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I think this info may be useful: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4609074.stm
I feel that it is necessary to modify some of the wording here, as I am uncertain about the NPOV of this article. I am currently re-reading 1421 after doing some research since reading in about 15 months ago. Peter Ellis 22:11, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I think it is very interesting that many people are so focused on Menzies' hypothese regarding rather Zheng He discovered America but completely ignored his other claim that none of the European explorers such as Columbus, Magellan or the Portugese discovered America or are the first one to circumnavigated around the world because all of the seem to already have a map before any other their first voyage. If this is proven to be true, this fact alone will result in a major rewrite of the world history. The next question is if none of the well known European explorers discovered America? Then who did? Clearly according to Menzie, Admiral Zheng He was the one who mapped out the world since China at that time was the most technologically capable of accomplishing such feat and that Zheng He's voyage was by far the largest in history; but his evidences proofing this was sketchy at best and completely hypotheical.
I think further investigations into rather Menzie's claim that Columbus and other European explorers did indeed have the map of America and other parts of the New World before any of their first voyage would be very important. We need to validate the current written history before we hypothesize who else could have discovered the rest of the world. [User:Kelvin] 24.149.52.84 12:53, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
Toytoy writes "A foreigner may never understand the level beaucracy of the Chinese government." Excuse me? Apeman
Martinscholes 21:35, 22 June 2006 (UTC) "The 1421 hypothesis has proven highly controversial among scholars. It proposes a revolutionary interpretation of established historical opinion but has been criticized for providing inadequate proof, largely relying on contested documents. However, it is popular in the Pseudohistory field."
Aha. Judge AND jury! The author of that paragraph (with NO evidence cited) condemns Menzies and everyone who admits his claims may be valid! This should be used as a classic example of a NPOV without even a shred of evidence.
Further to my comment above last year, as for the understanding of Chinese bureaucracy see, for example, Charles O. Hucker's book, in which he discusses the structure and defines and translates terms used in imperial Chinese government. [1]. We can safely assume there has been much more work done by scholars (of all races) in the field in recent decades as well. Apeman 08:43, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
For Wikipedia to maintain its integrity it cannot take a neutral point of view between truth-telling and lie-telling. This book is not amature scholarship it is professional and very profitable lying. Iglonghurst 22:39, 16 September 2006 (UTC)
Apparently Menzies's theories really are getting more outlandish. I wanted to add this to "Reactions," but the ffotnote didn't work. Could somebody do it? I was going to add something like "Most recently, Menzies admitted in a televised interview that he maintains "the Chinese sailed up the English Channel, went in the Thames, [ . . . ] and gave Henry V a set of underclothes." The source is here: Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Four Corners Program Transcript "Junk History". Apeman 08:43, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
As well, the "Reactions" section should be re-written, and there should be something in the article about Menzies' ghost writers, marketers and promotional people. This should lead to some words, with the support of Menzies himself (using the interview here "Junk History"), on the 1421 project as fundamentally designed to sell books: a very successful money-making scheme. Apeman 08:43, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
After reading the book, he does not infact claim that Zheng He discovered Australia, but that it was known already during the Sui Dynasty 132.205.15.43 19:23, 4 Apr 2005 (UTC)
why? Geni 1 July 2005 01:33 (UTC)
Because despite the apparent handicap of a total lack of historical training, he's achieved results which have eluded professional historians for centuries?
It's because virtually all of his claims lack evidence. Apeman
It is actually pseudohistory, not the other one. User:Danny Yee doesn't like this though. He doesn't like to accept that this issue about people of his blood, may indeed be within the realm of fringe theories used to displace the Western world. His position of deletion has NPOV problems. Menzies is clearly an Orientalist, while the info he claims is fact has not been found so--except by the fringe. IP Address 01:42, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
Then perhaps we'll keep the "pseudohistory" link for this page, with the psyche report for his page? IP Address 06:22, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I have no strong feelings either way on categorisation as "pseudohistory". Since that's a neologism with little precedent, it doesn't seem particularly helpful as a category. Is there really much in common between stories about Atlantis, Holocaust denial, and Gavin Menzies' ideas? The historiographical background to these seems very different to me. -- Danny Yee 05:18, 23 April 2006 (UTC)
" /.../ His book is considered by many experts to not be founded in fact. One Chinese expert pronounced the theory "pure fiction". However, some academicists, like Dr. Sir John Elliot (Oxford University) do believe the theory. /.../ "
I would like to see some references regarding Dr John Elliot and the other academic supporters of the 1421 theory. It would be very interesting to see what people who belong to the academic world have to say about the possibility of it being a valid view. Consolamentum
This would have been as much valued by the Chinese as by the Spaniards. Chinese and Spaniards never fought in that era, but Spain fought with mixed results against the Ottoman Turks, who were defeated by Timur, who never risked a fight with the Ming Chinese until the very end of his life. So Ming China could easily have conqured the New World. Or just traded silk and other commodities for the gold and silver that the New World didn't much value.
Having read the book, I also wondered why the Chinese had visited the whole world apart from Western Europe, where they would definintely have been recorded. It seems he's now claiming them did. It still seems unlikely that such gigantic ships could not have left more of a record.
-- 172.201.10.215 17:11, 16 August 2005 (UTC) Gwydion M. Williams
Unless there's something I've missed, I think these sites should be removed. Neither of them qualifies as "debunking" in my judgment; instead they pick at just one or two selected points from the book. The alternate theories offered are even more debatable than the originals. And really, the second site is just a juvenile attack.
I have no opinion about the validity of Menzies's claims, though I hear that some historians strongly disagree with them. The book includes tens of pages of categorized data; if there's a site out there that comes close to refuting any of it--or the conclusions he draws from it--I think that does belong here.
-- Papayoung 9 September 2005
Google "Gavin Menzies" or something. A couple of links that touch on the data he uses:
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2843/is_6_27/ai_110575769 http://hnn.us/articles/1308.html
I personally haven't seen any credible academic source that takes him at all seriously, though I may just not be looking hard enough. In fact, academia seems to consider him just a notch above von Daniken as far as credibility goes.
Anyone with google and half an hour or so could probably scare up a number of links to historians that attack his theory; I'd do it, but I have to get to class. A common complaint is his use of circular logic, which is something that could be added to the criticisms section.
