
I'm not familiar with Stringer or AHOB. You would have to enlighten me.
Moderators: MichelleH, Minimalist, JPeters
The evidence for the long-range model consists of a panoply of material finds which the short-range protagonists seem unfamiliar with. When confronted by individual finds challenging their model they try to explain them away; or regard them as a ‘running ahead of time’ (Vishnyatsky 1994); or pronounce them untypical; or challenge their dating
or the scholarly competence of their presenters.
Pleistocene archaeology has, once again, been Piltdowned.It appeared to be one of archaeology's most sensational finds. The skull fragment discovered in a peat bog near Hamburg was more than 36,000 years old - and was the vital missing link between modern humans and Neanderthals.
This, at least, is what Professor Reiner Protsch von Zieten - a distinguished, cigar-smoking German anthropologist - told his scientific colleagues, to global acclaim, after being invited to date the extremely rare skull.
However, the professor's 30-year-old academic career has now ended in disgrace after the revelation that he systematically falsified the dates on this and numerous other "stone age" relics.
Yesterday his university in Frankfurt announced the professor had been forced to retire because of numerous "falsehoods and manipulations". According to experts, his deceptions may mean an entire tranche of the history of man's development will have to be rewritten.
"Anthropology is going to have to completely revise its picture of modern man between 40,000 and 10,000 years ago," said Thomas Terberger, the archaeologist who discovered the hoax. "Prof Protsch's work appeared to prove that anatomically modern humans and Neanderthals had co-existed, and perhaps even had children together. This now appears to be rubbish."
I question that.All recent discoveries of the last twenty-six years have squarely confirmed my phosphene hypothesis, and no competing theory has stood the test of time (especially the shamanic hypothesis of art origins, which is so inexpedient I will not bother to discuss it here).
I find it odd that Bednarik should say that the shamanic hypothesis of art origins are “inexpedient”. Apart from the strange choice of word, it also doesn’t make sense given that the earliest artefacts, otherwise, of Upper Palaeolithic man are all cult related - megaliths, other cult structures and skulls decorated with shells before burial. So why would we assume that the inspiration for their cave art is any different? Are we not imposing our own value judgements on a civilisation whose lives, we know, were centred around the mystical experience and was at one with it in a way we can hardly imagine in our society.
The reason for the relevance of the phosphene hypothesis is it reinforces the notion that the earliest engravings we have reflect the operation of the visual system (Eichmeier and Höfer 1974). Phosphenes are most easily described as a kind of test pattern of the visual system. They are an autogeneous and involuntary phenomenon of the mammalian visual system whose form constants cannot be influenced by cultural conditioning and which seem to be ontogenically stable. This phenomenon can be produced by many factors, such as electrical stimulation (frequency dependent), pressure on the eyeball, blows to the head (“seeing stars”), certain hallucinogens and many others. Phosphene forms are the fifteen known standard form constants of phosphenes, and most of these are found in the earliest engravings and petroglyphs.
It is beyond doubt that phosphenes are intrinsic phenomena of the visual system, or entoptic phenomena, and that they reflect inherent structures of the visual system rather than any external factor or information. Since the earliest graphic production of the modern infant and the earliest production of hominins both consist entirely of compositions resembling phosphene forms, I consider it likely that these art forms are in some way related to specific basic neural processes of the visual system. Therefore the idea that these earliest engravings “resonate” with the neuron structures of the brain seems to be confirmed by the phosphene theory, according to which the entoptic stimulation recorded by the visual centre resembles inherent structures, such as perhaps that of the striate cortex …
Lewis Williams and Pearce make the very good point that these are common visual patterns of phosphene activity experienced by the shaman at the beginning of the shamanic journey.
The first structured engravings are followed by increasingly complex geometric arrangements, such as multiple arcs, zigzags, circles and radiate patterns.