First off, Van Daniken never said that he had not visited some of the sites he wrote about. Nor did he ever capitulate and say he made it all up. The data he presents is there for anyone to see - it is his interpretation which some have questioned, not the data itself.Gaybutton wrote: What on earth (or space) is your source for that claim? The only time I recall reading anything claiming that was when Erich von Daniken's books were popular - right up until he was forced to admit he had not been to any of these places himself and had simply made it all up.
I know one ancient text that never made such a claim - perhaps the most widely accepted ancient text of all - the Bible. What ancient texts did reference alien visitations?
Even if that is precisely what ancients believed, are you suggesting that the aliens landed, taught them whatever they taught them, then left never to land again and communicate directly with us earthlings?
Then you asked for a source to the claim that ancient writings referenced extra terestials. You might want to check out http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/viman ... anas_3.htm which lists several such texts.
You then go on to claim the Bible makes no such references. In fact it does. You might read the book of Ezekial which describes the saucer like craft that hovered over the people. I am tempted to suggest that the "angels" that visited Job, the voice and tablets presented to Moses, and several other stories are as likely aliens than they are ethereal visitors from heaven.
You then ask if I believe that aliens came down from above, taught us some good stuff, and then disappeared never to be seen or heard from again. I think the whole point of this thread is to support the notion that they, in fact, never left and they are here in numbers at the present time.