Worlds in Collision

by Immanuel Velikovsky

Publisher: Paradigma Ltd Published: 2009 Category: Personal Empowerment

Prepare to have your understanding of history, science, and human civilization fundamentally challenged. This groundbreaking work presents a radical reinterpretation of ancient history through the lens of catastrophic events that shaped not only our planet but the collective memory of humanity itself. At its core lies a compelling thesis: that Earth has experienced cataclysmic encounters with other celestial bodies within recorded human history, events so traumatic they became encoded in the myths, legends, and religious texts of cultures worldwide.

Drawing upon an astonishing breadth of ancient sources including Egyptian, Babylonian, Hindu, Chinese, Mayan, and Biblical records, this work demonstrates how seemingly disparate mythologies share striking similarities in their descriptions of cosmic catastrophes. These aren't merely poetic metaphors or primitive superstitions, the argument goes, but actual eyewitness accounts of celestial disturbances that brought unprecedented destruction and transformation to Earth. The investigation reveals how Venus, Mars, and other planetary bodies may have followed vastly different orbital paths in antiquity, coming dangerously close to our world and triggering global upheavals.

For readers on a journey of personal empowerment, this material offers something profoundly liberating: permission to question established narratives and trust your own critical thinking. The work exemplifies intellectual courage, demonstrating how one individual armed with curiosity and determination can challenge entire fields of orthodox thought. It shows that transformative insights often come from connecting dots that specialists, confined within their narrow disciplines, fail to see. This interdisciplinary approach—weaving together astronomy, geology, archaeology, comparative mythology, and ancient texts—models a holistic way of seeking truth that transcends artificial academic boundaries.

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