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Old 05-03-2009, 02:19 PM   #21
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Since we've got you here, David, could you go over the refutations to the criticisms of your interpretations of the Royal Cache and the San tombs, and briefly explain what the current thoughts are on the Assyrian and Hittite Chronologies and the Philistine problem?

I'm rereading Lords of Avaris anyway to make sure I'm up to speed on things, but as I said getting access to Newgrosh's book is going to be pretty difficult, so my responses have been necessarily limited.
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Old 05-03-2009, 04:01 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Reply to (a load of) spin:

I am one of those 442 readers of this thread and I think that I am entitled to feel pretty aggrieved at the insults and defamatory remarks hurled onto the pages of this forum by this ‘spin’ creature. <comments on moderation removed>

But first, how qualified is spin to challenge the New Chronology theory?
Life must be dull if you've come slumming it here.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
It is obvious that his knowledge is poor at best. Any person with half a brain would know that a solar eclipse can only take place at the very beginning of a lunar month when the Sun, Moon and Earth are aligned. Hence a solar eclipse cannot take place on ‘the sixth [day] of the lunar month’. Yet spin seems to think that it is impossible for a solar eclipse to occur on ‘the day of the new moon’. This is 100% rubbish. That is precisely when solar eclipses occur!
You're a bit slow here. As you'll notice earlier I put it down to a brain fart. Happens to the best of us. Why not get off your roll and catch up?

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
He says that my ‘strange reading’ of the Ugarit tablet KTU 1.78 ‘ignores all other dating attempts’. I do not ignore them but simply offer an alternative date based on a more logical translation of the text. This translation does not involve rejecting linguistic rules (such as some scholars’ unacceptable turning of BTT, which they translate as B-TT ‘on six’ into ‘on sixth’ B-TDT).
This is a sad attempt to force Ugaritic into your notions of how a language should be.

The strange reading is forcing the text into the idea of early evening, so you've jumped the gun there bit.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
If my reading of the text is strange, then both Christopher Walker of the British Museum and Fred Espenak of NASA must be barmy as well for using the same strange translation of BTT as the verb root ‘put to shame’ (well attested in Ugaritic, Hebrew and Aramaic). I and many others thus understand that ‘the day was put to shame’ refers to an eclipse of the sun. The phrase ‘the sun entered’ is also well attested as the ancient way of describing the sun entering the horizon (i.e. sunset) in both Egyptian and Semitic literature.
Let's just forget about the verb here, meaning simply, "to enter, to go in" in the context of the noun "gate". Of course it can imply "sunset", but then there would be nothing for the day to be "put to shame" over.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Spin needs to support his claim that ‘the sun entered’ refers to the eclipse itself by giving us a reference from the ancient literature. I think he will struggle to find a single example. In fact, last time I looked, nine out of fourteen scholarly translations of the tablet that I have seen refer to a near sunset eclipse of the sun on the first day of the lunar month of Hiyarru. My reading is therefore neither strange nor in the minority.
Try Amos 8:9 there, buddy. hb)ty h:$m$ b:chrym ("c" = tsade) -- the sun going in at noon. Would you like to have it mean "set"??

Perhaps you can give an ancient source that finds it necessary to supply both ywm and xd$ in the same phrase along with the name of the month!

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
In his Public Profile spin claims to come from ‘nowhere’ and that his occupation is ‘time wasting’. Well that’s because he obviously has no formal academic training in any of the subjects upon which he spews out is verbal diatribes. He has been asked for his academic qualifications but refuses to respond - because he can’t without exposing his utter failure to gain any qualifications in these fields. Instead he spends his whole miserable life doing nothing but slander people from the safety of his ‘nowhere-man’ existence whilst forcing those he slanders to completely waste their time trying to put the record straight after all his lies.
Haven't you got better to do than bleed? A tour or something?

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
He accuses me of being ignorant about linguistics. Does this criticism come from a man qualified sufficiently in the subject to comment? No.
You're not sufficiently in the know, are you there bro?