In acedemia many critics become quite hostile, so the tone of a page should not be used to judge its veracity and validity. Taken together, each of the pages plays a rol ein debunking this ridiculous hypothesis.-- Dahveed323 09:09, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
I want to write a science-fiction piece in which after the Zhang He explorations, Chinese colonists travel across the Pacific and settle the Western United States. I was wondering could China have the capabilities to conduct European-scale colonization and what could be the outcome when Britian and French colonists find a second China instead of America?
So America could have been a Chinese territory before Europeans arrived?
A cool idea. The wonderful thing about science fiction is license -- though I believe historical China could indeed erect sophisticated colonies, if it turned out they could not: you wouldn't have to spoil your story with such facts. Your work being, as it is, fiction! I say go ahead with it regardless. Dress the details with fact if you choose to, but have fun with the broad strokes. --Anon.
Name should be consistent with the lead, and those terms are far from synonims.-- Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus Talk 15:08, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
Menzies may simply be drawn to Hippie counterculture of the Cold War, embracing a New Age pseudohistory of The Orient and promoting Eastern (Communist) propaganda in contradiction to the prevalent Western (Capitalist) perspective. See Triumphalism.
This seems barely meaningful to me, and in so far as I can work out what it means, just screwball. The guy posting it seems obsessed by it, though. Is this some kind of trolling, or am I missing something? -- Danny Yee 01:40, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
As far as I am concerned, that is just personal opinion and hearsay. Unless there is solid evidence to its validity, I do not see why should it be posted as factual.
Oh and play nice, the world would be a better place to live in if people are polite. And I am no 'sockpuppet' I assure you. Nic tan33 04:42, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I love how you use two different accounts, alternating on and off each one. How come the other name isn't active right now and Nic_tan33 posting (vice versa circumstances exit)? IP Address 05:08, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I feel the section above has is rather poorly written and has a biased POV (especially the bit about the convenient destruction of chinese records). Also, it doesn't really seem that unlikely the voyages never reached Europe. If you were going from China and visited the Pacific first then later came back and visited Asia and Africa, Europe would be the last place you would reach. If you were going from China to Europe by sea and somehow missed Africa for example, it would seem quite unusual. However never reaching Europe doesn't seem that surprising if you are starting from China. Also, given that Europe was already fairly well explored by the Europeans and there was existing contact we can assume there may have been significantly less incentive or desire to visit Europe. Why go somewhere you already know very well about? Nil Einne 11:58, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
The bigger flaw in the theory appears to be the lack of evidence rather then failing to visit Europe. The issue of whether news of the voyages to the Pacific etc would have reached Europe is an interesting one and probably needs to be elaborated further. Since there was clearly contact, the question becomes was it that unlikely that news of the voyages would not have reached Europe? One way looking in to to further would be to establish whether or whether not news of voyages by Ming Zhe and other Chinese of this era that are undisputed did reach Europe early on. If news of these other voyages did reach Europe, it would seem rather bizzarre that news of the voyages to the Pacific did not. On the other hand if news of the other voyages did not in fact reach Europe until a long time later, it would seem less surprising that news of the voyages to the Pacific never reached Europe Nil Einne 11:58, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
I am no fan of Menzies or the 1421 hypothesis, but I think some portions of this article that are critical of the hypothesis need citations. Otherwise, the material is unencyclopedic and POV. Lack of citations also undermines the credibility of the criticism, indirectly making Menzies seem more credible. If there's not a credible source that can be cited for a particular criticism, then that criticism should be deleted.-- A. B. 02:35, 11 June 2006 (UTC)
I have put a number of references into the criticism section. Especially on the Australian section as I checked the information locally to confirm the criticisms raised by other academics. It would be good if some New Zealanders contributed as they are extremely angry at Menzies' nonsense. Roonz123 01:55, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
I will probably make both Menzies fans and Menzies detractors upset with the changes I'm making but I am working my way through the article trying to make the language more neutral. In some cases, that means trying to make pro-Menzies sentences more neutral, in other cases, trying to make anti-Menzies sentences more neutral. I will also add requests for citations.
I'm doing this as I have the time; it may take a day or two.
My goal is not to take a side but to try to make a neutral article. I don't pretend to be the best at it. Please don't take my edits personally!
Request: If you object to an edit on POV or factual grounds, please bring your objection to the talk page first and let it sit for a day or two for others to discuss, before reverting. Revert wars resolve nothing. Obviously, as you find "spellin or grammatickal erors", go head and fix them; I'm a terrible proof-reader of my own work.
Regards to all, --[[[User:A. B.|A. B.]] 19:09, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
Regarding my removal of this and the subsequent reversion: "However, it is popular in the Pseudohistory field." When I click pseudohistory, I see this: "Pseudohistory is a pejorative term applied to texts...." Yes, Menzies is a crank, but this is unacceptably POV, in my opinion. On top of that, this does not address my objection that pseudohistory is not a field. I intend to take this back out unless a good case can be made for keeping it in (the fact that the word "pseudohistory" is wikilinked does not qualify).-- Birdmessenger 00:13, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
I count these problematic lines, which I will discuss here before doing anything else:
-- Birdmessenger 00:36, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
I've noticed the article is biased both pro and con in different places. I think the people that edit this article also have a range of views from very pro to very con on the 1421 hypothesis. Here are two recommendations:
Our goal should not be to advance a particular view we agree with. We edit as individuals who hold varying opinions, but our product is not ours -- it's Wikipedia's. To the outside world, what we write is seen as Wikipedia's material, not mine or Joe's or Kathy's. Wikipedia's goal is to have no opinion and offer no judgement. Personally, I am skeptical of Menzies' work, but when I come to this article, my responsibility is to make the same neutral edits that a strong Menzies supporter would make.
The alternative is a ongoing edit and reversion war like some other articles' editors get into. Ultimately, all of us come out losers in these situations, since the article alternates between supporting one viewpoint one hour and the opposite postion the next hour. Furthermore it gets so chopped up in the process that the grammar and flow go all to hell. To the outside world, the credibility of the article and of both points of view all become suspect. By extension, it also damages the perceived reliability of other Wikipedia articles and all the hard work done by other editors that have never even heard of Menzies or the 1421 Hypothesis.
