Years ago I encountered on the internet this idea that all of recorded history is actually simply mistakenly recounting the last few hundred years over and over again, and we’ve actually only been around for that long. I can’t remember any specifics but it’s something like our stories of the Roman Empire are actually garbled mis-tellings of the history of France in the 19th century, and stuff like that, applied to pretty much everything in history.
It seemed familiar to me, but I didn’t remember it off the top of my head. I got to it from Wikipedia’s list of conspiracy theories. I had no idea that page existed, but I’ll be spending a good amount of time there in the near future.
I heard an interesting variant on this that isn’t totally batnuts crazy: our historical time-line has a few centuries of gaps in it, in ancient times – around 700 B.C. – because of misreading of clues in archaeological sites. Something along the lines of the Trojan War being only 800 B.C. instead of 1,000 B.C.
It isn’t really convincing…but at least it isn’t hopelessly foolish.
Okay, so if any particular recyclable event is tragedy the first time around and farce the second time around (this much is known), then what is it the third time and after that?
Chronos: “Of course not, because the Universe didn’t exist last week. It was all created last Thursday.”
Yes, of course, of course. All evidence of anything earlier was simply placed there at the creation, by the Devil, to deceive us into mis-belief. I thought everybody knew that.