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Let’s just look at his championing of evangelical Christian Professor Kenneth Kitchen on the question of Egyptian ‘S’ never shifting to Hebrew ‘SH’. To rely so heavily on a Christian ‘fundamentalist nutter’ (spin’s words for another evangelical Christian scholar) is foolhardy in the extreme - especially if that ‘nutter’ has an agenda (i.e. to protect is vice-like grip on the discipline of Egyptian chronology - even revisions of a few years are lambasted by the grumpy professor). So how does spin explain Kitchen’s rather remarkable oversight of the name Moses, which appears in Egyptian texts as Mose (ms) and in Hebrew as Moshe? Is this not a shifting of Egyptian S to Hebrew SH?
Hebrew supplies a Hebrew etymology for the name "Moses". Live with it.

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What about the city name Ashkelon? In Egyptian it is Askelana and in Hebrew Ashkelon.
Why are you going in the wrong direction? Your claim regards Egyptian to Hebrew. Ashkelon is irrelevant for your trajectory, my good fellow.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Another one that Kitchen seems to conveniently forget? There are others. And, of course, in the New Chronology, the lingua franca of the region at the time of Ramesses II and his contemporary Solomon is Akkadian which does transfer Egyptian S to Semitic SH.
Perhaps you can supply a few Akkadian texts in the Israeli archaeological record to help your case.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
But there is something else that both Kitchen and his disciple, spin, seem to be completely unaware of.
(I suppose if it were true, being a disciple of Kitchen is eminently more reasonable than being a disciple of Velikovsky.)

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
The fact (and yes it is a fact) is that the biblical Hebrew script did not distinguish between S (sin) and SH (shin) before the introduction of pointing in the early centuries AD.
Whoa there, matey. Because we can't distinguish the two allophones of the one letter in early Hebrew doesn't mean that the Hebrews couldn't. All you are trying to do is confuse them. The Hebrews clearly distinguished between the Egyptian /s/ and "sh". Did words like Phinehas get written with a sin? Of course not.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
In other words, any biblical text or annal of the kings of Judah would have written the name Shishak as sin-yod-sin-qoph - no-one would have been able to tell whether of the original S was vocalised sin or shin without knowing it from oral tradition
The "in other words" should indicate a complex but sufficient case being made rather than trying to pull the wool over the unsuspecting reader's eyes.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
And, before anyone moves the goal-posts, the ending of Shishak in a qoph is no problem either because, in the 10th century proto-Hebrew script, the signs for waw and qoph were also identical (see the Lachish VI ostracon where waw is clearly the same sign as qoph - a loop mounted on top of a vertical stem).
As there are so very few exemplars of proto-Hebrew to illustrate your point, it should be easy to cite the exact evidence here.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
So, if a 10th century BC scribe (contemporary with Shishak - in the NC identified with Ramesses II bearing the hypocoristicon ‘SYSW), wrote the name of the Egyptian pharaoh Sysw in the script of his day, he would have written sin-yod-sin-waw. If then a 7th century BC scribe (contemporary with Josiah) was to attempt to read that name from an ancient temple scroll, he might easily have read it as sin-yod-sin-qoph, given that in his time the two signs had separated and the loop on stem was then only identifiable with qoph. Incidentally the name Shoshenk - which Kitchen identifies with Shishak has no yod in it and was pronounced in East Semitic as SUSINKU - nothing like Shishak.
If you check 1 Kings 14:25 (Ketiv), the name is $W$Q, yup, a waw, a more difficult reading suggesting it was in fact the original. The later Hebrew's apparently been influenced through Greek, Seswnxos, etc. Shoshenq is simply a better fit for $W$K. There is no convoluted special pleading for the shin. The original waw is a better fit. Sorry, but your alternative is a dud.