Relevant links:
Is the achievement cited in this article really an achievement? Although Menzies does reveal some true details of the expeditions and the period in history, the reader is most likely to be misled by his outlandish claims, which are either based on speculative or fabricated evidence. His conjectures are often updated, so even by his own standards, they are not firm. Raising awareness is not an achievement if it is only superficial.
The man is a crank. Rintrah 14:13, 2 August 2006 (UTC) Menzies makes many mistakes in the eyes of people who are capable to distiguish likely evidence, i.e. evidence that is likely to proof a point, from unlikely evidence. To them he made the mistake of pretending that the book his ghost writers composed is in fact history, rather than fiction set in some historical time frame. The objective of Menzies and his publishers is however to earn as much money as possible and if that objective can only be achieved by pretending that they present history, and some of us have fallen for it, they have achieved and continues to achieve that objective. A good history book with "news" rarely sells well (most publishers will tell you), as it has to painstakingly discuss all the alternative scenarios of the evidence, which is rather boring. A BAD 'history book' ( i.e. one containing fiction at the key points, skipping the hard analysis) however, providing some sensational point to the uncritical, sells well provided it is written using some seductive writing techniques from the fiction writers' repertoire. The sad thing is that it is an attack on our carefully built up world history that took centuries to find evidence for. Rich people often gained their money by lying, cheating etc. An endless list of examples can be found. User Bruno 22 August.
As this hypothesis was primarily outlined in the book I suggest that this article is merged into that one.-- Moonlight Mile 23:22, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
I'm not sure this one should be merged, given the article's size and the fact that it deals with an emerging historical theory, becoming much greater than the book itself. I say keep them separate Orchid Righteous
Then Merge Qur'an With Islam. Merge Bible with Christianity! If we merged everything that was related we'd just have one big article.... Zazaban 05:14, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
I would suggest to keep the two separate, as the hypothesis has now taken on a life of its own and become a topic of great debate, with many websites and numerous arguments advanced on both sides etc - the hypothesis has become bigger than the book itself. -- 82.29.235.182 22:27, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
i first saw the map on the 1421 website. i noticed that the yellow and yangtze rivers were out of place, along with other mis shaped areas. such as korea and japan. it is possible that the sizes of these countires can be wrong, but the basic shapes are too wrong. the chinese have traded with these 2 countries for thousands of years. the kanglido also has correct shapes of korea and japan, which shows that asians knew the basic shapes of these countires also the yellow river and the Yangtze have been navigated since the beginings of chinese civilization. i think it is impossible that the chinese could of had misplaced them. i would like to belive that this map is real, but it has too many flaws.
Regardless of whether an editor believes the hypothesis or disbelieves it there is no reason for what is simply poisoning the well and bordering on ad homenim in places.
1. Intro The introduction is very close to what it should be. It seems to be clear and gives an overview of what will be being read by the reader. The last paragraph causes me some problems. "The 1421 hypothesis has proven popular with the general public, but has been dismissed by Sinologists and other professional historians." What is the basis for making these broad sweeping statements. I don't see any evidence. Who are the general public? Which countries? How do you know how popular it is? The way dismissal is used implies all sinologists and professional historians (who are also part of the general public) are agisnt it. evidence. Replace this section perhaps with something about the number of books sold in X place, number of documentaries made and the fact that the hypothesis has met with critisism and the level of critisism if it can be ascertained and substantiated.
2. Method The first phrase in the method is poisoned. Substitute with Menzies claims he has found evidence from .... without alleged and disputed etc. There is plenty of room for critisism and making the critisism in one place gives it more weight.
The Maps piece seems OK. However, it's not clear why the section is here. Shouldn't it be clearer that this is evidence put forward by Menzies?
The Other Evidence has a few more weasle words like purportedly. I also prefer to use something like "claims that .... were reported" rather than "reportedly seen". Somehow the current phrase almost reads cynically rather than neutrally.
3. Critisism is a mess. Lots of citations needed. It reads badly as if it is not thought through. It is often not presented in a readable fashion. Weasle words are everywhere. "Some critics...", "They claim ...", "Most people". ....
There is also an axe to grind here I feel. I corrected an error where a critisism in this Wiki claims Menzies was raised in China but was actually born in London. In fact, the book claims he was born in China.
Quoting from the reference given for this:
"Where were you born?
GAVIN MENZIES, AUTHOR: I was born in London.
QUENTIN MCDERMOTT: Well, why did the dust jacket on your book say you were born in China?
GAVIN MENZIES, AUTHOR: Well, the - the original draft said, "He spent his early life in China," I think.
QUENTIN MCDERMOTT: Well, it actually said you were born in China.
GAVIN MENZIES, AUTHOR: Well, I went there when I was three weeks old. I mean, it's a mistake, I can't see it's material."
This is actually very trivial. Dust jackets are often not written by authors and there are pleanty of mistakes in them.
Overall, this critisism section needs really smartening up if it to actually contribute to this article.
I will watch this article and look for responses. I'm afraid I will have to do some culling of weasle words and unreferenced statements at a later time if they are not worked on by someone else. Hopefully I will find some positive reponses here. Candy 15:21, 14 December 2006 (UTC)
If the contention is lack of support, Danny Lee, then that also needs to be shown in a reference. Otherwise it's original research. It's no good hiding behind "Menzies is wrong" if the article does not support that clearly. It doesn't. Whatever your views on Menzies it is inappropriate to support them without citation. Candy 14:03, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
I'm making some basic changes to this article based on my previous post.
These are:
1.The 1421 hypothesis is a controversial theory .. It's a hypothesis not a theory. 2. According to Menzies ... Removed. Almost seems like ad homenim! 3. Many of these categories and items of evidence... How can a category be contested? Makes no sense. 4. Changed the mainstream part to two mainstream as that is all that is offered.
Stopping there becasue it is bedtime 8=)
Adding doesn't cite sources to page. Theer are enough unsubstantiated comments now for that.
