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In 2015, researchers determined that the structure was built during the time of the Inca Empire (1438–1533)
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Dear Abhishek,
Claiming a resemblance between two geographical features is easy; providing rigorous proof is the challenge. As the saying goes, 'Once is a coincidence, twice is a pattern.' However, calling it a 'pattern' is too strong, even when we lack the data to establish a causal link. That is the hurdle we face here. Identifying two similar 'dots' supports a claim, but proving that Sugriva’s descriptions specifically refer to South American landmarks requires overwhelming corroborating evidence.
As Dr Rajaram Ji pointed out, several critical inconsistencies remain:
1. The Logistical Paradox: Sugriva dispatched a quarter of his army toward this specific direction. If the Vānara army possessed the capability to reach South America—thousands of miles across the Pacific—it raises a massive logical question: Why was a bridge to Lanka necessary? Lanka, located just off the coast of the mainland, would be a trivial distance for an army capable of trans-oceanic exploration.
Your previous answer on it regarding Lanka being a 'fortified city' does not fully resolve this. Even if Lanka required a siege strategy, the primary mission of the search parties was reconnaissance (finding Mata Sita), not an immediate siege.
2. The Paradox of the Southern Troop: If the Vānara troops were so highly capable that they could reach the far side of the Earth (Peru) easily or without documented struggle, why did the troop sent directly southward face such a monumental challenge just to reach the shoreline near Lanka?
The Rāmāyaṇa in Kishkindhakand describes the Southern party's journey as one of great effort, doubt, and physical barriers. It is logically inconsistent to suggest that while one group was effortlessly crossing the Pacific Ocean to the Andes, the other group—led by Hanumān and Angada—was standing at the edge of the Indian Ocean, wondering how they would ever cross a mere 100 yojanas to reach Lanka. If they had the 'Global Reach' required for the "Andes and band of holes" Peru theory, the Setu Bandhanam (building of the bridge) would have been an unnecessary waste of time and resources."
If they could 'scout' the Andes, they certainly could have scouted or reached Lanka without the monumental effort of Hanuman by leaping to Lanka and building the Setu.
3. Geographical and Navigational Barriers The distance from Kishkindha (modern-day Hampi) to the Paracas Candelabra in Peru is staggering. Even today, there is no land route. You must address how an ancient army crossed the Pacific.
Aviation/Maritime Technology: Modern flights take 22–30 hours with multiple refuelling stops. Cargo ships take weeks. To claim this was done in antiquity, you must provide evidence of the specific technologies that allowed for such advanced navigation.
The Pacific Gap: Current global travel largely bypasses the deep "middle" of the Pacific for safety and logistics. If you are proposing a direct eastern route, the burden of proof lies in explaining the maritime capability of that era.
4. The Temporal and Geological Problem
Archaeological Correlation: You must establish a synchronised timeline between the Ramayana era and the physical creation of the Candelabra and the 'band of holes'.
The Pangea Misconception: Even if we consider a Pangea-like configuration, the continents began drifting apart over 180 million years ago—millions of years before the appearance of modern humans, let alone organised civilisations. Furthermore, in Gondwana, India and South America were separated by the massive African landmass. Travelling 'east' from India to reach Peru would have still required crossing a vast ocean, not a land bridge.
This is not the end of the questions, but the beginning. Until these technological and temporal gaps are bridged with data, the connection and correlation remain a fascinating theory rather than a historical fact."
As Carl Sagan famously said, "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
We aren't necessarily denying that the connection and correlation are impossible, but we are refusing to accept it as fact until the evidence meets the weight of the claim. "Finally, we must approach this from the perspective of modern scientific scepticism. While the visual similarities between the Ramayana's descriptions and the artefacts in Peru are intriguing, sitting in the 'modern scientific chair' requires us to remain sceptical until a mechanical and chronological bridge is built. To claim a definitive connection without solving the logistical paradox of the Pacific or the massive temporal gap in the geological record is to jump to a conclusion before the data is ready.
By matching two dots, we have a hypothesis. But a hypothesis is not a proof. Until we can explain how a troop that struggled to reach Lanka could effortlessly scout the Andes—and how they did so in a single month—we must treat these resemblances as fascinating coincidences rather than historical certainties.
"Let us remain open to the possibility but rigorous in our demand for evidence."
असतो मा सद्गमय । Asato mā sadgamaya
From Unreality (Asat), let us move towards Reality (Sat).
चरैवेति चरैवेति
"Keep moving forward."
Thanks
Dr Govind Maurya
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Accusatory and provocative language are subjective terms. I personally think Dr. Govind's initial response was pretty condescending and full of red herring because I did not talk about pangea or other supercontinents. I already explained why the archaeological consensus cannot be taken at face value and I already answered the query regarding the logistic paradox when raised by Dr. Raja initially. And you really have no place to demand rules of debate to be followed when you yourself started with a boomer joke about acorns and what not.शठे शाठ्यं समाचरेत् is what is required when that happens.Despite all of that I have given point by point clarification to his questions but he replies by throwing jargon around without even pointing out where and how these jargons even apply. People should argue based on principle and not jargon and rhetoric. I have simply pointed out how the Candelabra of the Andes and the Band of Holes falls with the correct grammatical meaning of the verses and given that there is a sufficient room to reinterpret and revise the current archaeological consensus these interpretation can be given a some benefit of doubt. Unless they have some means to object these interpretation there is no meaningful debate.
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