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
I may not have a degree in linguistics, but I do have a first class degree in the ancient Egyptian language and a degree in Egyptology and Ancient History and have taken university courses on Levantine archaeology, Mycenaean and Minoan archaeology, Egyptian archaeology, Egyptian environment, Ancient Near Eastern history from 3000 to 300 BC, Greek history and historical method. So I believe that I am a darn sight more qualified to explain the linguistic arguments over the Shishak/Sysw hypothesis than spin is.
You don't have to worry here about your feelings of inadequacy over your qualifications. The rule here ostensibly is evidence.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Getting back to Kitchen’s TIPE Preface - which spin relies on so much for his arguments - all of the professor’s criticisms have been answered by NC scholars and shown to be unfounded.
But can you cite any scholars who are not card carrying members of NC?

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Just like plate tectonics theory, which was ridiculed for years before it became accepted by the ‘establishment’ twenty years later, the New Chronology is gaining ground bit by bit.
I love the analogy, but you need to be in a hindsight position which sadly you are not. You are just selling spin.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Israeli professors are now openly stating that the character Labayu from the Amarna Letters was most likely the historical model for King Saul (as in the NC);
Could you provide citations for this claim so that I can see just who said what?

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
many younger Egyptologists now reject Sothic dating and question Kitchen’s Third Intermediate Period chronology; Egyptologists (including Kitchen) accept the discovery of a second king Hedjkheperre Shoshenk made by myself and other NC researchers;
Schliemann did find something.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
other grandees of Egyptology have agreed that a vizier of the 12th Dynasty may well have been the proto-Joseph figure who was the source of the Genesis tradition (as in the NC); a private poll of 100 Egyptologists voted in the clear majority that the most likely time for the biblical Exodus was the Second Intermediate Period (New Chronology) and not the 19th Dynasty (Orthodox Chronology); and even Kitchen publicly - in front of 300 delegates at the Reading University ‘Exodus: Myth or History?’ conference - accepted that (and I quote) ‘there are now two powerful Exodus dates - David Rohl’s and my own’. It is therefore somewhat ironic that spin’s hero is conceding the possibility of a Middle Bronze Age (Second Intermediate Period) Exodus, yet spin himself can’t climb out of his dark little hole to see this new dawn.
I think, in this specific case, your are both kidding yourselves. You both assume there was an exodus, converting Hebrew legend into fact. For Kitchen it is a given, but in the fieldthe exodus is not considered veracious. Continuous occupation of the land as seen in hundreds of sites in Israel indicates that an exodus is simply questionable.

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Finally, to put the record straight about the filming of Kitchen’s interview for the ‘Pharaohs and Kings’ TV series. In this matter spin blatantly lies through his teeth. He has no right to do this. He was not there. He did not witness the interview.
You are not setting any record straight by accusing me of lying through my teeth when you have no evidence that I personally was in fact lying. You are confusing content with intent. I may have been wrong, which hasn't been established, but cut the stupid accusations.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
And he has absolutely no idea how TV works. He does not even have the common sense to work out that a newcomer to TV (me) had absolutely no control over what the broadcasting company, producer and director decided to do with the footage shot for the production. That’s like a newly ordained priest telling the Pope how to run the Catholic church.
This seems to be an indication that Kitchen was totally misrepresented.

Thank you for your clarification regarding Kitchen's treatment in the interview. I read it with interest. I'm sure you can understand his public reaction.


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Old 05-03-2009, 04:06 PM   #23
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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Being a newbie, I just looked back through the archive and found the sarcastic remark regarding my inability to spell pharaoh from VoxRat on 6th October 2007. How short-sighted some people can be. Let me put you straight VoxRat or whatever you are called (another contributor who prefers anonymity - makes you wonder).

Perhaps you need to use your brain and think before you open your mouth.

Find me one misspelling of pharaoh in the text of the book or in any of my books for that matter. Then ask yourself where the misspelling of pharaoh as pharoah is located. Yes, you got it, on the title page of the AMERICAN version of the book, prepared and printed by the AMERICAN publisher Crown in New York. This was the only page in the USA edition of the book that I did not write or typeset as it was not part of the original UK book publication sent to the USA for the preparation of their version.

So you should be proud of yourself and your fellow countrymen for this marvelous piece of work. Am I responsible for spelling pharaoh incorrectly? No, I'm afraid some crass idiot educated in the USA who probably thinks Cairo is is in Scotland was responsible.