Candy
03:53, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
It's a minor point, but how do people feel about the terms used to distinguish Menzies from 'academic' historians (i.e. the ones working in universities who think his ideas are crap). Are they mainstream historians, academic historians, traditional historians? What do people think is the most accurate or precise terminology? Currently the article uses both, professional in the intro paragraph, and mainstream later on. I don't really have a preference, but at the least it should be harmonized, and should convey that the the consensus of academics who disagree. WLU 15:31, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
Hmm. I'm still failing to come up with a good adjective then, traditional was my best bet. Academic might be best, but that kind of wording attracts the nutjobs who think that academic historians are just out to conspiracy-theory the 'truth' (i.e. Atlantis, lizard-alien rulers, pyramids-as-landing-pads). Would conventional work? How about (a bit snippy) educated historians? I'm trying to think of a wording that conveys the 'trained in a school, has actually read the books/articles/reports, peer-reviewed knowledge'. Anyway, no matter what is chosen, I'd be happier if the two terms were the same. Oh, and Menzies is definitely an 'amateur' (with pejorative connotations) historian. See my response below also. WLU 12:05, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Currently (15:31, 13 March 2007 (UTC)) the intro to the criticism section reads: 'received no support from mainstream historians'. I think could be worded better - though I'm 100% positive that academic historians (versus pseudohistorians and pyramid/atlantis nutters) have nothing good to say about the book, it is impossible to prove a negative. We'd have to cite every single historian on the planet. Would people be comfortable with 'has been severely criticized by mainstream historians' or something similar? WLU 15:31, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
I wouldn't use scathing, I would stick with something like 'the professional/academic/mainstream historians who have responded to Menzies ideas have been heavily critical and provided numerous rebuttals.' Few is a subjective judgement (proportionately few, or numerically few? Is 100 few, considering there are 50 000 historians in the world? etc) and scathing, though accurate, is a bit of a weasel word (though that's arguable, as their own comments and criticisms are pretty harsh and damning). Could say 'heavily critical of his findings and approach', I think that conveys the sense of their criticism overall. WLU 12:10, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Excellent re-word, top notch. WLU 11:47, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
The fundamental evidence Menzie uses to support his hypothesis are the maps, most notably the Kangnido, Piri Reis, the Fra Mauro Planisphere, and the Pizzigano chart. I'm no expert in the history of exploration in the 14th and 15th centuries. The readers of Wikipedia would be well served if the article answered a few basic questions about these maps: Are the dates that Menzie's assigns these maps correct? If so, how have previous writers explained the existence of these charts, some of which were supposedly published prior to Columbus' voyage? Also, the article cites the book by Louise Levathes, but gives no substantive explanation of the difference between that book and Menzie's book. J l harvey 23:02, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
Should British ghost writer Neil Hanson be acknowledged here, as he has been identified as such by Gavin Menzies in the 2006 ABC TV program?-- Nickm57 ( talk) 11:53, 21 November 2007 (UTC)
Every statement in this section has request for citation to be added. But the book itself is the source for all the claims so why do we need to cite it repeatedly?
Example: Evidence of Horses, flightless ducks and Asiatic melanotic chickens and pigs in the New World prior to Columbus's arrival. are claims made in the book by the author supporting his hypothesis. Is it necessary to cite the book when the artical is about the book? Xtrump ( talk) 01:22, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
I was just wondering -- the blurb under the map says "entirety of the Old World, from Europe and Africa in the west, to Korea and Japan in the east," but of course it leaves out areas we know the Chinese knew -- Southeast Asia, Indonesia and India. So, 'entirety'? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dougweller ( talk • contribs) 06:56, 17 February 2008 (UTC)
No it doesn't Doug, you haven't finished doing your research! It has India (not too well) and Sri Lanka. More later if I can get the latest article on it. -- goes off mumbling more to self-- Dougweller ( talk) 16:47, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
When I see Aztec art I think of Polynesia and I beleive that is where they came from..while others like Mayans ad Incas seem more Mongolian to me. Just the word MEXICO there is no X or O in spanish that's Chinese not "indio". people of the Americas could just be mixes of several Asian tribes/groups who just mixed with the new people of Europe & Africa(slaves). what I don't get is why peple get offended by the idea that Asians was here first. I think it's safe to say that most people know that "natives" are from Asians...DNA proves this they accept that native Americans are Asians yet they say there is no proof they came here first. Umm what part of that makes sense?? --Mari —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.32.93.111 ( talk) 18:42, 2 March 2008 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you mean. I don't think the Chinese went to the Americas or England in 1421, but most people agree that sometime in the past 40000 or so years (opinions differ a lot) there were migrations from Asia to the Americas. The Spanish alphabet does have X and O although obviously they pronounce X differently than English speakers do. But the name Mexico isn't Spanish originally, although the Spanish changed it from the original. It is a Nahuatl name (Uto-Aztecan), no relationship to Chinese.-- Doug Weller ( talk) 19:34, 2 March 2008 (UTC)
the problem with this and the book is that first we know there were people already in america before anybody from the old world got here,but i think it is disparageing to the norse people i believe it is now accepted fact that the vikings discovered america around 998 A.D i think this arguement about east asians finding the new world first is brushed aside by the onset of facts-- Wikiscribe ( talk) 05:07, 6 May 2008 (UTC)
Menzies is trying to convince the reader - and perhaps himself...
I know this is only a smallish article, but I believe this is submitting to the opinion that his book is just of poor quality. Whether it is or isn't, is not our directorate, rather we offer unbiased explanation of the differing opinions which some take on this issue. Eps0n ( talk) 12:42, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I added a book box to the page. Note that the genre I put it in was pseudohistory - I couldn't think of what else to put, it can't be history 'cause it's got about as much evidence as Area 51, but fiction is too much of a stretch. WLU 21:32, 29 April 2007 (UTC)
I don't see why my reference addition to the paragraph "Many in China ... (citation needed)" isn't suitable.
In his book, Menzies claims that these people: Professor Yao Jide, Professor Fayuan Gao, Professor Bi Quanzhong, all support his hypothesis with their own research. He also claims that the prestigious Yunnan University awarded an honorary doctorate.
Even if these claims are false, they need to be verified as such.
Metadigital 17:34, 10 May 2007 (UTC)
Why is he a noted vexatious litigant? As says on this article Vexatious litigation. Thas, Dailly Rubbings 02:33, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
What is the point of the book outline?
