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View Full Version : The Hollow Earth- does David Still believe this?


guuna
30-04-2008, 11:17 PM
One of my favourite theories of old that has fascinated me has been the theory of the Hollow Earth.

Davd devoted a section of his book THE BIGGEST SECRET to it. I have noticed that none of his subsequent books have made mention of it, and was wondering if this is an idea that he has since jettisoned as new information has been revealed to him.

I am new to these forums and do ask for you patience with me if this topic has been covered previously, or indeed if i have posted it in the correct forum.

hagbard_celine
30-04-2008, 11:50 PM
One of my favourite theories of old that has fascinated me has been the theory of the Hollow Earth.

Davd devoted a section of his book THE BIGGEST SECRET to it. I have noticed that none of his subsequent books have made mention of it, and was wondering if this is an idea that he has since jettisoned as new information has been revealed to him.

I am new to these forums and do ask for you patience with me if this topic has been covered previously, or indeed if i have posted it in the correct forum.


Welcome, Guuna.:)

There are lots of threads on this subject; too many to post, but try putting "hollow earth" in the search box and you'll soon find them all.

I'm personally quite drawn to the idea that it may be true. I used to think it was crazy... but then I realized that the only reason I thought that was because of convention. I was used to looking at maps and globes that supported the SS (solid sphere) model. Remember that a few 100 years ago it was the SS theorists who were jeered! now anyone who's not an SS theorist is jeered! You can't win!

guuna
01-05-2008, 12:34 AM
Thanks for the welcome Hagbard.

I'm pretty much with you on this one.

Interestingly i recently bought a dvd of the tv series called TARZAN' THE EPIC ADVENTURES and in one of the episodes Tarzan activates a portal to a land at the center of the Earth called Pellucidar.

It has a concave, upward curving lanscape and thus no horizon with a sun directly centered somewhere in the center of it's 'sky', so thus an entirely different frame of reference to what is our experience on the 'outer earth'. This is almost exactly the way as it is portrayed in Theosophist tomes.

Tarzan even ecounters a race of shape shifter Amazon flying reptiles called Maharis.

I wish that i could download some scenes of this show, but alas i don't have the necessary tech. for that.

kblood
01-05-2008, 10:41 AM
I believe there are those underground cavesystems that the map of the Hollow Earth shows.

Places with vast underground natural cavesystems:
The Himalayan mountains
Nullabor Plains
The Amazons as you mentioned?

And the list probably goes on and on. I wonder if there are cave divers somewhere who knows more about these caves?

quickening666
01-05-2008, 12:09 PM
Thanks for the welcome Hagbard.

I'm pretty much with you on this one.

Interestingly i recently bought a dvd of the tv series called TARZAN' THE EPIC ADVENTURES and in one of the episodes Tarzan activates a portal to a land at the center of the Earth called Pellucidar.

It has a concave, upward curving lanscape and thus no horizon with a sun directly centered somewhere in the center of it's 'sky', so thus an entirely different frame of reference to what is our experience on the 'outer earth'. This is almost exactly the way as it is portrayed in Theosophist tomes.

Tarzan even ecounters a race of shape shifter Amazon flying reptiles called Maharis.

I wish that i could download some scenes of this show, but alas i don't have the necessary tech. for that.

There was a comic, "Tarzan versus Predator at the Centre of the Earth".

guuna
05-05-2008, 09:23 PM
It's interesting to note that the famed Polar explorer Fiennes has a dog that he has named Thule. That's a name frequently assosciated with Norse theology and sometimes with the mystical underground world.

Does he know something that he's not telling. It is a true thing that very few people have actually visited the Poles and there could i.m.o be some kind of an official cover up as to their true nature and geography in general.

marpat
05-05-2008, 10:02 PM
It's interesting to note that the famed Polar explorer Fiennes has a dog that he has named Thule. That's a name frequently assosciated with Norse theology and sometimes with the mystical underground world.

Does he know something that he's not telling. It is a true thing that very few people have actually visited the Poles and there could i.m.o be some kind of an official cover up as to their true nature and geography in general.

Naming your dog after some mythological thing hardly means indicates that such a thing may actually exist. If he was trying to hide such a thing then why name your dog after it?

guuna
05-05-2008, 10:14 PM
Naming your dog after some mythological thing hardly means indicates that such a thing may actually exist. If he was trying to hide such a thing then why name your dog after it?

Just mentioning it in passing. I did not state that this means that it exists.

I hope that you are not trolling,if you are trolling, kindly go elsewhere.