Just like evangelical nutters can do mass murder in the name of Jesus or Mohamed, you can hardly blame either of those historical characters for the sins of their distant followers. So why do you think I am responsible for your American book title page of my A Test of Time UK publication? I suggest you owe me a public apology and retraction. But are you honest enough? I doubt it.
Talking about brain farts!


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Old 05-03-2009, 04:40 PM   #24
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This thread is under discussion by the moderation staff. In the meantime, please abide by the rules of this forum and try to avoid insults and unproductive sniping.

Use the report post button if you think a post is in violation, rather than responding in kind.

Thanks for your attention to this.
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Old 05-04-2009, 07:09 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Rohl is ignorant about the linguistics. How come the /s/ in Ramses ends up a "sh" in Hebrew? As Kitchen points out (p.44 of the preface to his TIP) there is no trouble transliterating the Egyptian /s/ in Pi(r)-Baste -> Pi-Beseth or Panehasi -> Pinehas. Why should (Ram)ses -> Shishaq? No reason at all. Besides Shoshenq is a much better candidate linguistically. Rohl is just wrong.
JW:
Hi Spin. Of course Rohl is getting off to a bad start here accusing you of being a specific amateur and disciple of Kitchen and on these unholy boards you are the one with the reputation. But as you so often say, the evidence still speaks for itself.

Regarding the above, for the benefit of those of us who never studied, it seems that Rohl has to use the minority/questionable translation to arrive at the Pharoah in his theory? If so, is he than saying that his theory is possible or probable?

Everybody is welcome to answer except for Harvey Dubish.



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Old 05-04-2009, 07:36 AM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Rohl is ignorant about the linguistics. How come the /s/ in Ramses ends up a "sh" in Hebrew? As Kitchen points out (p.44 of the preface to his TIP) there is no trouble transliterating the Egyptian /s/ in Pi(r)-Baste -> Pi-Beseth or Panehasi -> Pinehas. Why should (Ram)ses -> Shishaq? No reason at all. Besides Shoshenq is a much better candidate linguistically. Rohl is just wrong.
JW:
Hi Spin. Of course Rohl is getting off to a bad start here accusing you of being a specific amateur and disciple of Kitchen and on these unholy boards you are the one with the reputation. But as you so often say, the evidence still speaks for itself.

Regarding the above, for the benefit of those of us who never studied, it seems that Rohl has to use the minority/questionable translation to arrive at the Pharoah in his theory? If so, is he than saying that his theory is possible or probable?
I wouldn't consider the call about Shishak being (Ram)ses II to be a central part of his theory. He would be relying on the specifically Egyptian evidence that bring into question the relationship between the various dynasties of the Third Intermediate Period. The relationship between Shishak and Ramses would come as a consequence. It has to be so for the theory to work.


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Old 05-04-2009, 08:46 AM   #27
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In reply to Duke Leto:

Thank you for your courteous response which I am happy to reply to. However, given that any attempt at debate/discussion with spin is pointless and a waste of time, I will just ignore his comments from now on. There is simply no point in it and, that way, we can avoid tit for tat abuse.

To get to your points in order:

You wrote: “I don't think your reputation is all that high here (in America). As such my first task in the discussion was to forcibly dissociate myself from that milieu (of fundamentalism) lest I be dismissed out of hand as another one in this series of inerrantist quote miners who are only familiar with your books at one remove.”

In response: I have to live with misquotes and misconceptions and deliberate misrepresentation all the time. It comes with the territory. The sad thing is that people very rarely discuss what you actually said/wrote but rather what other people (usually antagonistic to your thesis) report what they think you said - often received second or third hand. Take spin’s constant reference to Kitchen as an example, where the Liverpudlian professor misrepresents the archaeological evidence on a fairly regular basis and gets away with it through his intimidation of lesser mortals (he has a well deserved reputation for it). But the misrepresentation or colouring of what I say/write is, I agree, a problem on the evangelical Christian side as well. I have no problem in people of any creed arguing their case using my work - so long as they represent it fairly and don’t try to put words into my mouth that I didn’t say.