Anybody wants to put some content into this outline? Otherwise best remove it, as the links there confuse you to think that they point to an on-line copy. Tzafrir 17:51, 7 July 2007 (UTC)
This page is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
I think this info may be useful: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4609074.stm
I feel that it is necessary to modify some of the wording here, as I am uncertain about the NPOV of this article. I am currently re-reading 1421 after doing some research since reading in about 15 months ago. Peter Ellis 22:11, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I think it is very interesting that many people are so focused on Menzies' hypothese regarding rather Zheng He discovered America but completely ignored his other claim that none of the European explorers such as Columbus, Magellan or the Portugese discovered America or are the first one to circumnavigated around the world because all of the seem to already have a map before any other their first voyage. If this is proven to be true, this fact alone will result in a major rewrite of the world history. The next question is if none of the well known European explorers discovered America? Then who did? Clearly according to Menzie, Admiral Zheng He was the one who mapped out the world since China at that time was the most technologically capable of accomplishing such feat and that Zheng He's voyage was by far the largest in history; but his evidences proofing this was sketchy at best and completely hypotheical.
I think further investigations into rather Menzie's claim that Columbus and other European explorers did indeed have the map of America and other parts of the New World before any of their first voyage would be very important. We need to validate the current written history before we hypothesize who else could have discovered the rest of the world. [User:Kelvin] 24.149.52.84 12:53, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
Toytoy writes "A foreigner may never understand the level beaucracy of the Chinese government." Excuse me? Apeman
Martinscholes 21:35, 22 June 2006 (UTC) "The 1421 hypothesis has proven highly controversial among scholars. It proposes a revolutionary interpretation of established historical opinion but has been criticized for providing inadequate proof, largely relying on contested documents. However, it is popular in the Pseudohistory field."
Aha. Judge AND jury! The author of that paragraph (with NO evidence cited) condemns Menzies and everyone who admits his claims may be valid! This should be used as a classic example of a NPOV without even a shred of evidence.
Further to my comment above last year, as for the understanding of Chinese bureaucracy see, for example, Charles O. Hucker's book, in which he discusses the structure and defines and translates terms used in imperial Chinese government. [1]. We can safely assume there has been much more work done by scholars (of all races) in the field in recent decades as well. Apeman 08:43, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
For Wikipedia to maintain its integrity it cannot take a neutral point of view between truth-telling and lie-telling. This book is not amature scholarship it is professional and very profitable lying. Iglonghurst 22:39, 16 September 2006 (UTC)
Apparently Menzies's theories really are getting more outlandish. I wanted to add this to "Reactions," but the ffotnote didn't work. Could somebody do it? I was going to add something like "Most recently, Menzies admitted in a televised interview that he maintains "the Chinese sailed up the English Channel, went in the Thames, [ . . . ] and gave Henry V a set of underclothes." The source is here: Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Four Corners Program Transcript "Junk History". Apeman 08:43, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
As well, the "Reactions" section should be re-written, and there should be something in the article about Menzies' ghost writers, marketers and promotional people. This should lead to some words, with the support of Menzies himself (using the interview here "Junk History"), on the 1421 project as fundamentally designed to sell books: a very successful money-making scheme. Apeman 08:43, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
After reading the book, he does not infact claim that Zheng He discovered Australia, but that it was known already during the Sui Dynasty 132.205.15.43 19:23, 4 Apr 2005 (UTC)
why? Geni 1 July 2005 01:33 (UTC)
Because despite the apparent handicap of a total lack of historical training, he's achieved results which have eluded professional historians for centuries?
It's because virtually all of his claims lack evidence. Apeman
It is actually pseudohistory, not the other one. User:Danny Yee doesn't like this though. He doesn't like to accept that this issue about people of his blood, may indeed be within the realm of fringe theories used to displace the Western world. His position of deletion has NPOV problems. Menzies is clearly an Orientalist, while the info he claims is fact has not been found so--except by the fringe. IP Address 01:42, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
Then perhaps we'll keep the "pseudohistory" link for this page, with the psyche report for his page? IP Address 06:22, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I have no strong feelings either way on categorisation as "pseudohistory". Since that's a neologism with little precedent, it doesn't seem particularly helpful as a category. Is there really much in common between stories about Atlantis, Holocaust denial, and Gavin Menzies' ideas? The historiographical background to these seems very different to me. -- Danny Yee 05:18, 23 April 2006 (UTC)
" /.../ His book is considered by many experts to not be founded in fact. One Chinese expert pronounced the theory "pure fiction". However, some academicists, like Dr. Sir John Elliot (Oxford University) do believe the theory. /.../ "
I would like to see some references regarding Dr John Elliot and the other academic supporters of the 1421 theory. It would be very interesting to see what people who belong to the academic world have to say about the possibility of it being a valid view. Consolamentum
This would have been as much valued by the Chinese as by the Spaniards. Chinese and Spaniards never fought in that era, but Spain fought with mixed results against the Ottoman Turks, who were defeated by Timur, who never risked a fight with the Ming Chinese until the very end of his life. So Ming China could easily have conqured the New World. Or just traded silk and other commodities for the gold and silver that the New World didn't much value.
Having read the book, I also wondered why the Chinese had visited the whole world apart from Western Europe, where they would definintely have been recorded. It seems he's now claiming them did. It still seems unlikely that such gigantic ships could not have left more of a record.
-- 172.201.10.215 17:11, 16 August 2005 (UTC) Gwydion M. Williams
Unless there's something I've missed, I think these sites should be removed. Neither of them qualifies as "debunking" in my judgment; instead they pick at just one or two selected points from the book. The alternate theories offered are even more debatable than the originals. And really, the second site is just a juvenile attack.
I have no opinion about the validity of Menzies's claims, though I hear that some historians strongly disagree with them. The book includes tens of pages of categorized data; if there's a site out there that comes close to refuting any of it--or the conclusions he draws from it--I think that does belong here.
-- Papayoung 9 September 2005
Google "Gavin Menzies" or something. A couple of links that touch on the data he uses:
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2843/is_6_27/ai_110575769 http://hnn.us/articles/1308.html
I personally haven't seen any credible academic source that takes him at all seriously, though I may just not be looking hard enough. In fact, academia seems to consider him just a notch above von Daniken as far as credibility goes.
Anyone with google and half an hour or so could probably scare up a number of links to historians that attack his theory; I'd do it, but I have to get to class. A common complaint is his use of circular logic, which is something that could be added to the criticisms section.
