not removing this.

  • @abdulhasim6891
    @abdulhasim6891 Před rokem +113

    Graham is a man who seeks truth
    Love his work and hope the real history of mankind is taught in schools

    • @jl8410
      @jl8410 Před rokem

      He's a charlatan pushing hypotheses that have been around for over 100 years while basing his arguments on misleading information and logical fallacies. Unfortunately he has gullible fan base who thinks he's putting out new ideas when the reality is everything he is saying is completely unoriginal and has been considered. It's like when Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins pushed the "New Atheist" movement, yet after a little inquiry you realized there wasn't anything "New" about it, as it was more of the same old same old. Same applies with Hancock. The guy can't even produce a working definition to articulate what he means when he refers to "advanced civilizations". Same guy who was citing a report of an impact crater as evidence for his theories, only to be debunked by current research which concluded said crate wasn't thousands of years old, but in fact 56 million years old.

    • @IZn0g0uDatAll
      @IZn0g0uDatAll Před 11 měsíci

      He really precisely doesn’t seek truth.

  • @squirrelbong
    @squirrelbong Před 8 lety +222

    powerful Graham Hancock.

    • @areuswhite9670
      @areuswhite9670 Před 8 lety +23

      Hello freak bitches.

    • @MrSmokeytehbear
      @MrSmokeytehbear Před 8 lety +1

      Powerful alpha brain

    • @SuperPurgatorio
      @SuperPurgatorio Před 8 lety

      Very intelligent argument. Are you a scientist, you must be an intellectual?

    • @mattkolb2579
      @mattkolb2579 Před 8 lety +4

      +SuperPurgatorio ain't nobody got time to argue when it comes to the powerful Graham.

    • @trendgil
      @trendgil Před 7 lety +1

      Matt Kolb yee boys will be boys

  • @splodgersplodgy1362
    @splodgersplodgy1362 Před 7 lety +8

    There must be no barriers to freedom of inquiry ... There is no place for dogma in science. The scientist is free, and must be free to ask any question, to doubt any assertion, to seek for any evidence, to correct any errors.

  • @phyllisneal8687
    @phyllisneal8687 Před 2 lety +6

    Graham Hancock is one of the MOST BRILLIANT MEN & a TIRELESS scientist‼️ FABULOUS man! Thank you, Graham!!

  • @richardlees5303
    @richardlees5303 Před rokem +8

    Until now I've always been impressed by TED Talks ability to present interesting and thought provoking ideas. Didn't ever expect disclaimers casting shade on a speaker's research and thinking process. Disappointed in that turn of events but continually interested in Graham Hancock's ideas. Disappointed in the weasel words and innuendo that talks other than Graham's might be more credible.

  • @Comedy-Cult
    @Comedy-Cult Před 3 lety +765

    Hancock has made several major predictions that were later proven to be true. He thinks outside the box and challenges the stagnation and pretentious, rigid framework that runs rampant through archeology as a whole. He’s a pioneer and an amazing mind. I love listening to this man speak.

    • @anna3046
      @anna3046 Před 3 lety +4

      Completely agree!

    • @theendoftheline
      @theendoftheline Před 3 lety +47

      make vague claims, then claim anything that sounds like what you said. Avoids dealing with evidence or having theories fully disproved when they aren't completed to begin with. Charlatan 101

    • @venicebeachsportsnetwork6677
      @venicebeachsportsnetwork6677 Před 3 lety +14

      Wrong about the end of the world in 2012 tho 😂

    • @Emma-lg1cr
      @Emma-lg1cr Před 3 lety +33

      No he hasn't. He has never proven anything at all.

    • @bnsk6106
      @bnsk6106 Před 3 lety +6

      Emma are you scared ?

  • @mikecuntala9675
    @mikecuntala9675 Před 5 lety +1668

    Outdated? They found a crater dating to exactly this time. You need to update your outdated caption. Thumbs up for Hancock. Thumbs down for your outdated hit-piece caption

    • @TheBatman135
      @TheBatman135 Před 4 lety +3

      @gdpm according to whom?

