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06-29-2008, 07:26 AM | #41 |
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Okay, it's time for me to reveal my face down cards. I am of the catastrophist school of thought in regard to the solar system. I've been doing some in depth reading lately in the writings of a group of interdisciplinary thinkers who are working in (1) comparative mythology studies, (2) plasma physics (which is the study of electrical action in space) and (3) arcaeo-astronomy (which is the study of the astronomical understanding of the ancients based on the record they have left behind). Here's the website if you're interested: http://www.kronia.com/thoth.html
On the reliability of human witnesses, you will find this to be an interesting link: http://www.kronia.com/thoth/ThotII06.txt |
06-30-2008, 10:47 AM | #42 | |
Doubting Dwimmerlaik
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In my admittedly brief review (and obvious bias against) Immanuel_Velikovsky's work, "Worlds in Collision," ...well, all I can say is I wish you and those that believe and study such all the best. Show your results and change the establishment; that's what's science is all about. What's hard for me to believe is that with all of the rearranging of the planets - Earth, Saturn, Venus - that any would have been alive to observe and record such events. As I understand this, much of the planets' re-ordering (Earth used to orbit Saturn?) was recently (~3500 BC) recorded by humans who, not only seeing signs and wonders in the heavens, also experienced cataclysmic events on Earth, and yet lived to tell of it. We read their works today, which they may have presented as what we call mythology, but this was just the language that they used to express these events. Assume for a moment that the ancients did record these events, and that, in defiance of all of the science that the establishment holds dear (and is used successfully daily), that Velikovsky's hypotheses are true. This would not provide any proof that 'real' gods exist, and that today, we still know more about Venus than did those thousands of years ago. I hope to have time to read more in regards to the mythology comparison as, though not a catastrophist, find the similarities (when they exist and are not read into the data) interesting. ** An aside that might help you understand where I come from - The wolves that raised me and some of my sibling wolves got together last night. One noted that our dog looked "fluffy," and innocently asked how much the dog weighed. As it's my/our dog, I stated that she weighed between 55 and 60 pounds. This, of course, was not acceptable proof in my family. It was opinion and not admissible. Calls were made to get the bathroom scale. Me and my brother wolf made sure that the scale was somewhat accurate - it displayed the weights that we'd both expect if one of us were to step on it, and when I went to weigh the dog - I would have to hold her - our combined weights would be within the limits of the scale, as established by my heavier brother's test. So, while trying not to get bitten (the dog was wondered what all this was about), I stood on the scale while holding her in my arms. After subtracting my weight, the dog's weight was established to be ~53 pounds. So I was wrong, having overestimated the dog's weight. This established, we went on to discuss another topic, as I wasn't even sure why I was weighing the dog in the first place. So maybe this will help you understand why I doubt everything - it's not you.
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06-30-2008, 06:50 PM | #43 |
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There's a reason I didn't bring up the name "Velikovsky", as it tends to have a d~~ning effect on discussions.
I find the "electrical universe" science at least as interesting as the comparative mythology stuff. Thus, what appears to be an anatomically incorrect dragon wreaking havoc upon the world is actually the electrical discharges flashing between two celestial bodies at (relatively) close proximity. And IF these things actually occurred, I for one would love to see an animated (or virtual) recreation of it to see what it might have looked like to traumatized folks looking at their chaotic sky. Of course, this goes beyond Tolkien except to the degree that he used such archetypes in his works. So the idea of no sun or moon comes back full circle; if (big if) Saturn was at one time the only "sun" people on earth knew, it is interesting that Tolkien used that theme in his work. More than that probably cannot be said. |
06-30-2008, 09:50 PM | #44 | |
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07-03-2008, 10:14 AM | #45 | |||
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Speaking of science and angular momentum, the Voyager spacecraft has crossed over the heliosphere. Think that I would rely on an observation made 'next to the hurricane' (this hurricane is seven billion miles from the sun) than one made from earth. Even at that distance, L = r X p. Quote:
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07-03-2008, 09:21 PM | #46 | |
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07-04-2008, 10:12 AM | #47 | ||||
Doubting Dwimmerlaik
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This thread is becoming the 'science blog.'
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Isn't the universe a glorious place? And yet we can feel something for characters created by a man who put them under a sun and moon possibly like our own.
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07-04-2008, 06:55 PM | #48 | |||
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Not such a bad thing, eh?
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Birkeland currents are huge electric fields that stretch across and through entire galaxies. When our solar system passes through a part of a galactic Birkeland current, it is going to have an effect on the solar system, indeed, on earth. What kind of effect? It depends upon the nature, intensity, etc., of the Birkeland current. Some physicists believe that Birkeland currents are responsible for sunspots (and thus solar wind and lightning storms on earth, which results in shifting weather patterns on earth, etc., etc.). Quote:
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07-05-2008, 04:18 PM | #49 | |
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07-05-2008, 07:55 PM | #50 |
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Makes you wonder what they saw. The ancients believed that the sky was made of stone and that now and then a piece of it fell to earth (meteorites); and that the planets hung in their own spheres, some closer some farther away; and that Saturn was the sphere of the 7th heaven, the highest; and yes, ancient cultures do talk about the waters above; even the Bible refers to the waters above and the waters below the firmament. Wonder what they saw, to think there was so much water in the sky? And don't tell me it was just the clouds.