In acedemia many critics become quite hostile, so the tone of a page should not be used to judge its veracity and validity. Taken together, each of the pages plays a rol ein debunking this ridiculous hypothesis.-- Dahveed323 09:09, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
I want to write a science-fiction piece in which after the Zhang He explorations, Chinese colonists travel across the Pacific and settle the Western United States. I was wondering could China have the capabilities to conduct European-scale colonization and what could be the outcome when Britian and French colonists find a second China instead of America?
So America could have been a Chinese territory before Europeans arrived?
A cool idea. The wonderful thing about science fiction is license -- though I believe historical China could indeed erect sophisticated colonies, if it turned out they could not: you wouldn't have to spoil your story with such facts. Your work being, as it is, fiction! I say go ahead with it regardless. Dress the details with fact if you choose to, but have fun with the broad strokes. --Anon.
Name should be consistent with the lead, and those terms are far from synonims.-- Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus Talk 15:08, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
Menzies may simply be drawn to Hippie counterculture of the Cold War, embracing a New Age pseudohistory of The Orient and promoting Eastern (Communist) propaganda in contradiction to the prevalent Western (Capitalist) perspective. See Triumphalism.
This seems barely meaningful to me, and in so far as I can work out what it means, just screwball. The guy posting it seems obsessed by it, though. Is this some kind of trolling, or am I missing something? -- Danny Yee 01:40, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
As far as I am concerned, that is just personal opinion and hearsay. Unless there is solid evidence to its validity, I do not see why should it be posted as factual.
Oh and play nice, the world would be a better place to live in if people are polite. And I am no 'sockpuppet' I assure you. Nic tan33 04:42, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I love how you use two different accounts, alternating on and off each one. How come the other name isn't active right now and Nic_tan33 posting (vice versa circumstances exit)? IP Address 05:08, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I feel the section above has is rather poorly written and has a biased POV (especially the bit about the convenient destruction of chinese records). Also, it doesn't really seem that unlikely the voyages never reached Europe. If you were going from China and visited the Pacific first then later came back and visited Asia and Africa, Europe would be the last place you would reach. If you were going from China to Europe by sea and somehow missed Africa for example, it would seem quite unusual. However never reaching Europe doesn't seem that surprising if you are starting from China. Also, given that Europe was already fairly well explored by the Europeans and there was existing contact we can assume there may have been significantly less incentive or desire to visit Europe. Why go somewhere you already know very well about? Nil Einne 11:58, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
The bigger flaw in the theory appears to be the lack of evidence rather then failing to visit Europe. The issue of whether news of the voyages to the Pacific etc would have reached Europe is an interesting one and probably needs to be elaborated further. Since there was clearly contact, the question becomes was it that unlikely that news of the voyages would not have reached Europe? One way looking in to to further would be to establish whether or whether not news of voyages by Ming Zhe and other Chinese of this era that are undisputed did reach Europe early on. If news of these other voyages did reach Europe, it would seem rather bizzarre that news of the voyages to the Pacific did not. On the other hand if news of the other voyages did not in fact reach Europe until a long time later, it would seem less surprising that news of the voyages to the Pacific never reached Europe Nil Einne 11:58, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
I am no fan of Menzies or the 1421 hypothesis, but I think some portions of this article that are critical of the hypothesis need citations. Otherwise, the material is unencyclopedic and POV. Lack of citations also undermines the credibility of the criticism, indirectly making Menzies seem more credible. If there's not a credible source that can be cited for a particular criticism, then that criticism should be deleted.-- A. B. 02:35, 11 June 2006 (UTC)
I have put a number of references into the criticism section. Especially on the Australian section as I checked the information locally to confirm the criticisms raised by other academics. It would be good if some New Zealanders contributed as they are extremely angry at Menzies' nonsense. Roonz123 01:55, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
I will probably make both Menzies fans and Menzies detractors upset with the changes I'm making but I am working my way through the article trying to make the language more neutral. In some cases, that means trying to make pro-Menzies sentences more neutral, in other cases, trying to make anti-Menzies sentences more neutral. I will also add requests for citations.
I'm doing this as I have the time; it may take a day or two.
My goal is not to take a side but to try to make a neutral article. I don't pretend to be the best at it. Please don't take my edits personally!
Request: If you object to an edit on POV or factual grounds, please bring your objection to the talk page first and let it sit for a day or two for others to discuss, before reverting. Revert wars resolve nothing. Obviously, as you find "spellin or grammatickal erors", go head and fix them; I'm a terrible proof-reader of my own work.
Regards to all, --[[[User:A. B.|A. B.]] 19:09, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
Regarding my removal of this and the subsequent reversion: "However, it is popular in the Pseudohistory field." When I click pseudohistory, I see this: "Pseudohistory is a pejorative term applied to texts...." Yes, Menzies is a crank, but this is unacceptably POV, in my opinion. On top of that, this does not address my objection that pseudohistory is not a field. I intend to take this back out unless a good case can be made for keeping it in (the fact that the word "pseudohistory" is wikilinked does not qualify).-- Birdmessenger 00:13, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
I count these problematic lines, which I will discuss here before doing anything else:
-- Birdmessenger 00:36, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
I've noticed the article is biased both pro and con in different places. I think the people that edit this article also have a range of views from very pro to very con on the 1421 hypothesis. Here are two recommendations:
Our goal should not be to advance a particular view we agree with. We edit as individuals who hold varying opinions, but our product is not ours -- it's Wikipedia's. To the outside world, what we write is seen as Wikipedia's material, not mine or Joe's or Kathy's. Wikipedia's goal is to have no opinion and offer no judgement. Personally, I am skeptical of Menzies' work, but when I come to this article, my responsibility is to make the same neutral edits that a strong Menzies supporter would make.
The alternative is a ongoing edit and reversion war like some other articles' editors get into. Ultimately, all of us come out losers in these situations, since the article alternates between supporting one viewpoint one hour and the opposite postion the next hour. Furthermore it gets so chopped up in the process that the grammar and flow go all to hell. To the outside world, the credibility of the article and of both points of view all become suspect. By extension, it also damages the perceived reliability of other Wikipedia articles and all the hard work done by other editors that have never even heard of Menzies or the 1421 Hypothesis.
