Native
Free Natural Philosopher & Comparative Mythologist
First a thank you for testing and developing my explanation skills
My prime fix point is my approach in the Milky Way Mythology which is a part of most ancient stories of creation. The identification of this connection can only be looking for the relevant references as I´ve don with the Egyptian myths.
Here I would like to tell you something from my dreams back in the 1979-1984:
A night I got this clear sentence: "the answer will come from the library". The morning after and several days after, I didn´t have any clues of it´s meaning. At that time I frequently visited the main library on Bornholm, in the Baltic Sea, where i live. I got my books and some music records and on my way out of the library, I suddenly noted an adversary pillar with an image.
It showed up to be an Atlas image of the northern and southern hemisphere with a clear marking of the most visible Milky Way contours. At that instants, I knew I got my answer to the dream sequence. And I even knew that this image was the main answer to my mythical and cosmological interests.
Mysterious? I really thought so when it happens, but later on I got more and more inspirations and confirmations. Well there I went along . . .
------------
I stated:
Native said: ↑
2. That ancient myths of creation contains real astronomical and cosmological knowledge.
I gave the example of Hathor, Ra and Ogdoad. This is real knowledge even if modern humans have difficulties understanding this and accepting this.
Native said: ↑
3. That this knowledge can be compared to modern science and make sense.
4. That ancient knowledge in some cases is more logical than modern cosmological science.
Again, I gave the Egyptian examples of comparison. To me it is more logical to claim the formation in the Universe to be cyclical as told in ancient mythology, compared to a Big Bang with a linear time scale and a creation from nothing.
I said:
Native said: ↑
5. That modern cosmological science is largely based on speculations instead of natural observations.
Every time something in the modern cosmological science is contradicted by terms or by surprised scientist, this shows that former assumptions are wrong and that their speculations were wrong. And there are lots of such going on in modern cosmology.
Native said: ↑
The comparison between ancient and modern science is not a new one, but I have my own special approach in this matter and this deals specifically with the ancient myths of the Milky Way and its connection with the ancient cultural Stories of Creation, which is long forgotten by many scholars.
Yes really. Although I for instants, can find reminiscences in the Egypt mythology and some other few sources, modern scholars have forgotten this. Their very interpretations of ancient myths just shows this.
Native said: ↑
Of course, this special approach to the topic leaves me with very few sources of notes since the subject is long forgotten.
No it doesn´t IMO. It just shows that modern scholars don´t even take the few clear sources seriously.
Native said: ↑
I've earlier linked you to the Egyptian goddess Hathor and her Milky Way connection. I´ve also linked you the an ancient Egyptian creation story, the Ogdoad, which describes the creation in a genius and symbolic way of explaining the principles in the creation.
Aren´t we going in circles here?
Native said: ↑
Excerpt from the Ogdoad telling:
1) “The eight deities were arranged in four male-female pairs [...]
There is of course no obvious way to explain this Egyptian story of creation if having NO CLUES of that it deals with primeval cosmological elements and qualities and real cosmology. If scholars for instants don´t know what the mythical concept of "primordial waters" means, they just are lost. If modern scholars cannot grasp the mythical language of describing the creative powers in male and female qualities and allegories, they also are lost.
We cannot "hypothesize with considerable freedom" here. But this is just what is going on as long as scholars don´t get the hang of it. They hypothesizes this and that and examine the words etymology without having understood the mytho-cosmological implications in the ancient stories of creation.
Native said: ↑
I fully understand if people have difficulties in grasping the ancient and mostly forgotten knowledge.
"There's no way of grasping 'forgotten knowledge', you replied. This is NOT an answer I welcome after all my efforts and explanations where I´ve tried to explain just the forgotten knowledge.
-----------I'm not unacquainted with the outlines of the old history of Mesopotamia, Persia and westward through Europe and North Africa. I'm much more sketchy on the rest. On that basis I think that ancient knowledge has some fixed points in it, but a lot is unclear or hypothetical. Before it can be estimated, over or under, it must first be identified, and that is, and is likely to remain, a work in progress. But I don't doubt they could be smart at times.
My prime fix point is my approach in the Milky Way Mythology which is a part of most ancient stories of creation. The identification of this connection can only be looking for the relevant references as I´ve don with the Egyptian myths.
