The authors who
publish their articles on Chrono-Logic share the following views:
-
Since
roughly 1500 AD - or let's say since Charles V and Albrecht Dürer
- our History has been registered more or less accurately. One is
allowed to doubt and to refuse some details, such as exact years,
but the overall framework is considered to be correct.
-
Our
knowledge of the 15. century AD - with the rise of astronomical
science in Europe, bookprinting, the Portuguese discovery of African
coasts etc - might be considered close to the truth as a whole,
but all year dates have been deduced and fixed later, which means
that one should analyse carefully any given fact.
-
All
events before the 15 century AD have been recorded and dated long
afterwards and might have happened as we are told or in a very different
way or may even not have happened at all. A great deal of persons
- from kings to clerics and writers - have been made up later.
-
The
evolution of cultures before the 15. century AD has been progressing
much faster than what is commonly believed.
- Frequent cosmic
catastrophs have influenced in an important way the Earth's evolution
and must be integrated into our geological models and theories.
- Several catastrophs
have happened in the recent History of humankind -roughly said: in
the last thousand years - and explain important cultural developments,
although the record of their existence has been excluded later willingly
from the collective memory.
-
We
use a scientific method that gathers, analyses and examines critically
all sources and records about a given event, such as writings, excavations,
stratigraphy, coins or oral traditions. Every statement will be
explained, based on commonly accepted facts. When an object or document
is stated to be a fake, evidence must be given, based on logical
analysis. Former scientific records are to be used, even if interpreting
them in a critical manner.
- The similarity
of different epochs or dynasties, as may result from a statistical
comparison, is not to be considered an evidence that can justify far-reaching
conclusions.
- The dating
methods of the conventional science - such as radiocarbon
(or carbon-14) method, dendrochronology, thermoluminiscence...
- cannot be accepted in an uncritical way, because these methods have
been developed by comparison of objects which were considered well-dated...
but only according to conventional chronology. Thus, the results they
offer as an outcome are already part of the input and cannot be considered
as an independent fact.
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