Even you suggest that I “never explicitly stated” in A Test of Time that I was “not arguing for biblical inerrancy.” Maybe I was not explicit, but I’m not sure if I agree that I did not make it clear what my own beliefs are. In the Introduction to the book I state:

“Of course, if you are a devout Christian, Jew or Muslim you may have no doubts about the historical accuracy of the Old Testament or Tanaakh narratives and the parallel stories found in the Koran. Your weapon against critical biblical scholarship is your absolute faith. If, on the other hand, like me, you are primarily interested in the search for historical truth - it is essential to find archaeological evidence to demonstrate that the events recorded in the Bible actually happened … It is the lack of such evidence which, in essence, lies at the very heart of the academic scepticism now prevalent in some areas of biblical scholarship.” [p. 8]

I think that my non-acceptance of the concept of biblical inerrancy is inherent in this statement. But the following from The Lost Testament surely clarifies the matter further:

“Not every aspect and incident in the biblical narrative has a place in this reworking of the story. Where details are not obviously relevant to the historical narrative, or where I simply have no historical explanation for them (certain ‘miraculous’ events come to mind here), I have chosen to pass them by, leaving the reader to add his own perspective on such matters. My personal views are not important here. I am simply telling the story within a revised chronological and archaeological framework for others to overlay their own belief systems or theological interpretations.” [p.13]

Regarding Nunki.net, you give me an opportunity to clarify and disabuse people of my role in that now defunct web site. Although this was labelled as the ‘official’ David Rohl site at the time, I did not attempt to control the output. It is probably a weakness of mine, but I tend to give people a fairly free rein when they volunteer to work for me or with me. As I said before, I am not a control freak and believe that it is neither proper nor morally right to dictate what others do. So I had an American web master who wrote all the blurb for the site. I contributed the articles and text of published debates which were taken from other publications. So the so-called ‘self promotion’ was not my work but that of the web master. Perhaps I should have suppressed his genuine enthusiasm but, as I said, I tend to be fairly easy going when it comes to my relationships with enthusiasts.

Now, with regard to my writing style/popularist approach, you wrote: “The necessary precondition to academic freedom is the avoidance of outside power interdicting itself in academic practice. In order maintain academic freedom, we have to be sure not to solicit outside, especially governmental, authority to justify our views. The most disasterous possible outcome is when a government or political group endorses a shoddy piece of scholarship as canonical … There is however, no more dangerous power in a democracy than popular opinion. … the mortal sin for a historian is to appeal to authority in preference to peer review. For better or worse, Test of Time looks to many as though it is an appeal to popular authority over academic authority, and you can't expect academic authorities to be pleased about it. That's the real meat of the "grandstanding" accusation and you can take it however you will.

My response to this interesting point of view requires me to give you a bit of background which is not really public knowledge.

But, first, do I have to remind you that your newly elected President had to reach out directly to popular opinion in order to break the Establishment stranglehold on US politics. Was he wrong to do that?

I began work on the New Chronology thesis back in the late 1970s soon after acquiring Kenneth Kitchen’s book The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt. It was not only me who realised how problematical the conclusions in that book were for the study of ancient chronology. Other young scholars realised that the whole thesis was based on one supposition placed upon another until the lowest levels of supposition had become fact. But the whole edifice had been erected on one fundamental foundation which was totally flawed. Kitchen, a Bible believer, had used a date derived from the Bible to establish the foundation date of the Egyptian 22nd Dynasty and then filled in the subsequent dates and history of the Third Intermediate Period down to 664 BC with the remaining archaeological data. However Kitchen now tries to protest his innocence of this seriously skewed methodology, the evidence is there in black and white in his book.

