'In my view, if there was a Hall of Records
at Giza, as Cayce claimed, it is unlikely to have survived intact to the present day.'
(The Phoenix Solution p. 380)'It strikes me as highly implausible that we might uncover something which the ancient Egyptians
themselves failed to find, for they occupied that site for at least three thousand years, and knew its every nook and cranny. And if the Egyptians did find the much rumoured 'records' thousands of years ago, we must
recognise the probability that those records were long ago removed for safekeeping or else destroyed.'
(The Phoenix Solution p. 380)
'the existence of a Hall of Records is an entirely plausible and predictable
corollary of the theory that the Great Pyramid is an advanced pre-dynastic construction, for who can doubt that its builders would have had the foresight to equip the site for future maintenance and repair?'
(The Phoenix Solution p. 396)
'the idea occurred to me that the Egyptians did discover the alleged Hall of Records, perhaps at the very beginning of their civilisation. This idea would explain many of the sudden
scientific advances in Egypt at that time, and would also explain how an astronomical theory could be adopted as the basis of the state religion, due to its manner of appearance as a sudden, sacred revelation.'
(The Phoenix Solution p. 380)
'One cannot help but wonder whether the Egyptians of 3100 bc deciphered an ancient version of a 'Rosetta Stone', written in two languages, pictographic and cuneiform, one alongside the
other. Could this have been the form of the legendary 'records' which were deposited at Giza?'
(The Phoenix Solution p. 381)
'Concerning the Hall of Records, I personally feel that such records exist, but were long
ago relocated, and may now be in the hands of a secret society. In the unlikely event of such records one day becoming public, I predict that they will be engraved in stone, in archaic forms of both hieroglyphic and
cuneiform languages, and will describe the same planetary events which are encoded into Egyptian geography and mythology.'
(The Phoenix Solution p. 413)