    • @Shark_King325
      @Shark_King325 Před 4 lety +37

      Since they found a crater in Greenland dating back to 12,000 years, TED’s disclaimer cOnTaInS oUtDaTeD AnD cOuNtErFaCtUaL iNfOrMaTiOn

    • @berserkasaurusrex4233
      @berserkasaurusrex4233 Před 4 lety +76

      @gdpm They just found a second crater dated to 12K years, this one in the middle east. There are scientists actually apologizing to Hancock for not taking his theory seriously before.

    • @Yajarobi
      @Yajarobi Před 4 lety +1

      Berserkasaurus Rex link

    • @berserkasaurusrex4233
      @berserkasaurusrex4233 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Yajarobi Uh, that glowing blue text is a link, my friend.

  • @frankmccann29
    @frankmccann29 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, Sir. Vindication is so sweet.

  • @monikagenlund3991
    @monikagenlund3991 Před 2 lety +4

    How interesting! Thank you all for your work and presentation on this!

  • @Workdove
    @Workdove Před 7 lety +17

    Having an ancient pre-Egyptian civilization which collapsed would interfere with the current progress narrative, where we move as a civilization in straight line from the cavemen to the stars. It is the progress narrative which needs revising more than anything else.

  • @ACTIONLEVER
    @ACTIONLEVER Před 3 lety +191

    Stunned and amazed. Stunned by the"please be aware" labelling by TED, Amazed at the profound implications brought forward fearlessly by a most impressive individual.

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 3 lety +4

      Should TED ever have a disclaimer? Would you want a disclaimer like that for a Flat Earth theory? Is it important that big groups like TED differentiate between agreed science and non scientific speculation? and before you accuse me of being close minded, Hancock himself states that he is NOT a scientist or scholar rather just a journalist and writer.

    • @raul.tortosa.murcia
      @raul.tortosa.murcia Před 2 lety +2

      @@AIenSmithee What is the point for Hancock to become a scholar by going through the study and reading of the many theories and materials that he himself is proving to be wrong?

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +1

      @@raul.tortosa.murcia what are you even talking about? Are you trying to say that nothing can be found by doing science. That every single history book is wrong and that the only real knowledge comes from shamans. Get a grip dude. Youre being silly.

    • @raul.tortosa.murcia
      @raul.tortosa.murcia Před 2 lety +2

      @@AIenSmithee Science can't become an religion built on indisputable dogmas. When that happens, the purpose of science is corrupted and prevents from further progress. Hancock is doing science by not letting long-established previous assumptions override the facts. True science, after all. You understood nothing, my die-hard dogmatic friend 😘

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před 2 lety +3

      @@raul.tortosa.murcia what indisputable dogmas? You are just repeating things you’ve heard others say. Nobody is stopping Hancock, they’re just rightfully pointing out that he is not doing science. What is dogma by the way. According to Hancock it’s anyone in any field that doesn’t instantly believe his claims with no evidence. You are not a scientist and if you were you would understand why. I gaurantee you are not open minded enough to read anything pointing Hancock’s lies or ignorance with real effort. Remember buddy, nobody knows they’re in a cult till they leave it. Be honest with yourself you know it’s got all the trappings of a regular conspiracy theory. You are not open minded. You have your mind made up. My mind can be changed I bet you confirm that yours can’t be.

  • @radezzientertainment501
    @radezzientertainment501 Před rokem +9

    love this content

  • @goldenheartOh
    @goldenheartOh Před rokem +2

    Years ago, I took an anthropology class in college. The textbook said modern man's been around for 150,000 to 200,000 years but civilization only started roughly 8,000yrs ago. So the accepted assumption is we sat on our hands for 140,000+ years trying to figure out language and passing knowledge onto the next generation.
    Sure. That sounds more plausible than a catastrophe that knocked us back to the stone age while the catastrophe and sea levels raising 100+ feet wiped out most signs of previous civilizatios..
    Yeah. Humanity totally wasted 140,000yrs. I buy that.

