Episode #449 from 1:49:31

Panspermia

Everything we're talking about is so full of mystery. It's just fascinating, especially the farther back we go. That's what I love about the past, is the mystery that's there. And that's another thing that I regret about some archeologists is that their mission seems to drain all mystery out of the past, to suck it dry like some vampire sucking the blood out of the past and to reduce it to a series of numbers that appear to be scientific. I think that's most unfortunate. The past is deeply mysterious. The whole story of life on earth is deeply mysterious. We were talking about the timeline of human beings, but if you go back to the formation of the earth itself, if I've got the figures right, it's about four-and-a-half billion years ago that the Earth supposedly formed. It was then incredibly hot and inhospitable to life for the next several hundred million years.

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Everything we're talking about is so full of mystery. It's just fascinating, especially the farther back we go. That's what I love about the past, is the mystery that's there. And that's another thing that I regret about some archeologists is that their mission seems to drain all mystery out of the past, to suck it dry like some vampire sucking the blood out of the past and to reduce it to a series of numbers that appear to be scientific. I think that's most unfortunate. The past is deeply mysterious. The whole story of life on earth is deeply mysterious. We were talking about the timeline of human beings, but if you go back to the formation of the earth itself, if I've got the figures right, it's about four-and-a-half billion years ago that the Earth supposedly formed. It was then incredibly hot and inhospitable to life for the next several hundred million years.

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Panspermia chapter timestamp | Graham Hancock: Lost Civilization of the Ice Age & Ancient Human History | EpisodeIndex