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Atlantis The Search for the Lost Continent by Pat Linse, p.297. In: Shermer, M.;Linse,Pat (2002) The Skeptic encyclopedia of pseudoscience. With friendly permission by Skeptics Society The citizens of Atlantis had blue blood which gave them skin of a beautiful violet color and they often stood over 8 feet tall. They possessed advanced crystal technology that generated unlimited free energy. Crystals of different colors allowed them to completely control the weather and cure every disease. Their life span was over 800 years long. Some say that they came from planets beyond our own galaxy. They bred shorter inferior humans—us—as slaves to attend to their every need. But because their life was so easy they were bored. They set apart large areas of their continent as national parks where the humans were allowed to live. In these areas they staged violent storms, earthquakes and volcanos for their amusement, caring little about the unfortunate effects these disasters had on their slaves. Then one day their technology spun wildly out of control and the entire continent was destroyed and sank beneath the sea without a trace. But slaves who had formerly escaped from the continent and settled elsewhere in the world remembered the culture of their masters and tried to recreate it where ever they lived. They became the founders of the ancient civilizations that we today know as the Aztecs, the Mayans, the Incas, the Sumerians, the ancient Egyptians, and the ancient Chinese. But no evidence of Atlantis has ever been found. Every mention of Atlantis can be traced back to a single source—the Greek philosopher Plato who first mentioned Atlantis over 2,500 years ago. Plato wrote a few pages describing the layout of the capital city and countryside and little else. The detailed information that fills the books and Websites is based on speculation, imagination, guesses, and even psychic channeling. No one paid much attention to Atlantis for a couple hundred years after Plato. Plato’s own student, the famed philosopher Aristotle, was quoted as saying that Plato made up the story to make a point. Christian writers in the Middle Ages ignored Atlantis, considering it a pagan folk tale. But about 2,000 years later, when Europe was shocked by the discovery of the American continents, a great excitement about Atlantis was kindled, and the possibility that it was more than a story was taken seriously. Both professional and amateur scientists alike began to search for traces of the lost continent. A second surge of interest in Atlantis came in the 1800s when stories about Atlantis began to be combined with quests for spiritual knowledge. Today the lessons of the story of the destruction of the corrupt pleasure-loving Atlanteans is more compelling than ever, because for the first time in history we actually have the technology to destroy civilization either through ecological disaster or nuclear war. WHO WAS PLATO AND WHAT DID HE WRITE IN HIS DIALOGUE ABOUT ATLANTIS? Plato was a philosopher who lived 2,500 years ago in ancient Greece. Since he is the single source for the story, anyone searching for Atlantis has to start by looking carefully at what Plato wrote, and understand the context in which he wrote it. But Plato was not writing history or geography when he mentioned Atlantis. He was writing about what the citizens in an ideal society should be like. He used Atlantis as an example of what can happen when a society becomes morally corrupt. Some people suppose that Plato wanted his readers to believe that Atlantis was real, and others argue that the story is just a way to make the moral lesson he was teaching more exciting and compelling. Plato began his career writing plays. When he became a philosopher he invented a new form of writing that was like a short play, called a “dialogue.” In a dialogue, several people who had different viewpoints argued about philosophical questions like “What is the best way to live an honorable life?” At the time, the study of “philosophy” (which means love of wisdom) also included questions about how the universe worked, so the characters in dialogues might also ask questions like “How were the stars created?” or “What happens to an object when it burns?” Plato felt that presenting several viewpoints was a way to promote a healthy mind and soul. He thought the process of thinking was as important as the conclusion that you might reach, and that exercising your mind was like going to the gym to exercise your body. But the dialogue served as more than a way to make philosophical discussion dramatic. Plato lived in a conquered city where writing about how society should be organized was politically dangerous. Putting his opinions in the mouths of different characters gave him a measure of safety since no one could prove which character was expressing his view. The Heroic Trinity Plato was part of a group of three ancient Greek philosophers known as the Heroic Trinity. The first of the hero philosophers was Plato’s teacher Socrates, Plato himself was the second, and Plato’s student Aristotle was the third. Together they laid much of the foundation of modern Western thought. Socrates was an amazing character. Because he was disheveled and barefoot, a Greek playwright once joked that he was a disgrace to shoemakers. Yet his powerful