  • @nicoleisabelle3012
    @nicoleisabelle3012 Před 5 lety +750

    Who is here from the Bright Insight video?

    • @dsst6647
      @dsst6647 Před 5 lety +11

      Hey, girl, hey! High fives to Bright Insiders!

    • @luisgerardollamasgutierrez9726
      @luisgerardollamasgutierrez9726 Před 5 lety +8

      Hi 👋🏽 i’m looking back at it from Bright’s video again... this is something :) exciting !

    • @jeanagarrett92
      @jeanagarrett92 Před 5 lety +10

      Me! Love this stuff! Been obsessed for months now, it all started with Bright Insight!

    • @senghnick4429
      @senghnick4429 Před 5 lety +11

      so excited that the crater has been found. really hoping for a reset button on our understanding on ancient history

    • @silversage7381
      @silversage7381 Před 5 lety +5

      Woot woot! I had heard about this infamous TED talk but never ran across it until I saw it in the sidebar as I was watching Jimmy's latest. 😊

  • @tracymatherson8174
    @tracymatherson8174 Před 5 lety +49

    He’s not only an excellent speaker, he’s an equally excellent writer!

    • @notreally2406
      @notreally2406 Před rokem

      ​@A damn smart guy you can't find one thing he says that is false

  • @michaelsparks3573
    @michaelsparks3573 Před rokem +6

    I only tuned in to listen to Graham and see what else he's come up with. From the Great Pyramid to Gobekli Tepi I'm up for all of it. I know there's a great many others doing this exact same thing, but I prefer listening to Graham. He's like a favorite old professor and I'll always be a good student. 👍

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před rokem

      He doesn’t even tell Plato’s story correctly. In Plato’s story Atlantis was at war with Athens. Athens continued and Atlantis was wiped out. That’s not civilization starting again like “children”. Also, it’s obvious the story is just an allegory. Hancock contends that Plato said the story was true, so does he believe the literal god if the sea created a continent. 🤦‍♂️

    • @adammchugh5456
      @adammchugh5456 Před rokem

      you sound like a brainwashed cultist.

    • @TexasTimelapse
      @TexasTimelapse Před rokem +1

      @@AIenSmithee
      You bought the wrong books bud

    • @AIenSmithee
      @AIenSmithee Před rokem

      @@TexasTimelapse are you actually saying that in the story of Atlantis it doesn't say that is was created by Poseidon. The Criteas iterally says tha things i am saying so if thats the "wrong" book what other reference do you have to Atlantis...bud.

    • @syyylvo
      @syyylvo Před rokem

      @@AIenSmithee this is another misconception: thinking that ancient myths and stories are allegories. In fact most of them aren't. It's just the level of interpretation of modern people (historians etc.) that is wrong

  • @andrewaajohnson7584
    @andrewaajohnson7584 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent! Presented wonderfully.🥇

  • @silasashe4158
    @silasashe4158 Před 4 lety +674

    How do I upvote Graham and down-vote Ted

  • @sean3533
    @sean3533 Před 4 lety +1234

    TED: "We like knowledge, just no new ideas please."

    • @guillermogutierrez-santana4446
      @guillermogutierrez-santana4446 Před 4 lety +8

      TED: "People can you please hurry up the sob stories and speeches on procrastination! All we have left is speakers promoting invigorating new ideas!"

    • @AF-tv6uf
      @AF-tv6uf Před 3 lety +40

      Exactly. They don't want new facts to deal with, they want an orthodoxy that reinforces their nihilistic worldview.

    • @sean3533
      @sean3533 Před 3 lety +9

      Final Boss Welcome to the new enlightenment.

    • @MrAchile13
      @MrAchile13 Před 3 lety +9

      @Final Boss I am sorry, But Hancock is still a pseudo-scientist and no one takes him seriously.
      He is arguing for a lost highly advanced (as Napoleonic Europe) global civilization, with psychic powers (he said that in America Before, chapter 30). Not only there is not a shred of evidence for this, but it doesn't make any logical sense either.
      Gobekli Tepe has nothing to do with his claims, yet he tries to use it as evidence for his claims, which is really disingenuous.

