Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
217
He was particularly suspicious of the claim that the human species had an extraterrestrial origin, namely, that it did not originate on his own world, Gor.
19
218
It was not that he denied there was a place called "Earth" but he thought it must be somewhere on Gor, perhaps east of the Voltai Range or south of the Tahari.
19
219
Marcus and I had agreed not to discuss the issue.
19
220
I had no ready response, incidentally, to his suggestion that the human race might have originated on Gor and then some of these folks, perhaps transported by priest-kings, had been settled on Earth.
19
221
Indeed, although I regarded this as quite unlikely, it seemed an empirical possibility.
19
222
For example, anthropoidal fossils can be found on Gor, as well as on Earth, and so on.
19
223
At any rate, Marcus found it much easier to believe that magic existed than that his world was round, that it moved, and that there might be other worlds rather like it here and there in the universe.
He was particularly suspicious of the claim that the human species had an extraterrestrial origin, namely, that it did not originate on his own world, Gor.
It was not that he denied there was a place called "Earth" but he thought it must be somewhere on Gor, perhaps east of the Voltai Range or south of the Tahari.
Marcus and I had agreed not to discuss the issue.
I had no ready response, incidentally, to his suggestion that the human race might have originated on Gor and then some of these folks, perhaps transported by priest-kings, had been settled on Earth.
Indeed, although I regarded this as quite unlikely, it seemed an empirical possibility.
For example, anthropoidal fossils can be found on Gor, as well as on Earth, and so on.
At any rate, Marcus found it much easier to believe that magic existed than that his world was round, that it moved, and that there might be other worlds rather like it here and there in the universe.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter )