NASA Claims: Over 30 Advanced civilizations have Collapsed
before us
– Are we next?
by Ancient Code
A NASA-funded study has found that advanced ancient
civilizations that existed on Earth thousands of years ago were as susceptible
to collapse as we are today.
Is there a mysterious, chaotic pattern within civilization?
How many times have you heard in history books that a
superpower in the distant past became so advanced and uncontrollably powerful
that it eventually collapsed?
You may think you haven’t heard of that in history books at
all, but you may be wrong.
If we look back at our history books –which by the way are
totally incomplete— you will notice that in the distant past, looking at the
18th century, for example, there were countries like France who were considered
a world superpower.
Their mighty culture developed at such rate that they
eventually felt supremacy and acted irresponsibly in turn.
With vast territories overseas, spending money
uncontrollably, eventually lead to catastrophic budget deficits which in turn
caused them to enter into debts and their currency was devaluated, chaos
followed.
Even though France did not disappear entirely from history,
it is evidence of a small chaotic pattern present in modern-day society. This
chaotic way researchers believe has been present in civilization for thousands
of years.
The truth is that even before that, there were numerous
cultures and civilizations that just as France and other countries, were the
makers of their own collapse.
If we look back in history 3000–5000 years, we will find a
historical record that clearly shows us how advanced and sophisticated
civilizations were just as susceptible to collapse as we are today.
While lifestyles were much different in the distant past
than they are today, it turns out that there is an ongoing pattern encrusted
into humanity that raises numerous questions about our sustainability as a
civilization which ultimately challenges our ability to stay ‘afloat’ as a
complex society and culture.
If we look back in time over 10,000 years, we will discover
that numerous advanced civilizations that predate the Inca, Olmec, and Egyptian
civilization existed on Earth which mysteriously vanished without a trace.
Look back at the Ancient Maya for example. The Ancient Maya
were one of the most advanced and sophisticated ancient civilizations ever to
rule on Earth.
This ancient Civilization, which flourished in the jungles
of present-day Mexico(south), Guatemala and Belize is noted for the Maya
script, the only known developed writing system of the Pre-Columbian Americas.
In fact, the ancient Maya were so ahead of other societies
even in Europe, that they had perfected the use of rubber creating various
products from it 3000 years before people in the Old World even knew what it
was.
The Maya created fascinating monuments, pyramids, ancient
cities, writing techniques and strangely, like many other great civilizations,
they too disappeared under mysterious circumstances.
But in addition to the Ancient Maya, researchers around the
globe have found similar patterns in other civilizations that just as the Maya,
collapsed and vanished.
Many scientists argue that it is difficult to overlook the
sheer number of repeating patterns in most of these civilizations, and a study
partially funded by NASA provides us with evidence that there are certain
(chaotic) characteristics present in ancient cultures that lived on Earth
thousands of years ago and eventually disappeared.
This is considered by many people as a sign that clearly
states that ancient civilizations have reset a number of times.
In the report, applied mathematician Safa Motesharri and his
“Human and Nature Dynamical” model claims that “the process of
rise-and-collapse is actually a recurrent cycle found throughout history.”
“The fall of the
Roman Empire and the equally (if not more) advanced Han, Mauryan, and Gupta
Empires, as well as so many advanced Mesopotamian Empires, are all testimony to
the fact that advanced, sophisticated, complex, and creative civilizations can
be both fragile and impermanent.”
In the study, we find that“Technological change can raise
the efficiency of resource use, but it also tends to raise both per capita
resource consumption and the scale of resource extraction, so that, absent
policy effects, the increases in consumption often compensate for the increased
efficiency of resource use.”
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