Here I would like to tell you something from my dreams back in the 1979-1984:
A night I got this clear sentence: "the answer will come from the library". The morning after and several days after, I didn´t have any clues of it´s meaning. At that time I frequently visited the main library on Bornholm, in the Baltic Sea, where i live. I got my books and some music records and on my way out of the library, I suddenly noted an adversary pillar with an image.
It showed up to be an Atlas image of the northern and southern hemisphere with a clear marking of the most visible Milky Way contours. At that instants, I knew I got my answer to the dream sequence. And I even knew that this image was the main answer to my mythical and cosmological interests.
Mysterious? I really thought so when it happens, but later on I got more and more inspirations and confirmations. Well there I went along . . .
------------
I stated:
Native said: ↑
2. That ancient myths of creation contains real astronomical and cosmological knowledge.
--------------We need some clearly stated examples, please. And their respect sources and best available dates. Only then will it be clear how remarkable they are.
I gave the example of Hathor, Ra and Ogdoad. This is real knowledge even if modern humans have difficulties understanding this and accepting this.
Native said: ↑
3. That this knowledge can be compared to modern science and make sense.
4. That ancient knowledge in some cases is more logical than modern cosmological science.
----------An answer to these will have to await the examples.
Again, I gave the Egyptian examples of comparison. To me it is more logical to claim the formation in the Universe to be cyclical as told in ancient mythology, compared to a Big Bang with a linear time scale and a creation from nothing.
I said:
Native said: ↑
5. That modern cosmological science is largely based on speculations instead of natural observations.
Every time something in the modern cosmological science is contradicted by terms or by surprised scientist, this shows that former assumptions are wrong and that their speculations were wrong. And there are lots of such going on in modern cosmology.
Native said: ↑
The comparison between ancient and modern science is not a new one, but I have my own special approach in this matter and this deals specifically with the ancient myths of the Milky Way and its connection with the ancient cultural Stories of Creation, which is long forgotten by many scholars.
-------------Long forgotten? Really?
Yes really. Although I for instants, can find reminiscences in the Egypt mythology and some other few sources, modern scholars have forgotten this. Their very interpretations of ancient myths just shows this.
Native said: ↑
Of course, this special approach to the topic leaves me with very few sources of notes since the subject is long forgotten.
-----That suggests you may not be in the strongest position to complain that others are speculating, doesn't it?
No it doesn´t IMO. It just shows that modern scholars don´t even take the few clear sources seriously.
Native said: ↑
I've earlier linked you to the Egyptian goddess Hathor and her Milky Way connection. I´ve also linked you the an ancient Egyptian creation story, the Ogdoad, which describes the creation in a genius and symbolic way of explaining the principles in the creation.
----------BUT you need to point specifically to the things you find remarkable, and the dates of your evidence, or we have nothing to evaluate.
Aren´t we going in circles here?
Native said: ↑
Excerpt from the Ogdoad telling:
1) “The eight deities were arranged in four male-female pairs [...]
--------------------But as Wikipedia (under 'Ogdoad') says:
There is no obvious way to allot or attribute four functions to the four pairs of gods, and it seems clear that "the ancient Egyptians themselves had no very clear idea" regarding such functions. Nevertheless, there have been attempts to assign "four ontological concepts" to the four groups. For example, in the context of the New Kingdom, Karenga (2004) uses "fluidity" (for "flood, waters"), "darkness", "unboundedness" and "invisibility" (for "repose, inactivity").
Which seems to mean we can hypothesize with considerable freedom, and no one can show whether we're wrong or right.
There is of course no obvious way to explain this Egyptian story of creation if having NO CLUES of that it deals with primeval cosmological elements and qualities and real cosmology. If scholars for instants don´t know what the mythical concept of "primordial waters" means, they just are lost. If modern scholars cannot grasp the mythical language of describing the creative powers in male and female qualities and allegories, they also are lost.
We cannot "hypothesize with considerable freedom" here. But this is just what is going on as long as scholars don´t get the hang of it. They hypothesizes this and that and examine the words etymology without having understood the mytho-cosmological implications in the ancient stories of creation.
Native said: ↑
I fully understand if people have difficulties in grasping the ancient and mostly forgotten knowledge.
---------There's no way of grasping 'forgotten knowledge' so we'd be left with the remnant implied by 'mostly'. If there are some pins in our map, then we can reason from those. Again, an example would illuminate.
"There's no way of grasping 'forgotten knowledge', you replied. This is NOT an answer I welcome after all my efforts and explanations where I´ve tried to explain just the forgotten knowledge.