So I decided to pursue this matter in what I thought was the correct way by going to university in order to equip myself with all the qualifications and research training to tackle the question of Egyptian chronology anew. In my first year at University College London (which established the first chair in Egyptology in the UK) I was already giving seminars on my findings to the postgraduate students and departmental staff, including Professors Harry Smith and Geoffrey Martin. I was then asked by Professor Smith to present my ideas to an open seminar of Egyptologists in the Petrie Museum. It was then that I got my first taste of the academic reaction to someone putting up challenging new proposals when Dr Maurice Bierbrier of the British Museum tried to dismiss the presentation with some arrogant remark or other and was promptly put down by my departmental professors and his sharp-witted postgraduates. The British Museum man departed in a huff. But the signs were writ large on the wall. This was not going to be an easy sell. Indeed, when A Test of Time came out in the UK, the British Museum immediately banned the book from its shops. I later found out that this was on the orders of Vivien Davies, head of the museum’s Egyptology department. Prior to my heretical offering, only Wallis Budge had been privileged to suffer the same fate - and that many decades after his death!

As an undergraduate student I continued to be asked to present my ideas to academic audiences. Professor Nicholas Coldstream (the great authority on Geometric Greece) invited me to put my case for eliminating the Greek Dark Age to his prestigious Mycenaean Seminar in the Institute of Archaeology, London. I also lectured to the Egypt Exploration Society and presented my case to the Archaeology Department at the University of Bristol before Professor Peter Warren and his academic staff and students. So I did go down the proper academic route in promoting my thesis - even though it was exceptional (to say the least) for an undergraduate student to be thrust into the gladiatorial ring in this fashion.

I even established an academic institute called ISIS, devoted to the study of ancient world chronology, with full educational charitable status. ISIS produced a scholarly journal (JACF) with contributions from some of the top scholars and archaeologists whose work impinged upon chronological studies. George Hart of the Educational Department of the British Museum accepted a directorship of the institute and so everything was going very well - that is until Vivien Davies of the BM hauled George Hart into his office to tell him that, if he did not immediately resign from his directorship of ISIS, he would be sacked from his BM post. That’s academia for you.

So, you see, I was getting a pretty clear idea how things were going to turn out. There were lots of academics and postgraduates who were both interested and enthusiastic about this re-examination of ancient world chronology, but there were also others, who did not know me and had not listened to the arguments, who simply dismissed the New Chronology as heresy and tried their damndest to get it snuffed out before it had any chance to succeed. Of course, Kenneth Kitchen was the general in command of all these reactionary forces and I was soon labelled the ‘Prince of Darkness’ and declared ‘100 per cent rubbish’.

It just so happens that the furore reached the ears of a literary agent who attended my public lecture to the Egypt Exploration Society. He approached me and asked if he could represent me. Within weeks I was being offered substantial book deals by several top international publishers and found myself flying to Washington for a meeting with John Ford, Chairman of The Learning Channel and now head of Discovery, having been signed up for a TV series by Channel Four in the UK a few days earlier. The joint UK/American broadcast was premiered in 1995 in the UK and 1996 in the USA under the title Pharaohs and Kings.

Now that all sounds a bit fantastic and, indeed, it was. I was literally swept up in a tidal wave of interest from the media. You may say that I should have turned it all down and taken the mugging by the academic establishment like a good little student. Like Galileo, maybe I should have accepted my silencing and avoided the excommunication. But I am a fighter and I decided that, if the knives were out anyway, I might as well publish and be damned. The academic route had been closed to me, so I went down the popular route to get a debate going. And, I think you will agree, I succeeded in that aim at least. If you think that this is grandstanding, then that’s your prerogative - but, in all honesty, I think I had no real choice. Peer review is all well and good - if you believe that academics in all disciplines are fair-minded and forward-thinking. However, there are numerous documented instances of aggressive academic suppression of new ideas. Remember what Max Plank once said:

“A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up which is familiar with it.”

Familiarity may bring contempt from some quarters but, in my case, it was the only avenue left open to me by my opponents who, incidentally, will indeed eventually die. Now that is a scientific truth that nobody can argue with!

I will respond to the specific archaeological questions you raise about the Royal Cache and Tanis Royal Tombs in another post if that’s alright?
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Old 05-04-2009, 09:45 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
In reply to Duke Leto:

Thank you for your courteous response which I am happy to reply to. However, given that any attempt at debate/discussion with spin is pointless and a waste of time, I will just ignore his comments from now on. There is simply no point in it and, that way, we can avoid tit for tat abuse.
And any attempt at David Rohl defending his position.