Relevant links:
Is the achievement cited in this article really an achievement? Although Menzies does reveal some true details of the expeditions and the period in history, the reader is most likely to be misled by his outlandish claims, which are either based on speculative or fabricated evidence. His conjectures are often updated, so even by his own standards, they are not firm. Raising awareness is not an achievement if it is only superficial.
The man is a crank. Rintrah 14:13, 2 August 2006 (UTC) Menzies makes many mistakes in the eyes of people who are capable to distiguish likely evidence, i.e. evidence that is likely to proof a point, from unlikely evidence. To them he made the mistake of pretending that the book his ghost writers composed is in fact history, rather than fiction set in some historical time frame. The objective of Menzies and his publishers is however to earn as much money as possible and if that objective can only be achieved by pretending that they present history, and some of us have fallen for it, they have achieved and continues to achieve that objective. A good history book with "news" rarely sells well (most publishers will tell you), as it has to painstakingly discuss all the alternative scenarios of the evidence, which is rather boring. A BAD 'history book' ( i.e. one containing fiction at the key points, skipping the hard analysis) however, providing some sensational point to the uncritical, sells well provided it is written using some seductive writing techniques from the fiction writers' repertoire. The sad thing is that it is an attack on our carefully built up world history that took centuries to find evidence for. Rich people often gained their money by lying, cheating etc. An endless list of examples can be found. User Bruno 22 August.
As this hypothesis was primarily outlined in the book I suggest that this article is merged into that one.-- Moonlight Mile 23:22, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
I'm not sure this one should be merged, given the article's size and the fact that it deals with an emerging historical theory, becoming much greater than the book itself. I say keep them separate Orchid Righteous
Then Merge Qur'an With Islam. Merge Bible with Christianity! If we merged everything that was related we'd just have one big article.... Zazaban 05:14, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
I would suggest to keep the two separate, as the hypothesis has now taken on a life of its own and become a topic of great debate, with many websites and numerous arguments advanced on both sides etc - the hypothesis has become bigger than the book itself. -- 82.29.235.182 22:27, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
i first saw the map on the 1421 website. i noticed that the yellow and yangtze rivers were out of place, along with other mis shaped areas. such as korea and japan. it is possible that the sizes of these countires can be wrong, but the basic shapes are too wrong. the chinese have traded with these 2 countries for thousands of years. the kanglido also has correct shapes of korea and japan, which shows that asians knew the basic shapes of these countires also the yellow river and the Yangtze have been navigated since the beginings of chinese civilization. i think it is impossible that the chinese could of had misplaced them. i would like to belive that this map is real, but it has too many flaws.
Regardless of whether an editor believes the hypothesis or disbelieves it there is no reason for what is simply poisoning the well and bordering on ad homenim in places.
1. Intro The introduction is very close to what it should be. It seems to be clear and gives an overview of what will be being read by the reader. The last paragraph causes me some problems. "The 1421 hypothesis has proven popular with the general public, but has been dismissed by Sinologists and other professional historians." What is the basis for making these broad sweeping statements. I don't see any evidence. Who are the general public? Which countries? How do you know how popular it is? The way dismissal is used implies all sinologists and professional historians (who are also part of the general public) are agisnt it. evidence. Replace this section perhaps with something about the number of books sold in X place, number of documentaries made and the fact that the hypothesis has met with critisism and the level of critisism if it can be ascertained and substantiated.
2. Method The first phrase in the method is poisoned. Substitute with Menzies claims he has found evidence from .... without alleged and disputed etc. There is plenty of room for critisism and making the critisism in one place gives it more weight.
The Maps piece seems OK. However, it's not clear why the section is here. Shouldn't it be clearer that this is evidence put forward by Menzies?
The Other Evidence has a few more weasle words like purportedly. I also prefer to use something like "claims that .... were reported" rather than "reportedly seen". Somehow the current phrase almost reads cynically rather than neutrally.
3. Critisism is a mess. Lots of citations needed. It reads badly as if it is not thought through. It is often not presented in a readable fashion. Weasle words are everywhere. "Some critics...", "They claim ...", "Most people". ....
There is also an axe to grind here I feel. I corrected an error where a critisism in this Wiki claims Menzies was raised in China but was actually born in London. In fact, the book claims he was born in China.
Quoting from the reference given for this:
"Where were you born?
GAVIN MENZIES, AUTHOR: I was born in London.
QUENTIN MCDERMOTT: Well, why did the dust jacket on your book say you were born in China?
GAVIN MENZIES, AUTHOR: Well, the - the original draft said, "He spent his early life in China," I think.
QUENTIN MCDERMOTT: Well, it actually said you were born in China.
GAVIN MENZIES, AUTHOR: Well, I went there when I was three weeks old. I mean, it's a mistake, I can't see it's material."
This is actually very trivial. Dust jackets are often not written by authors and there are pleanty of mistakes in them.
Overall, this critisism section needs really smartening up if it to actually contribute to this article.
I will watch this article and look for responses. I'm afraid I will have to do some culling of weasle words and unreferenced statements at a later time if they are not worked on by someone else. Hopefully I will find some positive reponses here. Candy 15:21, 14 December 2006 (UTC)
If the contention is lack of support, Danny Lee, then that also needs to be shown in a reference. Otherwise it's original research. It's no good hiding behind "Menzies is wrong" if the article does not support that clearly. It doesn't. Whatever your views on Menzies it is inappropriate to support them without citation. Candy 14:03, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
I'm making some basic changes to this article based on my previous post.
These are:
1.The 1421 hypothesis is a controversial theory .. It's a hypothesis not a theory. 2. According to Menzies ... Removed. Almost seems like ad homenim! 3. Many of these categories and items of evidence... How can a category be contested? Makes no sense. 4. Changed the mainstream part to two mainstream as that is all that is offered.
Stopping there becasue it is bedtime 8=)
Adding doesn't cite sources to page. Theer are enough unsubstantiated comments now for that.