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07-06-2008, 07:45 AM | #51 |
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Related news
Two current AP press releases bear on our topic:
1) "Scientists believe big hit split Mars: new evidence bolsters idea comet or asteroid struck 4 billion years ago". The article states that some outside object blasted away much of Mars' northern crust, creating a giant hole over 40 percent of the surface. No explanation is given for placing the event at 4 billion years in the past. I wonder if it's to keep the basic uniformitarian structure in place in spite of the evidence? And I wonder if that's because they want to keep up the illusion of safety from catastrophe in our own time? 2) "Space probes show solar system is dented: astronomers long thought it be circular". Appaerently, Voyagers 1 & 2 have reached the end of the solar wind at different distances from the sun. The solar wind is charged particles moving away from the sun in every direction. Remember, moving charged particles = a plasma field. The scientists are saying "it's like a hand pushing it in". Perhaps it's an extra-solar system plasma field (Birkeland current?) pushing it in. This is precisely what I was talking about, how the solar system is electromagnetically affected by the galaxy. |
07-06-2008, 06:49 PM | #52 | ||
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That and there is evidence of volcanoes forming after the impact.
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07-07-2008, 09:56 AM | #53 | ||
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07-14-2008, 10:16 AM | #54 | ||||
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Ever think that the 'dragon in the sky' and the subsequent global amnesia that all of our ancestors had was really due to a Glaurung-type flying dragon? Maybe it was just playing some nasty game, but was slain before it was able to remove the curse, as with Niënor Níniel. Quote:
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07-15-2008, 10:04 AM | #55 | |
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Not sure if this has anything to do with sun or moon.
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07-15-2008, 10:14 AM | #56 | ||
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07-15-2008, 10:23 AM | #57 | |
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07-15-2008, 11:02 AM | #58 | ||
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And I keep tripping over that F=ma equation I learned sometime back (force = mass times acceleration). If we assume that the mass of Venus is constant, then to move it from the outer to the inner part of the solar system is going to take some big-time F to get the ball rolling, and then again to get it to stop, especially if we have only so much time to do this in. More time, and we can accelerate/decelerate more slowly, and so less force is required (if I have that right). But we have only a few thousand years. So if this big force exists, why haven't we seen any large planet-sized bodies move in the last few hundred years? Doesn't it ever bother anyone that all of the fun miracles and myths occurred when the data resolution was less than we have today? Why do those dragons live only on the edges of maps?
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07-16-2008, 09:41 AM | #59 | ||||
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07-16-2008, 10:40 AM | #60 | ||||||
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To make a lame attempt in staying on topic, I hope to be able to show the kids (again) the moon via a small telescope tonight. Regardless of whether it was once part of earth, is a captured planetoid, or is the beautiful Artemis or the wayward Tilion, tis still a wonderous thing to see.
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07-16-2008, 07:20 PM | #61 | ||
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The best test of a paradigm and theory is if it has predictive power. Too often, modern physicists are surprised by what they find in space. Those who have been developing the paradigm of an "electric universe", are not surprised by what they find; instead, what's being found is precisely what they expect. That goes a long way with me. Last edited by littlemanpoet; 07-16-2008 at 07:37 PM. |
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07-16-2008, 07:53 PM | #62 | ||
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I should know better - my bad (just being lazy). The "stuff" is made up of particles that have collided with the comet as it sweeps the galaxy. There are other elements present that were there since the comet was formed (by the Galactic Yeti, who rolls them and tosses them towards the sun).
What is not present is an iron or other heavy metal core. Quote:
And maybe it's not "made of ice." Watermelons are almost 100% water, though you may not think that they are "made of water," especially if you haven't even cut into the surface. Boil one down, and you'd see that most of its mass is from liquid water. Same goes for comets, though they may not be as refreshing. Quote:
What was that about the sun and moon again?
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07-16-2008, 08:38 PM | #63 | |
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As for where did the light came from, I've always liked the claim that, after all, our material bodies are, on the atomic/molecular level, really just energy. Energy produces sound, which leads to music, and growth, which leads to fecundity or physical development. Once again, sorry to intrude upon your science versus myth debate with something aside from your points. But what can I say? Some of my best friends are scientists.
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07-18-2008, 09:23 AM | #64 | |
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As for another government trying to make NASA look stupid, look no further than the U.S. Army. There was a study done by an Army physicist and a report released, the details of which I forget but will go find when I have a better computer at my disposal than at work. |
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07-20-2008, 12:30 AM | #66 |
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Moon rock = dandruff of Tilion?
Gee, this is getting too serious...
Considering the fact that no one had ever done any archaeological digs on the Moon in Middle-Earth, won't it be better to keep an open mind about myths and whatnots? I believe that J.R.R.T meant literally that the Moon is really a space-Maia(TM) running after another space-Maia. But Hobbits clearly had another concept about the Moon. Perhaps after a few Ages (this being pro'lly the Seventh), Ol' Tirion had become a fossilised lump of space junk. And Arien grew to become the overweight, grumpy ball of flame due to inattention from her only mate in space... Oh yes, Morgoth could probably be an Earth-sized Comet by now...
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07-21-2008, 08:38 AM | #67 | |
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Eventually the truth will win out. To start back a few steps, that NASA probe Deep Impact sent back some snapshots of Earth and the Moon. Can we at least agree that there are no turtles holding up the Earth? And we finally get to see what Tilion's craft looks like from the back.
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07-23-2008, 08:35 PM | #68 |
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Sorry for the double post, but if I don't set this to pen now, surely I will forget it and the thought will become lost.
Did Immanuel Velikovsky get the idea for his work, "Worlds in Collision" from the science fiction author H.G Wells? Velikovsky published WiC in 1950, though of course it was written earlier. H.G. Wells published the following works (which, thanks to the glory on the internet, you can read online) as indicated:
The Star, a short story, described what happens when a planet cuts loose, flies by Earth, destroys most everything then dives into the sun. The ending is cute/humbling. In the Days of the Comet, a huge comet comes close to destroying Earth, but doesn't, though the tailing gases leave more than one guesses behind. No dragons, however, though I recently spotted one that may not fit the current paradigm.
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