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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Take spin’s constant reference to Kitchen as an example,...
Hmmm, "constant reference to Kitchen", he says. In my last response to Rohl, I referred to no substantive material regarding Kitchen at all. Constant reference? No, just Rohl's hyperbole.

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...
Let's keep this discussion focused on things that are safe, shall we?


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Old 05-04-2009, 10:40 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
...

Thank you for your courteous response which I am happy to reply to. However, given that any attempt at debate/discussion with spin is pointless and a waste of time, I will just ignore his comments from now on. There is simply no point in it and, that way, we can avoid tit for tat abuse.
As I explained in a PM, we do not allow participants in the debate to abuse each other; public figures are fair game. Aside from one early comment before you joined the discussion, all of spin's comments seem fairly on point, and you would ignore them at your disadvantage in the eyes of the lurkers.

Quote:
. . .
But, first, do I have to remind you that your newly elected President had to reach out directly to popular opinion in order to break the Establishment stranglehold on US politics. Was he wrong to do that?
This is a strange comment. Our newly elected President was the editor of the Harvard Law Review and has wide spread academic support. He reached out to popular opinion because that's how people get elected in this country. By doing so, he broke the hold of an antintellectual strain in American politics that rejected the so called Establishment views on science and education.

Be careful of your analogies.
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Old 05-04-2009, 12:39 PM   #30
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I agree with Toto that the best thing to do would be to respond to spin's points and not lose your temper with him. Frankly, otherwise you'd be no better than Kitchen.

You're also misinformed as to Obama's outsider reputation. We have two, arguably three leftish outside the establishment candidates for President in the US in every election cycle now. They are Dennis Kucinich, Al Sharpton, and Ralph Nader. They never win.

Obama's rise was predicated on his masterful use of the Democratic party's machinery and his innovative use of the system. For example, he targeted primary elections in small states that Clinton ignored to rack up the number of nominiating delegates he needed to win and courted the unelected "Superdelegates" who held the deciding votes in the nomination. Most candidates in the last few years have striven to win nominations by taking the first few state primaries and coasting after that. It also helped that McCain selected his running mate from Monty Python central casting.

I certainly agree that academia, particularly when the social sciences are involved, can be cliquish and can have a noticibly church like conformity, but I still think maintaining academic institutions as a whole are important. The problem with History in general and Ancient History in particular is the small size of the communities involved. Obviously there are tons of general history professors, but by the nature of things there are very few who specialize in a particular period or a particular subject, and those who work in an archaeological context are a small subset. Thus you can get a situation where a fellow like Kitchen can get in as the established authority on a given bit of history and be taken as such by the host of other narrowly focused authorities, who aren't looking at the forest intese interest in the trees. (Then of course if one swings to the other extreme, one ends up with a bunch of nearsighted foresters in dead forest with trees strangled by unnoticed kudzu vines. And an increasingly strained metaphor... And if one cuts down all the trees to leave the devil nothing to hide behind, then Thomas More tells you you ought to have been a teacher.)

The point is the perception of academic integrity is important, even if it doesn't always exist on the ground, much in the same way as the form of democracy and trial by evidence is important even if it is corrupted in practice. If you don't have any institutions, you have anarchy.

I admit that, however, my criticism basically boils down to your not doing enough to avoid being mistaken for a witch in a witch hunt.

At the same time, you're also suffering from guilt by association with Velikovsky, and let's face it the man poisoned the well by trying to make celestial mechanics dance to the tune of ancient history with his game of planetary bar billiards and his confused understanding of physics. Any ideas that are associated with him can with some justification be labeled as the work of a madman.

All that said, I don't necessarily know what I would have done differently given the set of circumstances you set out, other than ignore my advice and strive to ensure that the TV producers were at least happy if Kitchen could not be satisfied. (Actually, I would have ruined my academic career in utero with my cavalier disregard for minutia like grades and class attendance, or the fact that the professor was supposed to be the one giving the lectures.)
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