''Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of the Human Race'' is a 1993
pseudoarchaeological
Pseudoarchaeology (sometimes called fringe or alternative archaeology) consists of attempts to study, interpret, or teach about the subject-matter of archaeology while rejecting, ignoring, or misunderstanding the accepted Scientific method, data ...
book by
Michael A. Cremo and
Richard L. Thompson
Richard Leslie Thompson, also known as Sadaputa Dasa (; February 4, 1947 – September 18, 2008), was an American mathematician,. Readable online aWorldwisdom.com/ref> author and Gaudiya Vaishnava religious figure. Historian Meera Nanda des ...
, written in association with the
Bhaktivedanta Institute of
ISKCON
The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), commonly known as the Hare Krishna movement, is a religious organization that follows the Gaudiya Vaishnavism, Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition of Hinduism. It was founded on 13 July 1966 ...
. Cremo states that the book has "over 900 pages of well-documented evidence suggesting that modern man did not evolve from ape man, but instead has co-existed with apes for millions of years!",
and that the scientific establishment has suppressed the fossil evidence of extreme human antiquity. Cremo identifies as a "Vedic archeologist", since he believes his findings support the story of humanity described in the
Vedas
FIle:Atharva-Veda samhita page 471 illustration.png, upright=1.2, The Vedas are ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism. Above: A page from the ''Atharvaveda''.
The Vedas ( or ; ), sometimes collectively called the Veda, are a large body of relig ...
. He says a knowledge filter (
confirmation bias
Confirmation bias (also confirmatory bias, myside bias, or congeniality bias) is the tendency to search for, interpret, favor and recall information in a way that confirms or supports one's prior beliefs or Value (ethics and social sciences), val ...
) is the cause of the supposed suppression.
The book has attracted attention from some mainstream scholars as well as
Hindu creationists and paranormalists. Scholars of mainstream archaeology and
paleoanthropology
Paleoanthropology or paleo-anthropology is a branch of paleontology and anthropology which seeks to understand the early development of anatomically modern humans, a process known as hominization, through the reconstruction of evolutionary kinsh ...
have described it as
pseudoscience
Pseudoscience consists of statements, beliefs, or practices that claim to be both scientific and factual but are incompatible with the scientific method. Pseudoscience is often characterized by contradictory, exaggerated or unfalsifiable cl ...
.
[Wade Tarzia, ''Forbidden Archaeology'' : Antievolutionism Outside the Christian Arena]
"Creation/Evolution" Issue XXXIV Summer 1994
Academic analysis
In a twenty-page review in ''
Social Studies of Science
''Social Studies of Science'' is a bimonthly peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes papers relating to the history and philosophy of science. The journal's editors-in-chief are Nicole Nelson, Associate Professor in the Department of Medical ...
'', Jo Wodak and David Oldroyd describe the book's argument: Early paleoanthropologists, in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth, interpreted much empirical information as evidence favoring the existence of human beings in the Tertiary period (about 65.5 million to 2.6 million years ago). But starting from about the 1930s, paleoanthropologists turned to the view that human beings first evolved in the next era, the Pleistocene (2.6 million to 11,700 years ago). The older evidence, Cremo and Thompson say, was never shown bad; it was just reinterpreted in such a way as to rule out tertiary humans. So what Cremo and Thompson have done is "comb the early literature in great—indeed impressive—detail"
and argue, on the basis of their historical study, "that the old arguments were never satisfactorily disproved and should be reconsidered with open minds".
Ultimately, the book questions the Darwinian evolutionary assumptions underlying modern paleoanthropology.
Anthropologist
Colin Groves
Colin Peter Groves (24 June 1942 – 30 November 2017) was a British-Australian biologist and anthropologist. Groves was professor of biological anthropology at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia.
Education
Born in Englan ...
states that 19th-century finds were generally "found by accident and by amateurs", and were thus generally lacking proper documentation of crucial contextual information, and that the dates assigned were therefore suspect. Cremo and Thompson fail to take account of this, he says, and seem to want to accord equal value to all finds. Groves also states that their discussion of
radiometric dating
Radiometric dating, radioactive dating or radioisotope dating is a technique which is used to Chronological dating, date materials such as Rock (geology), rocks or carbon, in which trace radioactive impurity, impurities were selectively incorporat ...
fails to take account of the ongoing refinement of these methods, and the resulting fact that later results are more reliable than earlier ones. He concludes that the book is only "superficially scholarly".