personality, quick wit, and keen insights into human nature continue to inspire respect even today. Socrates tried to teach people to improve their thinking by challenging their views. This eventually created enemies and he was tried and sentenced to death by a vote of a committee of 30 citizens. Plato recorded the brilliant (but unsuccessful) speeches Socrates made in his own defense at his trial. Aristotle was the first to analyze and classify things in a scientific manner. His influence dominated scientific thought so completely for 2,000 years that it eventually hindered scientific progress because people were reluctant to accept new discoveries when they contradicted Aristotle. WHAT PLATO WROTE ABOUT ATLANTIS Plato says the Atlantis story is about “the greatest action a people ever did.” From all the excitement Atlantis has generated it would be reasonable to expect that these marvelous people would be the Atlanteans. But they are not. The story is actually about the “great and wonderful deeds” done by the people of Athens long ago! Plato wanted to inspire his fellow Athenians to value moral strength and become more like their noble ancestors because superior morality allowed the soldiers of a single city—Athens—to defeat an entire continent. >From a dramatic standpoint, the more powerful and dangerous the Atlanteans were said to be, the more important Plato’s moral instruction would seem. The two dialogues that mention Atlantis are named after their main speakers. The Timaeus Dialogue Socrates begins the dialogue by reminding Timaeus and Critias that he had asked them the day before to come up with examples of how an ideal society might act fighting in a great war. Critias says he knows a story that “by some mysterious coincidence” fits Socrates’ idea exactly. He heard it when he was 10 from an aged poet. He has spent the night searching his memory, so that he could tell the whole story in detail. Critias begins: “Listen Socrates to a tale which, though strange is certainly true, having been attested to by Solon.” (Solon was a famous Greek leader and historian.) Solon visited Egypt where priests told him that the Greek Athenians knew nothing of their ancient history. They didn't even know about the greatest deed the Athenians ever performed—how the soldiers of Athens singlehandedly defeated a mighty empire located just outside the “Pillars of Hercules.” The priests declared, “Solon, your country shone forth, in the excellence of her virtue and strength, among all human kind…when the rest fell off from her, being compelled to stand alone, after having undergone the very extremity of danger she defeated and triumphed over the invaders, and preserved from slavery those who were not yet subjugated, and generously liberated all the rest of us who dwell within the Pillars. But afterward there were violent earthquakes and in a single day and night all sank into the earth and the Island of Atlantis in like manner disappeared into the depths of the sea.” Then Timaeus speaks for most of the rest of the dialogue about how the universe was formed, and other matters not related to Atlantis. The Critias Dialogue The next day Socrates encourages Critias to tell his story in greater detail because, he says, details are required if the story is to seem believable. Critias promises to do just that. Critias explains that although the story is from Egypt, the names in it are Greek because Solon carefully translated them. He says he has Solon’s original manuscript, which he has studied since childhood. (Which seems to contradict his earlier account about hearing the story from a poet and trying to recall it from memory. Could this be a hint from Plato that we should take what Critias says with a grain of salt?) Half of Critias’s speech discusses how the gods founded ancient Greece, and how the sea god Poseidon and his family founded Atlantis. At last Critias gets around to describing Atlantis. It was a sunny island, marvelously beautiful, with rich forests for timber and a large level central plain which was overflowing with food crops, fruits, and flowers. The royal city was designed as a series of circular canals, lined with splendid palaces of white, red, and black stone set in fabulous patterns, shimmering with gold and the fiery glow of a valuable red metal called orichalch. In the very center of the circular canals stood a forbidden sanctuary surrounded by a golden fence. Poseidon himself had a huge temple completely covered with silver, with a roof of ivory, decorated with golden sculpture. A giant golden statue of Poseidon driving six winged horses, surrounded by 100 sea nymphs riding on dolphins filled the inner sanctuary up to the roof. Baths and pools fed by hot and cold springs were surrounded by gardens with every kind of beautiful and fruitful tree imaginable. A racecourse was built on the ground between two of the circular canals. And all of that was just the royal palace…! The rich climate allowed the Atlanteans to raise a gigantic armed force. The area around the royal city provided 60,000 military officers, 10,000 chariots, 240,000 cavalry, 120,000 hoplites, 600,000 archers, slingers, stone and javelin throwers, and 24,000 ships. And this was from only 1 of the 10 divisions of the country! Critias then goes back to discussing the political organization of the god-kings. He describes a bloody religious