    • @MadlandsMedia
      @MadlandsMedia Před 3 lety +38

      @@MrAchile13 he is not a pseudo-scientist. He is a journalist reporting on findings and pointing out flaws in the dogmatic timeline of archeology. Gobekli Tepe flies in the face of everything archeologists assert. Read his books and look at the evidence yourself from Robert Shocke of harvard university and the geology of Randall Carlson. The data is irrefutable. Why is it that the sphinx and the pyramids date to older than egypt? Why do the Egyptian pyramids architecture gradually get worse over time instead of better? There are no signs of the great pyramids being used as tombs as egyptology states. Never was a body or sarcophagus discovered in them or any artwork that normally accompanies pharaoh tombs. You are being lies to by unscientific dogmatists that are no better than the church.

  • @fairysox221
    @fairysox221 Před 2 lety +2

    This time they didn't ban you, they just turned your audio down to 1%

  • @karma_moths
    @karma_moths Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for the warning TED. I wouldn't want to risk opening my mind to any alternative view.

    • @waynemyers2469
      @waynemyers2469 Před rokem

      When you walk out the door in the morning you must be knocked down and trampled by Unicorns and Centaurs before you can even make it to your car!

  • @chrisdixonstudios
    @chrisdixonstudios Před 4 lety +193

    "NOTE for TED: Please be aware that this talk contains modern and factual informations, and should be understood as a representation of modern scholarship coverup upon ancient civilizations." ..but thanks for sharing so many truths!

    • @paulgarcia9825
      @paulgarcia9825 Před 4 lety +2

      Profound , fearless thinker !

    • @codybraden5400
      @codybraden5400 Před 3 lety +2

      Well put! I think it's really cool how you called them out without aggression, and acknowledged the good they've done. Many need to learn that style of being, please keep it up 🙂

    • @theendoftheline
      @theendoftheline Před 3 lety +1

      When your science convictions are all about supporting your book clubs purchases... You are exemplars in fad science and supporting charlatans.

    • @lostpony4885
      @lostpony4885 Před 2 lety

      @@theendoftheline perhaps you believed the fairy tales in the books you read in school. Fangirl

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 2 lety +1

      Try Robert Sepehr channel and his Atlantean Gardens channel -you will not be disappoinTED

  • @randalltufts3321
    @randalltufts3321 Před 4 lety +92

    Graham is an absolute treasure. More and more evidence is coming forward every year in support of what he and others are finding to be true.

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 2 lety

      Try Robert Sepehr channel and his Atlantean Gardens channel -you will not be disappoinTED

    • @prefferedcustomer
      @prefferedcustomer Před rokem +1

      @A damn smart guy Theres plenty of science. Check out his podcast episodes with Joe Rogan and his overlap with Randall Carlson.

    • @prefferedcustomer
      @prefferedcustomer Před rokem +1

      @Higher understanding He's a writer. He's presenting the findings and theories of others.

  • @raymondcava4669
    @raymondcava4669 Před 2 lety +5

    Love these TED talks. Beats going to the movies

    • @adammchugh5456
      @adammchugh5456 Před rokem +1

      but this talk contains more fantasy than any movie.

    • @granthurlburt4062
      @granthurlburt4062 Před rokem

      Grant Hurlburt
      This isnt a TED talk. They specifically state this and that these opinions are rejected by actual evidence and scholarship, in the caption.

    • @notreally2406
      @notreally2406 Před rokem

      ​@@adammchugh5456 your comments are fantasy

  • @Dr.Magic.
    @Dr.Magic. Před 2 lety +12

    It's 2021. They must have gotten rid of the disclaimer. Good work everyone!