Reviewing the book in the French journal ''L'anthropologie'', paleontologist
Marylène Patou-Mathis
Marylène Patou-Mathis (born 16 June 1955 in Paris), is a French prehistorian academic and a specialist in the behavior of the Neanderthals and the San people. She studies the place of women in these societies and has questioned the projections o ...
wrote that the book is "a provocative work that raises the problem of the influence of the dominant ideas of a time period on scientific research. These ideas can compel researchers to publish their analyses according to the conceptions permitted by the scientific community."
The evidence Cremo and Thompson bring forward for the very ancient origin of humanity, she wrote, "isn't always convincing (far from it)," but "the documentary richness of this work, more sociological than scientific, isn't to be overlooked."
Different reviewers (for example, Feder
and Wodak
) compared the book to works by Christian creationists. Writing in the ''British Journal for the History of Science'', Tim Murray
wrote, "This is a piece of 'Creation Science,' which, while not based on a need to present a Christian alternative, manifests many of the same types of argument," including accusing opponents of unscientifically trying to defend their biases, alleging they are acting conspiratorially, and explaining "the currently marginal position of your alternative as being the result of prejudice, conspiracy and manipulation rather than of any fault of the theory itself." Murray is head of the archaeology department at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia.
Writing in ''Geoarchaeology'',
[ anthropologist Kenneth L. Feder said, "While decidedly antievolutionary in perspective, this work is not the ordinary variety of antievolutionism in form, content, or style. In distinction to the usual brand of such writing, the authors use original sources and the book is well written. Further, the overall tone of the work is far superior to that exhibited in ordinary creationist literature. Nonetheless, I suspect that ]creationism
Creationism is the faith, religious belief that nature, and aspects such as the universe, Earth, life, and humans, originated with supernatural acts of Creation myth, divine creation, and is often Pseudoscience, pseudoscientific.#Gunn 2004, Gun ...
is at the root of the authors' argument, albeit of a sort not commonly seen before."
Other reviewers also wrote of the book as being doctrinally motivated. Murray wrote that "far from being a disinterested analysis", ''Forbidden Archeology'' "is designed to demolish the case for biological and chemical evolution and to advance the case for a Vedic alternative". Wodak and Oldroyd wrote that although the authors don't directly come out with a Vedic alternative, "the evidence is construed in the silent light of Vedic metaphysics."
Some reviewers (Feder and Wodak & Oldryod) have faulted the book for attacking the current picture of human evolution but not offering an alternative paradigm. The book's authors "openly acknowledge the Vedic inspiration of their research" and make what Feder calls the "reasonable request" that the Vedic derivation of their theoretical outlook not disqualify it. But, Feder says, "When you attempt to deconstruct a well-accepted paradigm, it is reasonable to expect that a new paradigm be suggested in its place." The book doesn't do this, instead promising that the paradigm will appear in a forthcoming volume (Wodak & Oldryod ). But this, Wodak & Oldryod say, is not of much help to the readers of ''Forbidden Archeology''.
Feder suggests that the authors left their paradigm out of the book because of an ulterior motive: "Wishing to appear entirely scientific, the authors hoped to avoid a detailed discussion of their own beliefs ..since, I would contend, these are based on a creationist view, but not the kind we are all familiar with ..Like fundamentalist Christian creationists, they avoid talking about the religious content of their perspective." In 2003, Cremo, writing alone, published the book detailing the Vedic paradigm, ''Human Devolution'' (2003). "The reasons for its late appearance", Cremo wrote in the Introduction, "have more to do with the time it takes to research and write such a book rather than any desire to avoid a detailed discussion of a Vedic alternative to Darwinism".
Several reviewers (Murray,[ Feder,] Wodak, & Oldryod) say that ''Forbidden Archeology'' proposes a "conspiracy theory" and argue that science in general and paleoanthropology in particular are more open than the book's authors would have us believe: " issentingvoices in the literature evidences the fact that there is not some conspiratorial 'cover-up' in palaeoanthropology."