ritual where they catch and sacrifice a bull. He tells how Zeus, the king of all gods, becomes annoyed because the formerly noble Atlanteans have been corrupted by their great wealth. Zeus decided to punish them so he called all the other gods together in his house,“and when he had gathered them there he said…” The dialogue ends there, right in the middle of a sentence! IS IT POSSIBLE THAT PLATO MADE UP ATLANTIS? Many people who search for a real Atlantis argue that Plato couldn’t have made up the Atlantis story because it contains too many realistic details. But Plato lived both an exciting and dangerous life. He grew up during “The Golden Age of Athens”—one of the most amazing times in history when the arts flourished in a way that has barely been equaled since. Plato was highly educated and likely read manuscripts like “On Marvelous Things Heard” which told a story about a lush island that had been discovered, like Atlantis, “outside the Pillars of Hercules.” As Plato grew out of his teens the Golden Age came to an end when his city suffered a bitter military defeat. Plato sailed several times to the island of Sicily and lived in Syracuse, a city of fabulous architecture with splendid temples, a multi-level fort, and a covered boat canal. He knew about the circular harbor at Carthage that was controlled from a central island. He advised rulers and spent time in prison when one relationship turned bad. He watched a strange plague kill one out of three people in Athens. Fighting Philosophers Some modern authors misrepresent Plato’s Atlantis as a peaceful paradise of spiritual people who had discovered the secret of eliminating war. But Plato said Atlantis was a gigantic military power that attacked without reason. It is not surprising that soldiers were the heroes of Plato's story. Both Plato and his teacher Socrates were elite hoplites—upper class soldiers. The short squat Socrates was famous for his stamina and skill in battle. Plato probably grew up hearing about the recent Greek victory over the Persians. During his lifetime Athens won a war against the Carthaginians, lost an army in Sicily, and lost a war against a rival city Sparta. Plato wrote about Atlantis when he was over 70, at the end of a rich life that would have given him plenty of material to draw upon. The Atlantis story was probably a combination of legends and bits of history woven together—whatever it took to create a memorable lesson. DID PLATO EXPECT PEOPLE TO BELIEVE IN ATLANTIS? Plato often used myths and legends to illustrate a point. He expected his a udience to recognize a parable (a story made up as a moral or religious lesson) when they heard it. Almost every parable he told starts with a statement that it is true. He himself explained that “We may liken the false to the true for the purpose of moral instruction.” In Plato’s most famous dialogue “The Republic,” he suggested that on rare occasions it might be okay to tell what he called a “noble lie” to the lower classes for the purpose of creating a stable social order. Lower classes would be told that the gods created the present social order, making the rulers of gold, the military classes of silver, and the common working class from bronze. Plato was not a man who believed in total democracy for everyone. He himself was upper class and he also might have been suspicious of democracy because his dear friend and teacher Socrates was condemned to death by a democratically elected committee of citizens. (To his credit he felt that people of merit could rise above the class they were born into.) WHAT WOULD PLATO THINK ABOUT TODAY’S ATLANTIS STORIES? Plato would be shocked to find his villains transformed into heroes. And he would be surprised to hear that Atlanteans are now said to possess superior wisdom, after he took pains to point out that they were destroyed because they made unwise choices. The idea of a Golden Age is so appealing that it has overshadowed Plato’s original lesson. A Golden Age and hidden wisdom is attractive because it is always located in the past or future, a very convenient arrangement for people who are dissatisfied with the present, but don’t know what to do to improve it. Plato’s life’s passion was to discover the best way to organize society with the means available in the here and now, so he would likely disapprove of belief systems which place solutions out of reach in some mystical time. EVIDENCE FOR AND AGAINST ATLANTIS BEING AN ACCURATE HISTORICAL ACCOUNT THE BEST BET FOR A REAL ATLANTIS Around 3,500 years ago a massive volcanic explosion blew away the center of Santorini Island in the Aegean Sea near Greece, leaving a water-filled crater about 6 miles wide. In the 1960s on the islands that make up the crater’s rim, archaeologists dug up the ruins of a luxurious city out of a layer of volcanic ash. Could the disaster at Santorini have been the source of the Atlantis myth? The Santorini blast was one of the largest volcanic explosions known. The earthquakes, destructive waves, extensive ash fall, darkened skies, crop failure and resulting starvation must have been terrifying. It is possible that some memory of this event survived a thousand years of retelling until Plato’s time. Similarities of Santorini to Atlantis:
ARGUMENTS AGAINST ATLANTIS BEING AN ACCURATE HISTORICAL ACCOUNT
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