    • @DinoFancellu
      @DinoFancellu Před 2 lety +4

      Its in the video description text, right now

    • @kokolanza7543
      @kokolanza7543 Před 2 lety +2

      Wish you were right, Dan B. The disclaimer is still there as of October 6, 2021.

  • @AguaFluorida
    @AguaFluorida Před 5 lety +140

    Given the recent announcement of the discovery of the Hiawatha meteorite crater in Greenland, isn't it time that patronising disclaimer was removed from the details above?

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Před 5 lety +8

      Nope. Liars never retract a lie. They just hide and pretend they weren't exposed.

    • @MyLittleMagneton
      @MyLittleMagneton Před 4 lety +3

      @@cybervigilante If people weren't commenting about it, they might have removed the statement without anyone noticing, but now they would have to admit that they were wrong, and we can't have that now can we.

  • @siriusfun
    @siriusfun Před 4 lety +1392

    It's 2020 - I see the smug Ted disclaimer didn't age well.

    • @marcokite
      @marcokite Před 3 lety +24

      you can almost touch TED's smugnes

    • @mattysee24
      @mattysee24 Před 3 lety +28

      @Nick Nack what are you talking about? U didn't watch the video did you? There's evidence throughout the whole thing.

    • @michaelchildish
      @michaelchildish Před 3 lety +15

      @Nick Nack I'm no archaeologist but a lot of what is said on the Joe Rogan show with Hancock and Randall Carlson is some very compelling stuff. If nothing else the underwater gallery section of hancock's website should open your mind up to possibilities. Rigid thinking authoritarians have dragged other people into their wrongness at every level from warring nations, medical science, and even academia, all trying to make people OBEY so the top dog gets theirs at the cost of everyone else. Mainstream Archaeology: no civilisation before ancient egypt, sumer? never heard of it, anyone who disagrees is insane and getting no funding. Gobekli tepe discovered: no civilisation at all before the hunter gatherers who didnt build gobekli tepe because hunter gatherers by definition dont do stonework like that. Gunung Padang discovered, possibly 30,000 years old, struggling to get it checked out. The gaffes of mainstream archaeology does not = ancient aliens or reptilians or the most unlikely of cryptids that people believe in with no evidence whatsoever

    • @theendoftheline
      @theendoftheline Před 3 lety

      Right, should have said, why did we ever do this?

    • @experienceanimation217
      @experienceanimation217 Před 3 lety +1

      😂

  • @andrewduffy93
    @andrewduffy93 Před 2 lety

    SO INTRESTING LEARNING ABOUT THIS ANCIENT TECHNOLOGY AND WAYS OF LIFE AT THAT TIMELOVE THIS STUFF

  • @darrenfry4695
    @darrenfry4695 Před 2 lety +15

    Plato spoke of the pyramids and said underneath there's a lake ,,now years and years later we discover that yes there's a lake underneath the great pyramid so I believe he talks the truth

  • @frankinmouse
    @frankinmouse Před 5 lety +221

    Note for TED, your disclaimer is outdated and contains factual inaccuracies.

    • @YnteryPictures
      @YnteryPictures Před 4 lety +7

      @Samuel Díez 12000 years old impact crater has been found in Greenland

    • @CH-gb7hf
      @CH-gb7hf Před 4 lety +1

      @@YnteryPictures We have no idea when the impact is from. More research is needed.

    • @McShag420
      @McShag420 Před 4 lety +4

      @@CH-gb7hf Most scientists seem to agree it is around 13,000 years old, with current findings.

    • @CH-gb7hf
      @CH-gb7hf Před 4 lety +1

      @@McShag420 'Most scientists'? Are you sure? based on what data? As I understand we just don't know enough about it yet, more research is needed. I am not disputing but as I understand it, the crater could be as much as 100s of thousands of years old.

    • @CH-gb7hf
      @CH-gb7hf Před 4 lety +6

      @ZeroWolf Graham is not a scientist, in his own words he is a journalist. He picks and chooses the evidence to create hype around a theory to sell books. This does not however mean that he is necessarily wrong. He could very well be right about a lot of things. He has a lot of cognitive bias (as we all do). Personally I find the latest finding intriguing but lets calm down a moment and not put a date on it just yet as we simply do not know at this point.

