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Atlantis: Everything Comes from the Ocean

Par : Jesse Harper
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8231427536
  • EAN9798231427536
  • Date de parution08/07/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurWalzone Press

Résumé

Atlantis: Everything Comes from the OceanAn Exploration of Maritime Memory and the Idea of a Lost WorldWe are taught that civilization began when humans stopped moving-when they planted crops, built walls, and recorded laws in clay. But what if that story leaves something out?What if a different kind of civilization came first-one that moved with the tide rather than resisting it? One that stored knowledge in memory, not in monuments? What if our deepest myths, especially those tied to the sea, are not just metaphors.
but fragments of real, ancestral memory?Atlantis: Everything Comes from the Ocean explores that possibility. Blending anthropology, archaeology, mythology, and oral tradition, this book offers a new lens-one that treats myth not as fantasy, but as a form of encoded knowledge. It doesn't claim to prove a lost civilization existed. Instead, it asks: If one had existed-if a seafaring culture once flourished before the first cities-what traces would it leave behind?It would not be found in stone or scroll, but in: Polynesian navigators who sail without instruments, reading stars and swells from memory The Bajau, whose bodies adapted over generations to deep-sea diving The Uros, who weave islands from reeds and rebuild their world weekly Flood stories found in nearly every culture-some of which align with geological records Sacred structures built to track solstices, eclipses, and tides-long before written calendars Songlines, chants, and cosmologies that contain ecological and astronomical intelligence Drawing on thinkers like Mircea Eliade, Wade Davis, Patrick Nunn, Lynne Kelly, Giorgio de Santillana, and James C.
Scott, this book proposes that we've underestimated the scientific function of story, ritual, and myth. Oral traditions were not just ways of making meaning. In many cases, they were technologies of memory-methods of storing complex data in a pre-literate world. This is not an argument for fantasy or pseudoscience. It's a respectful, curious reexamination of our oldest stories-through the lens of cultures that never stopped living them.
As rising seas and shifting climates challenge our current ways of life, the flexible, portable knowledge systems of oceanic and oral cultures may prove more relevant than ever. Their insights, rhythms, and relationships to place still live on-in breath-held dives, starlit voyages, and songs sung beside the sea. This is not a search for Atlantis as a lost city. It's an exploration of what may be a lost way of thinking.
And maybe-not lost. Just waiting to be remembered.
Atlantis: Everything Comes from the OceanAn Exploration of Maritime Memory and the Idea of a Lost WorldWe are taught that civilization began when humans stopped moving-when they planted crops, built walls, and recorded laws in clay. But what if that story leaves something out?What if a different kind of civilization came first-one that moved with the tide rather than resisting it? One that stored knowledge in memory, not in monuments? What if our deepest myths, especially those tied to the sea, are not just metaphors.
but fragments of real, ancestral memory?Atlantis: Everything Comes from the Ocean explores that possibility. Blending anthropology, archaeology, mythology, and oral tradition, this book offers a new lens-one that treats myth not as fantasy, but as a form of encoded knowledge. It doesn't claim to prove a lost civilization existed. Instead, it asks: If one had existed-if a seafaring culture once flourished before the first cities-what traces would it leave behind?It would not be found in stone or scroll, but in: Polynesian navigators who sail without instruments, reading stars and swells from memory The Bajau, whose bodies adapted over generations to deep-sea diving The Uros, who weave islands from reeds and rebuild their world weekly Flood stories found in nearly every culture-some of which align with geological records Sacred structures built to track solstices, eclipses, and tides-long before written calendars Songlines, chants, and cosmologies that contain ecological and astronomical intelligence Drawing on thinkers like Mircea Eliade, Wade Davis, Patrick Nunn, Lynne Kelly, Giorgio de Santillana, and James C.
Scott, this book proposes that we've underestimated the scientific function of story, ritual, and myth. Oral traditions were not just ways of making meaning. In many cases, they were technologies of memory-methods of storing complex data in a pre-literate world. This is not an argument for fantasy or pseudoscience. It's a respectful, curious reexamination of our oldest stories-through the lens of cultures that never stopped living them.
As rising seas and shifting climates challenge our current ways of life, the flexible, portable knowledge systems of oceanic and oral cultures may prove more relevant than ever. Their insights, rhythms, and relationships to place still live on-in breath-held dives, starlit voyages, and songs sung beside the sea. This is not a search for Atlantis as a lost city. It's an exploration of what may be a lost way of thinking.
And maybe-not lost. Just waiting to be remembered.