Feder, in his review, notes that neither Thompson nor Cremo is an archaeologist or paleoanthropologist. He says they fail to give due credit to the advances in technique that distinguish science in recent times from that of the nineteenth century. And he brings forward various objections to their analysis of eoliths
An eolith (from Greek "''eos''", dawn, and "''lithos''", stone) is a flint nodule that appears to have been crudely knapped. Eoliths were once thought to have been artifacts, the earliest stone tools, but are now believed to be geofacts (stone ...
, stone artifacts sometimes regarded as tools.
Wodak and Oldryod also criticize the book's discussion of eoliths. Moreover, they say, although granting the book's theory that anatomically modern humans co-existed with more primitive forms would certainly alter our current thinking about human history, it would not invalidate orthodox evolutionary theory.
The book is more than 900 pages long. " e authors go in for overkill in terms of swamping the reader with detail—a strategy which may persuade readers who lack access to the relevant sources and ave
is a Latin word, used by the Roman Empire, Romans as a salutation (greeting), salutation and greeting, meaning 'wikt:hail, hail'. It is the singular imperative mood, imperative form of the verb , which meant 'Well-being, to be well'; thus on ...
no special expertise in paleoanthropology, and are therefore likely to assume that such a thorough exposition of the historical terrain must signify accuracy and equity".
Wodak & Oldryod say that ''Forbidden Archeology'' is "one-sided" because, despite its great length, it does not discuss evidence favorable to the evolutionary model of human origins, nor the work of recent paleoanthropologists.
Murray[ wrote, "I have no doubt that there will be some who will read this book and profit from it. Certainly it provides the historian of archaeology with a useful compendium of case studies in the history and sociology of scientific knowledge, which can be used to foster debate within archaeology about how to describe the epistemology of one's discipline. On another level the book joins others from creation science and New Age philosophy as a body of works which seek to address members of a public alienated from science, either because it has become so arcane or because it has ceased to suit some in search of meaning in their lives."
]
Further writings and impact
Cremo continued the theme of ''Forbidden Archeology'' in his later books, such as in ''Forbidden Archeology's Impact'' (1998). His book ''Human Devolution'' (2003), like ''Forbidden Archeology'', claims that man has existed for millions of years, attempts to prove this by citing, as Meera Nanda puts it, "every possible research into the paranormal ever conducted anywhere to 'prove' the truth of holist Vedic cosmology which proposes the presence of a spiritual element in all matter (which takes different forms, thereby explaining the theory of 'devolution')."[ article "Postmodernism, Hindu Nationalism and 'Vedic Science'" by Meera Nanda]
The Indian magazine '' Frontline'' called Cremo and Thompson "the intellectual force driving Vedic creationism in America".
''The Mysterious Origins of Man''
In 1996 Thompson and Cremo appeared on the NBC
The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is an American commercial broadcast television and radio network serving as the flagship property of the NBC Entertainment division of NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast. It is one of NBCUniversal's ...
special ''The Mysterious Origins of Man'', which was based upon the book and which was similarly criticized by the scientific community.[For example:
*]Constance Holden
Constance "Tancy" Holden (October 11, 1941 – April 12, 2010) was an American science journalist, known for her reporting on the roles of genetics and biology in human behavior. She worked at ''Science'' from 1970 until her death in 2010. She was ...
. "Anti-evolution TV show prompts furor". ''Science''. March 8, 1996. p. Vol. 271, Iss. 5254. p.1357.
*John Carman. "NBC's Own Mystery Science". ''San Francisco Chronicle''. June 7, 1996. D1.
*
References
Further reading
*{{cite journal, last1=Lepper, first1=Bradley T., title=Hidden History, Hidden Agenda, journal=Skeptic , volume=4, issue=1, year=1996, pages=98–100, url=http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/mom/lepper.html
External links
Michael Cremo: "Forbidden Archaeology"
Talks at Google October 2014
1993 non-fiction books
American non-fiction books
English-language non-fiction books
Hindu creationism
Pseudoscience literature
Pseudoarchaeological texts