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- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 5 - Atlantis" (3/1/86CE)
- Reprinted from: _The Crystal Tablet of Set_
- (c) Temple of Set 1989 CE
- Weirdbase file version by TS permission
-
- by Michael A. Aquino, Ipsissimus VI* Temple of Set
- Electronic mail: MCI-Mail 278-4041
-
- Since it is now established fact that mankind has possessed high
- intelligence for quite some time prior to the recorded beginnings of Egypt,
- the question of what was happening during the previous 95,000 years -
- approximately the length of time we've possessed our expanded cranial
- capacity - remains unresolved. Did our ancestors content themselves with
- swinging from trees and eating bananas ... and suddenly decide to civilize
- themselves a mere 5,000 years ago? Or were other things taking place?
-
- 5A. _Atlantis, the Antediluvian World_ by Ignatius Donnelly, 1882;
- revised/edited by Egerton Sykes, 1949. NY: Gramercy, 1949. (TS-3) MA: "This
- is the classic analysis of Atlantis. Written to the scientific standards of
- Donnelly's time, it fell victim to a priori disbelief and was dealt a near-
- death blow by being embraced by the occult faddists of that day.
- Nevertheless the book remains a sound arch~ological study, though dated in
- some areas which will be readily apparent to modern readers. Some of the
- more startling points made by this book are cited at the beginning of George
- Pal's sci-fi/fantasy (?) film _Atlantis, the Lost Continent_."
-
- 5B. _The Mystery of Atlantis_ by Charles Berlitz.NY: Leisure Books #272DK,
- 1969. (TS-3) MA: "This book summarizes the current case both for and against
- Atlantis. Berlitz comments extensively and authoritatively on Donnelly,
- particularly with regard to the language question. [Berlitz, son of 'the'
- Berlitz, speaks thirty languages himself.] The tone of the book is
- conservative and scientific. Ultimately, however, Berlitz can add little in
- the way of new data; he merely critiques #5A."
-
- 5C. _Atlantis Rising_ by Brad Steiger. NY: Dell Books #1182, 1973. (TS-3)
- MA: "A speculative work on Atlantis, with some interesting new data. The
- case studies are well presented, although the book suffers from Steiger's
- sensationalistic writing-style."
-
- 5D. _Atlantis: The New Evidence_ by Martin Ebon. NY: Signet #W-7371, 1977.
- (TS-3) MA: "In most regards this book is neither as scholarly nor as
- thorough as the other books in this category. It does include, however, a
- very intriguing account of the arch~ological efforts of Heinrich and Paul
- Schliemann concerning Atlantis. A lot of time is wasted on snipe-hunt
- theories about Atlantis actually being Crete or Santorini, presuming that
- Plato (who traveled about the Mediterranean Sea) was too stupid to know the
- difference between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean."
-
- 5E. _Timaeus and Critias_ by Plato. Baltimore: Penguin Books #L261, 1971.
- (TS-4) MA: "These are the two Platonic dialogues concerned, among other
- things, with Atlantis. They are also included in #12C, but this edition has
- the added attraction of some very good footnotes to the mathematical
- intricacies of the dialogues. The book's drawback is a Santorini-oriented
- appendix on Atlantis by the edition's translator, Desmond Lee of University
- College, Cambridge."
-
- 5F. _The Secret of Atlantis_ by Otto Muck. NY: Pocket Books, 1978. (TS-3)
- MA: "A tightly argued, carefully documented case for the historical accuracy
- of Plato's accounts. Muck, a German scientist who contributed to the
- invention of the schnorkel and V1/V2 rockets of World War II, concludes:
- 'The Mayan temple records and modern methods of historical dating agree.
- They prove that Plato's account is true. The statements that have been
- looked on with such skepticism are correct.' Introduction by Peter Tompkins,
- author of #1F, who dispenses firmly with the Santorini theory."
-
- 5G. _Ancient Man: A Handbook of Puzzling Artifacts_ by William R. Corliss.
- Glen Arm, Maryland: The Sourcebook Project, 1978. (TS-3) MA: "In his preface
- Corliss states: 'The primary objective of this handbook is to provide
- libraries and individuals with a wide selection of reliable descriptions of
- unusual artifacts of ancient man. To meet this goal I have analyzed hundreds
- of volumes of archaeological journals as well as the complete files of
- Nature and Science. The result is an incomparable collection of information
- on the frontiers of archaeology.' Chapters on engineering structures, tools
- & artifacts, graphics & symbols, geology, anthropology, biology, and
- mythology. 800 pages of small print! Altogether a refreshingly reliable text
- after one has endured the sensationalistic stuff of van D~niken and his many
- imitators for so many years."
-
- 5H. _Atlantis of the North_ by Juergen Spanuth. NY: Van Nostrand Reinhold
- Company, 1979. (TS-4) (OT-1) MA: "This is a rather deceptive work. Although
- published as a book in 1979, it is a revised and expanded treatment of the
- author's earlier work _Atlantis_ (1965). But as you examine the dates in the
- footnotes and the 16-page bibliography, it begins to dawn on you that
- Spanuth has taken massive amounts of material from the archives of the
- prehistorical research elements of the Ahnenerbe-SS [see #14M]. In fact it
- is rather amusing to see how 'startling' everyone finds this book - as
- though this is all 'breakthrough revelation' in archaeology. It is more
- correctly the unveiling of source material that has lain under an emotional
- and political taboo since 1945. To be fair to Spanuth, he has done a good
- job of integrating and analyzing an enormous amount of data whose processing
- under the Nazi regime was inhibited by (a) wartime pressures and (b) the
- ideological constraints of Nazi politics. Spanuth's thesis is that the royal
- island of Atlantis (Basileia) was located in the area of Heligoland, and
- that the Platonic accounts of Atlantean history are essentially accurate. He
- - and the Ahnenerbe - make a good case."
-
-