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1120 results found.
112 pages of results. 1. The Saturn Problem [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: SIS Chronology & Catastrophism Review 2000:1 "Proceedings of the SIS Silver Jubilee Event" Home | Issue Contents The Saturn Problem by Peter J. James Peter James describes himself as a generalist' in the ancient Near East and Mediterranean. He graduated in Ancient History and Archaeology at Birmingham University and pursued postgraduate research in Ancient History at London University. Peter has published numerous articles on ancient chronology, technology and the history of science, in both academic and popular journals. He is the principal author of Centuries of Darkness, author of The Sunken Kingdom (1995) and co-author (with Nick Thorpe) of Ancient Inventions (1994) and Ancient Mysteries (1999 ...
2. The Unworkable Polar Saturn [Journals] [Aeon]
... From: Aeon I:3 (1988) Home | Issue Contents The Unworkable Polar Saturn Roger Ashton 1. Saturn at the North Celestial Pole As if a rational process of thinking accounted for the content of folklore and myth, efforts to trace it all back to an identifiable origin, starting particularly with de Santillana's and von Dechend's Hamlet's Mill, have tended to uncover origins in a celestial context. Pursuing the course of the earlier Worlds in Collision, by Immanuel Velikovsky, and looking further backwards, such writers as David N. Talbott, Dwardu Cardona and others have produced several divergent versions of planetarily reconstructed myth in which Saturn is situated at the Earth's north celestial pole. ...
3. Sun and Saturn by Morris Jastrow Jr [Articles]
... Sun and Saturn by Morris Jastrow Jr From: Revue D'Assyriologie et d'Archéologie Orientale, Septième Volume (Vol. VII), Paris 1910 [ CD-Rom Home ] Notes The Sun and Saturn are two very different celestial objects. Yet the Babylonians appeared to confuse' the two... or was it just the translators of the Babylonian texts. This is the first time this article has been made readily available since it was first published in 1910 . In this article, the word "Šamaš" should display as "Samas", but with a caron accent above each letter s'. If not, you should update your browser. For more provocative articles on why the ...
4. Variations on a Theme of Philolaos [Journals] [Kronos]
... by Lynn E. Rose [Note: This paper is much indebted to the works of Immanuel Velikovsky, and I have incorporated a number of his specific claims about the Age of Kronos. Velikovsky should of course not be held responsible for any of my own suggestions, such as the idea that Earth once kept the same hemisphere turned toward Saturn.] Philolaos of Southern Italy was a Pythagorean philosopher, and a contemporary of Socrates and Democritus. Three Southern Italian cities claimed him: Kroton, Metapontum, and Tarentum. Toward the end of the fifth century he taught at Thebes in Greece, and two of his students from Thebes- Simmias and Cebes- appear as characters in ...
5. Ra as Saturn [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... Feb 1998) Home | Issue Contents Kronia Mailing List focus The Kronia list is an email-based discussion group. An email sent to the Kronia list is automatically relayed to everyone who is subscribed to the list. To subscribe to the Kronia list, send an email to subscribe@kronia.com requesting that you want to join. Ra as Saturn From: Dwardu Cardona <dcardona@intouch.bc.ca> Date: Mon, 07 Apr 1997 09:59:28 -0700 Some of The Reasons Concerning Why The Mythological Ra Could Not Have Been The Sun. From the paper read at the Portland World Conference. .. . Thus, for example, Ra was often ...
6. In Defense Of The Saturn Thesis [Journals] [Aeon]
... From: Aeon VI:3 (Nov 2002) Home | Issue Contents In Defense Of The Saturn Thesis Dwardu Cardona At the Silver Jubilee Event of the Society for Interdisciplinary Studies, held at Easthampstead Park, Berkshire, England, in September of 1999, two papers critiquing the Saturn thesis were presented, one by Lynn Rose, the other by Peter James. These critiques were subsequently published in the Society's Review the following year. What follows constitutes my replies to these two scholars. I In reaffirming his version of the Saturnian model, which he based on the Philolaos system, Lynn Rose has again questioned the validity of the Saturnian model proposed by David Talbott, Ev Cochrane ...
7. Did Saturn Explode Twice? [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... From: SIS Workshop Vol 4 No 3 (Dec 1981) Home | Issue Contents Did Saturn Explode Twice?Hugh Eggleton In Kronos V:1 and the works of David Talbott, we are presented with overwhelming evidence that prior to Noah's flood, Saturn, which was then a star, became a nova. In Kronos III:3 Dwardu Cardona outlines a similar picture involving Saturn but he places Saturn's "flare-up" at the so called dawn of creation which implies that Talbotts "sun of night" would have been an already-spent star. Since Cardona's theory is also well founded, it is time to ask the question: did Saturn explode twice? According to the Bible ...
8. THE ROAD TO SATURN (EXCERPTS FROM AN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL ESSAY) [Journals] [Aeon]
... From: Aeon I:1 (Jan 1988) Home | Issue Contents The Road To Saturn (Excerpts from an Autobiographical Essay)Dwardu Cardona I I have read less than a handful of books that can be said to have influenced my way of thinking. Immanuel Velikovsky's Worlds in Collision has not only been one of them, in the end it totally changed my life. In this work Velikovsky proposed that, in the distant past, but still within man's memory, the planet Jupiter ejected from itself a smaller but sizeable body that careened across the solar system in the form of a giant comet. Coming into close contact with Earth, but avoiding an actual collision, ...
9. Saturn: In Myth and Religion [Journals] [Kronos]
... From: Kronos Vol. X No. 1 (Fall 1984) Home | Issue Contents Saturn: In Myth and Religion Dwardu Cardona Copyright (c ) 1983/1984 by Dwardu Cardona This paper is an adaptation of "Trilogies, Trinities, and Triads," which originally appeared in CSISN 2:1 (August 1983). 1. Trinities In their book, The Cosmic Serpent, Victor Clube and Bill Napier alluded to the Sun, the Moon, and Venus as a trilogy'(1 ) when it is obvious they meant "trinity". I'm not certain what this says for their mythological expertise but it is not a reassuring indication. Even had they used ...
10. On Saturn And The Flood [Journals] [Kronos]
... From: Kronos Vol. V No. 1 (Fall 1979) Home | Issue Contents On Saturn And The Flood Immanuel Velikovsky Copyright © 1963,1971, and 1979 by Immanuel Velikovsky [Editor's Note: This essay is based upon a lecture given by Immanuel Velikovsky at the University of the New World, Valais, Switzerland, in 1971. It was first transcribed by his secretary, Mr. Jan Sammer, who supplied both additional textual material (offset by brackets) as well as certain relevant referential data. Dr. Velikovsky's lecture was derived from his own unpublished manuscript - Saturn and the Flood - which was first conceived and written in the early 1940's. The present ...
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