Candy
03:53, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
It's a minor point, but how do people feel about the terms used to distinguish Menzies from 'academic' historians (i.e. the ones working in universities who think his ideas are crap). Are they mainstream historians, academic historians, traditional historians? What do people think is the most accurate or precise terminology? Currently the article uses both, professional in the intro paragraph, and mainstream later on. I don't really have a preference, but at the least it should be harmonized, and should convey that the the consensus of academics who disagree. WLU 15:31, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
Hmm. I'm still failing to come up with a good adjective then, traditional was my best bet. Academic might be best, but that kind of wording attracts the nutjobs who think that academic historians are just out to conspiracy-theory the 'truth' (i.e. Atlantis, lizard-alien rulers, pyramids-as-landing-pads). Would conventional work? How about (a bit snippy) educated historians? I'm trying to think of a wording that conveys the 'trained in a school, has actually read the books/articles/reports, peer-reviewed knowledge'. Anyway, no matter what is chosen, I'd be happier if the two terms were the same. Oh, and Menzies is definitely an 'amateur' (with pejorative connotations) historian. See my response below also. WLU 12:05, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Currently (15:31, 13 March 2007 (UTC)) the intro to the criticism section reads: 'received no support from mainstream historians'. I think could be worded better - though I'm 100% positive that academic historians (versus pseudohistorians and pyramid/atlantis nutters) have nothing good to say about the book, it is impossible to prove a negative. We'd have to cite every single historian on the planet. Would people be comfortable with 'has been severely criticized by mainstream historians' or something similar? WLU 15:31, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
I wouldn't use scathing, I would stick with something like 'the professional/academic/mainstream historians who have responded to Menzies ideas have been heavily critical and provided numerous rebuttals.' Few is a subjective judgement (proportionately few, or numerically few? Is 100 few, considering there are 50 000 historians in the world? etc) and scathing, though accurate, is a bit of a weasel word (though that's arguable, as their own comments and criticisms are pretty harsh and damning). Could say 'heavily critical of his findings and approach', I think that conveys the sense of their criticism overall. WLU 12:10, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Excellent re-word, top notch. WLU 11:47, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
The fundamental evidence Menzie uses to support his hypothesis are the maps, most notably the Kangnido, Piri Reis, the Fra Mauro Planisphere, and the Pizzigano chart. I'm no expert in the history of exploration in the 14th and 15th centuries. The readers of Wikipedia would be well served if the article answered a few basic questions about these maps: Are the dates that Menzie's assigns these maps correct? If so, how have previous writers explained the existence of these charts, some of which were supposedly published prior to Columbus' voyage? Also, the article cites the book by Louise Levathes, but gives no substantive explanation of the difference between that book and Menzie's book. J l harvey 23:02, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
Should British ghost writer Neil Hanson be acknowledged here, as he has been identified as such by Gavin Menzies in the 2006 ABC TV program?-- Nickm57 ( talk) 11:53, 21 November 2007 (UTC)
Every statement in this section has request for citation to be added. But the book itself is the source for all the claims so why do we need to cite it repeatedly?
Example: Evidence of Horses, flightless ducks and Asiatic melanotic chickens and pigs in the New World prior to Columbus's arrival. are claims made in the book by the author supporting his hypothesis. Is it necessary to cite the book when the artical is about the book? Xtrump ( talk) 01:22, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
I was just wondering -- the blurb under the map says "entirety of the Old World, from Europe and Africa in the west, to Korea and Japan in the east," but of course it leaves out areas we know the Chinese knew -- Southeast Asia, Indonesia and India. So, 'entirety'? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dougweller ( talk • contribs) 06:56, 17 February 2008 (UTC)
No it doesn't Doug, you haven't finished doing your research! It has India (not too well) and Sri Lanka. More later if I can get the latest article on it. -- goes off mumbling more to self-- Dougweller ( talk) 16:47, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
When I see Aztec art I think of Polynesia and I beleive that is where they came from..while others like Mayans ad Incas seem more Mongolian to me. Just the word MEXICO there is no X or O in spanish that's Chinese not "indio". people of the Americas could just be mixes of several Asian tribes/groups who just mixed with the new people of Europe & Africa(slaves). what I don't get is why peple get offended by the idea that Asians was here first. I think it's safe to say that most people know that "natives" are from Asians...DNA proves this they accept that native Americans are Asians yet they say there is no proof they came here first. Umm what part of that makes sense?? --Mari —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.32.93.111 ( talk) 18:42, 2 March 2008 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you mean. I don't think the Chinese went to the Americas or England in 1421, but most people agree that sometime in the past 40000 or so years (opinions differ a lot) there were migrations from Asia to the Americas. The Spanish alphabet does have X and O although obviously they pronounce X differently than English speakers do. But the name Mexico isn't Spanish originally, although the Spanish changed it from the original. It is a Nahuatl name (Uto-Aztecan), no relationship to Chinese.-- Doug Weller ( talk) 19:34, 2 March 2008 (UTC)
the problem with this and the book is that first we know there were people already in america before anybody from the old world got here,but i think it is disparageing to the norse people i believe it is now accepted fact that the vikings discovered america around 998 A.D i think this arguement about east asians finding the new world first is brushed aside by the onset of facts-- Wikiscribe ( talk) 05:07, 6 May 2008 (UTC)
Menzies is trying to convince the reader - and perhaps himself...
I know this is only a smallish article, but I believe this is submitting to the opinion that his book is just of poor quality. Whether it is or isn't, is not our directorate, rather we offer unbiased explanation of the differing opinions which some take on this issue. Eps0n ( talk) 12:42, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I added a book box to the page. Note that the genre I put it in was pseudohistory - I couldn't think of what else to put, it can't be history 'cause it's got about as much evidence as Area 51, but fiction is too much of a stretch. WLU 21:32, 29 April 2007 (UTC)
I don't see why my reference addition to the paragraph "Many in China ... (citation needed)" isn't suitable.
In his book, Menzies claims that these people: Professor Yao Jide, Professor Fayuan Gao, Professor Bi Quanzhong, all support his hypothesis with their own research. He also claims that the prestigious Yunnan University awarded an honorary doctorate.
Even if these claims are false, they need to be verified as such.
Metadigital 17:34, 10 May 2007 (UTC)
Why is he a noted vexatious litigant? As says on this article Vexatious litigation. Thas, Dailly Rubbings 02:33, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
What is the point of the book outline?
Anybody wants to put some content into this outline? Otherwise best remove it, as the links there confuse you to think that they point to an on-line copy. Tzafrir 17:51, 7 July 2007 (UTC)