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by Mark Adams
June 19,
2020
from
Ancient-Origins Website

Illustration of the popular perception
of the underwater ruins of Atlantis.
Source: manjik /Adobe Stock
It is perhaps the greatest unsolved mystery of all time:
Did the lost city of
Atlantis actually exist?
And if it did once
exist, where was it located before its watery demise?
Fortunately, the original
account of a civilization that vanished beneath the waves contains a
surprising amount of realistic detail that might be used to answer
these questions.
Unfortunately, not all of
those clues are of equal value.
Three thorny problems in
particular must be dealt with to avoid embarking on a wild goose
chase to the bottom of the sea (where, incidentally, Atlantis almost
certainly did not end up).

Artist's representation of Atlantis.
(Source:
BigStockPhoto)
Problem Number
One
Every Single
Reliable Clue We Have about Atlantis comes from Plato.
The Athenian philosopher Plato was the greatest thinker in
Western Civilization.
He was also the original
source of the Atlantis story. Nothing specific referring to Atlantis
appears before his account, and anything that comes after draws from
his original.
For anyone hoping to find
the lost city, this is usually assumed to be a good thing.
If one of the most
brilliant thinkers of all time wrote about Atlantis, and repeatedly
described the original story as true - which he did - then it must
be real, right?
Not necessarily...

Bust of Plato.
(CC BY
2.5)
One of the most
intriguing things about Plato's use of the Atlantis story is where
it appears in his
dialogues.
The story comes in two
parts.
The first part
comes at the opening of the dialogue
Timaeus.
This work seems to
have been written as a sort of sequel to
The Republic, Plato's
masterwork that covers topics ranging from government to justice
to the need for philosopher-kings, and a thousand other big
concepts.
In the Timaeus, the character Critias is prodded to tell a story
that illustrates the ideal state - a reference to a speech
Socrates has just given in the Republic - and he begins to
relate the tale of how "the island of Atlantis" was struck by
"earthquakes and floods" and "disappeared in the depths of the
sea."
The second part of Plato's story appears in the dialogue
Critias.
It is here that Plato
starts to pile up the realistic-sounding details that have
tantalized would-be Atlantis detectives. Critias provides the
location of Atlantis - opposite the Pillars of Heracles, facing
the land now known as Gades.
Among other clues, he
describes,
-
the
concentric rings of land and water upon which the
capital of Atlantis was built
-
the island's
red and black stone
-
its shiny
copper-like metal (called
orichalcum)
-
the kinds of
produce grown on the island's enormous oblong plain...
While
flood myths (Noah, Gilgamesh,
Deucalion) were common in antiquity, none of them closely matches
the Atlantis story.
It's entirely possible
that Plato made the whole thing up, an opinion favored by those
academics who deign to even consider the question of whether
Atlantis was real.
Any number of attempts have been made over the years to decode the
Atlantean language, which Plato never describes, or to search
for ancient places with names that sound like "Atlantis."
In the Timaeus, Critias
says that the original story came from Egypt, and that all the names
had been changed during translation.
Following that logic,
the original name of the lost civilization Plato describes could
have been almost anything except Atlantis...
Any alleged new details
that have emerged in the centuries after Plato's death, such as the
claims that the Atlanteans had nuclear power or sophisticated
airships or the assistance of aliens, must be rejected if a serious
attempt to solve the mystery is to be made.
Also, Plato never
mentions the pyramids in relation to Atlantis.

Claims that the Atlanteans had
nuclear
power or sophisticated airships
or the
assistance of aliens
must be
rejected.
(Phil
Daub /Adobe Stock)
Problem Number
Two
Plato Was a
Pythagorean
According to the Seventh Letter, a biographical account that
was likely either written by Plato or by someone who knew him, the
philosopher left Athens for several years after his mentor
Socrates was put to death.
He traveled throughout
the eastern Mediterranean, stopping for a long time at Taras in what
is now southern Italy.
This city was led by the statesman and mathematician Archytas,
who followed principles established by Pythagoras, best known
for his 3-4-5 triangle theorem. Pythagorean influence is obvious
throughout Plato's work:
the Timaeus in
particular tries to find the mathematical logic in the cosmos...
According to one famous
account, over the entrance to the Academy, the school
Plato founded in Athens, were inscribed the words,
"NONE BUT GEOMETERS
MAY ENTER HERE"...

Detail of Pythagoras writing from
'The School of Athens.'
By Raphael. (Public Domain)
The reason this is a serious problem for anyone trying to determine
the location of the original Atlantis, if it ever existed, is
that some of the most concrete details Plato gives about the
vanished island are numbers:
the specific widths
of its circular rings of earth and water, the size of its
temples, and - what is surely the number most frequently cited
by potential solvers of the Atlantis puzzle - the fact that nine
thousand years had passed since its destruction.
Since this date (which
would work out to around 9600 BCE) roughly coincides with the Ice
Age melt at the onset of the
Holocene Epoch, many have
hypothesized that rising sea levels inundated Atlantis.
The Pythagoreans, however, did not use numbers exactly as we use
them, to signify amounts.
To them, numbers were
living things with personalities; numerology can be traced back
to Pythagoras.
They saw numbers as a
hybrid of physics and religion, a possible gateway to
discovering the secrets of the universe.

Pythagoreans celebrate sunrise.
(1869)
By Fyodor Bronnikov.
(Public Domain)
If Plato was using numbers in a Pythagorean manner, it would help
explain some of the more outlandish figures he gives when describing
Atlantis, such as a military force of more than one million
personnel and a massive canal that would have required excavations
many times greater than those needed to create the Panama Canal.
Problem Number
Three in the Search for Atlantis
Plato Was a
Philosopher, not a Historian
Despite the repeated reassurances from Plato's character Critias as
he is telling the story of Atlantis that "every word of it is true,"
we cannot read Plato's work 'literally'...
Such a fundamentalist
reading would require, for starters, a willingness to believe that
Atlantis itself was created by the sea god Poseidon.
Written history was a relatively new technology in Plato's day -
Herodotus had initiated the discipline in Greece a century
before - and Plato was uncomfortable with it.
Up until that time,
historic events such as the destruction of a civilization by natural
disaster would have been passed down orally as myths (as in Homer's
Iliad).
In Plato's dialogue the
Phaedrus, Socrates discredits writing as inferior to memory
because it cannot be probed by questioning and so offers,
"the appearance of
wisdom, not true wisdom."

Plato's Atlantis described in
Timaeus
and Critias.
(Public
Domain)
Too frequently, anyone trying to prove where Atlantis might have
been located picks and chooses the evidence that suits his or her
hypothesis and rejects anything that contradicts it.
But Plato's works -
notoriously some of the most obtuse in philosophy - were written not
for a modern audience raised on Indiana Jones movies but for
his philosophy students at
The Academy.
The story of Atlantis
cannot simply be taken at face value, but must be interpreted.
Are these three problems insurmountable? Perhaps not...
If the Atlantis tale is
indeed a treasure map, it is one that needs to be decoded first.
In a future post, I'll
address some reasons to be hopeful that Atlantis - or whatever
disaster originally inspired the story of Atlantis - may
someday be found...
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