Brigit wrote:And that is one answer to Velikovsky's question about why the human race does not remember: possible destruction of historical records.
You are in good company with that thought. on p.299 of
Worlds In Collision (1950 Doubleday) Velikovsky cited Plato from his book
Timaeus:
Velikovsky wrote:The Egyptian priest, described by Plato as conversing with Solon, supposed that the memory of the catastrophes of fire and flood had been lost because literate men had perished in them, together with all the achievements of their cultures, and these upheavals "escaped your notice because for many generations the survivors died with no power to express themselves in writing."
Several centuries after Plato, this same idea was put forward by Philo the Alexandrian.
Philo knew about the repeated destructions of the world by water and fire, it did not occur to him that a catastrophe of conflagration was described in the Book of Exodus. Nor did he think that anything of this sort took place in the days of Joshua or even of Isaiah.....
..... The memory of the cataclysms was erased, not because of lack of written traditions, but because of some characteristic process, that later caused entire nations, together with their literate men, to read into these traditions allegories or metaphors where actually cosmic catastrophes are clearly described.
It is a psychological phenomenon in the life of individuals as well as whole nations that the most terrifying events of the past may be forgotten or displaced in the subconscious mind. As if obliterated are impressions that should be unforgettable. To uncover their vestiges and their distorted equivalents in the physical life of peoples is a task not unlike that of overcoming amnesia in a single person.
In the above quote, Velikovsky, who was a psychiatrist, understood that the therapist must gradually bring the repressed memories back to the consciousness of the patient. The patient must gradually recover the lost memories by the subtle direction of the therapist. Any sudden revelation by the therapist could have a negative or even hostile effect upon the amnesia patient's recovery.
And therein lies the dilemma, which Velikovsky understood: there was no way to apply those psychiatric techniques to the entire human race. His book was a story that most people did not want to hear or more likely, were not ready to hear. Velikovsky understood that because of his revelations, that he, as the bearer of unwanted news, was destined to bear the brunt of a very hostile reaction.