Tuesday, February 9, 2010

The Wrong End of Mystery

Scientists Baffled by Amazon Mystery

Some new archeological discovery always "baffles" the "world's scientists", as though they would have a clear handle on everything all of the time and both ways, into the past as well as our future.

It's like a false humility. Well of course you're baffled, dim wits, because no one can see eighteen hundred years into the past. Not everything is some code purposefully presented to our minds as a way of proving our perfect immensity. The codedness of mystery is an accidental; but mystery is the purposeful foundation of all of our inquiries, our adventures of being.

But no, they always have to put up this big show about how they've come across something that has them so baffled, and this bafflement in reality only works to increase their stature as experts. It works in the negative to make people think that we know most anything; and takes our minds away from the fact that we know largely nothing.

Hi, we're the News here, just to remind you that we (by which we mean 'we the world') know absolutely everything and there's no reason to despair. But wait, hold on a minute, there is something inexplicable, coming in just now - to tip the scales a bit so that our supreme knowledge doesn't immediately crush us with boredom - that has even baffled the world's scientists! Don't worry; Latin America has always been the seat of mystery itself, and the mystery in question most likely has to do with that peculiar and quaint specimen we now know as "religion".

You have to love those first conclusions they always come to; such as that these trenches were dug for religious or ceremonial purposes.

I don't know what the most likely cause would be; it could very well be for ceremonial purposes. But I find it funny that the "world's scientists" would not first suppose that these trenches were dug merely for agricultural reasons (i.e. drainage).

That would be too mundane. I mean, they're all over the place! And in different shapes too! No way could they have been for small scale crop fields!

What could these ancient peoples possibly have been communicating to our aerial cameras?

A great mystery!

3 comments:

christopher said...

EXCELLENT observations. We are truly a ridiculous people, nearly always missing the obvious and the point through our arrogance.

Might I add to your insight here in noting the way that the recent east coast storms were handled by the mainstream sights/mags/stations: "HISTORIC", "Crippling", "Crushing", "Paralyzing", "Raging", "City shut down", "Transportation at a standstill", etc. Yes, some areas MAY break a snow-fall record or two that stretches back a grand total of ... one hundred and thirty years. Techincally, no matter how much snow ends up falling, it's simply called "winter". Our fathers used to simply say, "Hmph... it's a bad one this year... time to go to work."

By the way, I enjoy your blog ever since following you here from Shredded Cheddar.

MahoneyMusings said...

I just snorted tea through my nose...."it's estimated that only 10% of the markings have been found."

Seriously? How the heck do you do the math on that one????

Paul Stilwell said...

Thanks Christopher, and welcome to this blog!

"Yes, some areas MAY break a snow-fall record or two that stretches back a grand total of ... one hundred and thirty years. Techincally, no matter how much snow ends up falling, it's simply called "winter". Our fathers used to simply say, "Hmph... it's a bad one this year... time to go to work.""

I couldn't agree more, especially about that hearkening back "a grand total of one hundred and thirty years"...how limited we actually are. There's definitely some kind of megalomania at work here.

Colleen, I actually missed that part!

Yes, estimations using *what* as the basis?