The Atlantis Syndrome by Paul Jordan, Sutton Publishing, 拢20, ISBN 0750925973
ATLANTIS pleases the crowds, but those who write about it constantly push the boundaries of credulity. The city of Plato鈥檚 4th-century BC morality tale is embedded in our imaginations where it hovers between metaphor and myth. Film-maker Paul Jordan explores our fascination with the fantasy past that Atlantis now represents.
Half the book confronts fringe ideas with historical and scientific knowledge, from ancient Greece to mitochondrial DNA and the origins of humanity. The second part is more interesting as Jordan takes a wry look at the big-name peddlers of silly ideas. Many of these, he observes, have been journalists in a previous incarnation.
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Graham Hancock has recently assumed Erich von Daniken鈥檚 pyrites crown with two bestselling books, Fingerprints of the Gods and Heaven鈥檚 Mirror, as well as several television series. Jordan鈥檚 dissection of his methods of enquiry is masterly. He shows how Hancock uses lavish photography, sets up archaeologists as straw men, and relies on a handful of phrases such as 鈥渢o my eye this looked like鈥, 鈥淪uppose the ancients knew something we didn鈥檛鈥, 鈥淐ould it be that鈥. Flattering the audience is an art form in Hancock鈥檚 hands and Jordan chronicles it well.
Inadequate as science, the idea of Atlantis appeals to so many people that Plato鈥檚 metaphor has become an international alternative reality.