JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post Overall Post 5126
(Gerald Mercator, 1596)
This is a short, dismissive, stabbing review of a book by a theological and long-established scholar and administrator, William F. Warren (1833-1929). I remember his name from his interesting work on ancient cosmologies (1882), illustrated with examples of the history of all things according to various belief systems and religions. This quick-and-dead arrow of a review (which appeared in Nature on 14 May 1885 p, 28), was directed at his new work Paradise Found, the Cradle of the Human Race at the North Pole..., which as you can guess tries to establish the origin of humans at the North Pole, along with the Garden of Eden and the Tree of Life. And, for that matter, also establishes the Pole as the home of Mt. Maru, the Arthurian Avallon, and so on. There's a lot that can be said but not by me—there is an attraction to hunting up other mythologies placing some part of great importance to the North Pole as the Navel of the Earth, but I just don't have the time or inclination. As a matter of fact, I hadn't known about this work by Warren, and I doubt I'll know much more than what I am communicating right now—one thing the reviewer doesn't mention is that the book runs about 500 pages, which is just too much of an investment for yours truly.
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