Giants, wandering planets and lost knowledge

Bert Thurlings

Science is based on facts, that is common knowledge. But what if those facts contradict each other, what is true then? Does what "most scientists" think apply then? Rocks from the moon, collected with the Apollo flights, have an age of +/- 4.6 billion years. But one of them deviates seriously: 5.5 billion years old or even more. So what is the real age? Because people don't know, that one deviation is further ignored; after all, the majority points to 4.6 billion years anyway. But science is not a democracy. It may very well be that just that one anomaly is correct and the majority wrong. For centuries the earth was flat and claiming otherwise could get you burned at the stake. In his search for real history, Thurlings repeatedly encounters this kind of democratization of science. The famous carbon dating method collides with a misunderstood phenomenon: older than 30,000 years, it turns out, radioactive carbon has not completely disappeared. There is a misunderstood remainder which should not be there. The method is useless but still people apply it, against their better judgment. Bron: Flaptekst, uitgeversinformatie

praktische informatie

Titel
Giants, wandering planets and lost knowledge
Auteur
Bert Thurlings
Taal
Engels
Formaat
e-book
Doelgroep
Volwassenen
Onderwerpen
Geschiedenis algemeen, cultuurgeschiedenis, Geschiedenis, Geschiedenis & Politiek
PPN
439252318
ISBN
9789464870350

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