  • @galanie
    @galanie Před 5 lety +56

    This man has made more sense to me since the 1990's than all the experts have all my life.

  • @mape52
    @mape52 Před 2 lety +2

    Brillant, qui d'autre osera se lever pour discuter de cette vision de l’histoire. Merci Graham.

  • @thebreakfastmenu
    @thebreakfastmenu Před 2 lety +9

    It's things like the "Note from TED" that prove Graham absolutely right when he criticizes the established mainstream narrative. They passive aggressively try to antagonize Graham to have the appearance of conformity and by extension, validation and dignity as per "modern scholarship."
    Right, because education is regurgitation of information with a lack of fundamental understanding of the ideas represented.

  • @orion4579
    @orion4579 Před 5 lety +142

    Looks like TEDx owes Graham Hancock an apology after the Greenland meteor impact site discovery. I've followed people like Graham for years now and find the information factual and interesting. Randall Carlson is another great information source on this subject.

    • @JD-5250
      @JD-5250 Před 4 lety

      JRE

    • @CraaaaaabPeople
      @CraaaaaabPeople Před 4 lety +1

      Someone has been watching too much Joe Rogan.

    • @McShag420
      @McShag420 Před 4 lety

      @@CraaaaaabPeople Ah, so you are saying you don't accept evidence scientists all agree on? It's just conspiracy? What things do you accept as fact, only what you want to?

    • @CraaaaaabPeople
      @CraaaaaabPeople Před 4 lety +1

      @@McShag420 no I am not, and I actually quite like Grahams work and don't hold an opinion either way. When someone mentions him in quick succession with Randal Carlson my mind immediately goes back to the JRE specials. That was all.
      Stop being so defensive and go back to watching Joe.

    • @CraaaaaabPeople
      @CraaaaaabPeople Před 4 lety

      @@McShag420 I "thumbs upped" the comment before making that observation. Which would indicate I tend to agree. Perhaps you should look at things with an eye for detail instead of flying off the handle and posting at strangers.

  • @MadameChaotica
    @MadameChaotica Před 5 lety +159

    Now that an impact crater has been found in Greenland, will you be removing the disclaimer?

    • @richardwarsin5174
      @richardwarsin5174 Před 4 lety +1

      That would be the correct thing to do.

    • @langworldtm8260
      @langworldtm8260 Před 4 lety

      Richard Warsin where is this disclaimer?

    • @jeffsmith4110
      @jeffsmith4110 Před 4 lety

      @@langworldtm8260 It's right below the video.

    • @Gilmaris
      @Gilmaris Před 4 lety

      Why? The dating of the crater does not fit with Hancock's theory at all.

    • @fioredeutchmark
      @fioredeutchmark Před 4 lety +5

      Gilmaris you again? The Hiawatha creator dates from EXACTLY when Graham suggested it would. The more recent one found is definitely older, maybe you got confused while reading with that crazy thick bias you have?!

  • @jansonvocmf
    @jansonvocmf Před rokem +5

    Ted: Watching this may make you question the mainstream.
    Me: I am going to watch it even harder.

    • @selwynr
      @selwynr Před rokem +1

      It's not "the mainstream", it's science. You want to question the science, become a scientist and get back to me.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před rokem

      Congratulations for outlining exactly what Hancock does.
      Misrepresent scholarship for his own ends - all those lovely book sales and he's just crying through your money 😂
      They used to say there'sa sucker born every minute but reading comments on his videos I'm pretty sure we can amend that to every second now.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před rokem

      @@selwynr He'd have to have paid attention in school to do that.
      Something tells me otherwise.

  • @valerie93_
    @valerie93_ Před 2 lety +1

    Fascinating talk, sir. Things like Gobekli Tepe, when combined with the Younger Dryas, certainly makes one wonder 🤔