Jeff, what do you make of the Oracle of Delphi?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PythiaShe was a major institution of the ancient Greeks... and widely respected. Many people are surprised at the reverence she held, with many so-called "scientific" Greeks who became quite superstitious when consulting her.
Interesting to me is the accuracy of many of her predictions... Of course most *are* ambiguous, but she gave several over the centuries that were pretty clear statements of "do this" or "don't do this" which the Greeks heeded pretty seriously. The Spartans, for example, wouldn't go to war without her approval.
Here are some of the predictions I believe I'm remembering right...
-She told the Athenians to abandon their city when the Persians came (they did this and indeed saved the population... the Persians burned the city itself to the ground)
-She told the Athenians to fight Persia at sea... (they won the Battle of Salamis)
-She made a pretty spooky prediction about the death of Philip of Macedon (Alexander's father)
-She accurately said Croesus' empire would fall if he went to war with Cyrus
-She accurately stated Alexander would be a world-conqueror...
-She said Socrates was the wisest man in Greece (speaks for itself)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_oracular_statements_from_DelphiThere are many I'm forgetting, but that is a good track record if you ask me...
She also gave guidance for some pretty major events, like the foundings of Cyrene, Byzantion, and Sparta.
Do you think there is anything to this? I have heard some modern scientists say they believe it was the gases under the caves in Delphi, that she got loopy on the fumes, but it doesn't really explain the thoughtfulness, learnedness, and wisdom to some of the statements. Could it be the operation of "intuition"? If so, why is she basically the one example we have in history of a "fortune teller" of this level of excellence? What did the priests of Apollo do right that let her work so effectively, and why have we not been able to recreate it since?