bladup wrote:
Evergreen Dazed wrote:
bladup wrote:
Harryshill wrote:
I know almost nothing about it.
But that's the good thing about prehistory, even the people who do think they know stuff [myself included] are constantly been proved wrong about things they believe, as so much is still unknown and some stuff may remain like that forever, this makes it a great leveler for newbies as they can come to the table with ideas just as good [if not better] than so called experts.I know the Romans attacked it and that it's huge, but it's history ai really unknown to me.
Mind you, I know next to nothing about any of the sites.
Anybody could say anything about a site but without something to show there is substance to a claim, it cannot be taken seriously. Lots of things are 'possible' but that doesn't get us anywhere.
But!
The thing I've found about prehistory ( I've been visiting and reading and thinking about this stuff for over 10 years, I do know a bit, honest ;) is that often the truth is mysterious and strange in itself.
It's intriguing and seems to deepen as we discover things.
Finding out the real truth of these sites also provides us living today with a new perspective. We have been so beaten down by 2000 years of Christianity, our ancient past provides us with insight into 'other' ways of living, ideas, motivations that we may have forgotten about.
It is really easy to feel alienated in the society we currently live in and some of us may long for a change of the rules. Revealing the past using evidence rather than guesswork, or feeling, gives us the chance to explore the whole nature of what it has ever meant to be a human being, to be a society.