Phenomenology S2 - Episode 6 features the team investigating a hillside in Colombia where they discover exceptionally rare Ice Age pictograms and petroglyphs depicting extinct reptiles and megafauna.
https://t.co/i02fKcE6g9
@archaeologyart@archaeologymag#Archaeology@Qafzeh
Episode 07 of Phenomenology features @disclosureteam_ witnessing anomalous lights in Colombia.
Are they hiker's torches? Perhaps "Andes Glow" reported as flashing around summits and outbursting like the beams of a great searchlight? Or, something else?
https://t.co/8y3OoOnxTk
//Phenomenology S1 Episode 04// is out now.
The team interviews a family of eyewitnesses seeking the nature of a mysterious blue light captured on film.
https://t.co/O8EvscfiPq
@_Yin______Yang_ @Hastings_Forbes @TechAnthroPro @michaelshermer I struggle to see far beyond the restrictions of currently accepted universal physics, even if the macro and the micro don't meet nicely in the middle. I regard "singularities" as being very conceptual, compared to the predictability of, say, apples falling from trees.👍
@MikeColangelo "There are some trees, Watson, which grow to a certain height, and then suddenly develop some unsightly eccentricity. You will see it often in humans."
Arthur Conan Doyle.
@mrjeffknox@Gus2089603005@BSquidding That's accurate, and what the whole series is about. We greatly focus on the structure of the reported experiences, and how they are perceived by different people, rather than the mountain phenomena itself.