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NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 07 May 2025 05:21:01 +0000
Subject: Re: Do AGI-BOTS indicate Life After Death exists?
Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity,sci.physics,sci.math
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From: Ross Finlayson
Date: Tue, 6 May 2025 22:21:06 -0700
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On 05/05/2025 08:32 PM, Physfitfreak wrote:
> On 5/5/25 7:56 PM, Ross Finlayson wrote:
>> On 05/05/2025 09:23 AM, Physfitfreak wrote:
>>> On 5/4/25 5:10 PM, Physfitfreak wrote:
>>>> On 5/4/25 3:04 PM, Ross Finlayson wrote:
>>>>> On 05/04/2025 11:58 AM, Physfitfreak wrote:
>>>>>> On 5/3/25 9:51 AM, Ross Finlayson wrote:
>>>>>>> That the meso-Americans and Mediterraneans were connected
>>>>>>> by the Atlanteans in the ante-Deluvean Bronze Age cross-Atlantic
>>>>>>> Bronze Age trade, circa 5000-10000 BC, and that the meso-Americans
>>>>>>> and Mediterreans share both languages and scripts and pyramids
>>>>>>> and as from the trail from Peru as with regards to the separate
>>>>>>> Northern population what is of the red, yellow, white, and brown
>>>>>>> peoples of about the Noachic and Vedic variously, is a bit lost
>>>>>>> in the mists of time yet definitely has that the meso-Americans
>>>>>>> and Mediterraneans have a cross-Atlantic bridge not explained
>>>>>>> by the Alaska land bridge, nor Micro-nesian island hopping.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Could you give a source for that.
>>>>>
>>>>> Maybe you'd like Allen's "Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning",
>>>>> or something like on Atlantis studies.
>>>>>
>>>>> Mostly commonalities in the names and legends of astronomy,
>>>>> and as well the written scripts, then what most survived
>>>>> is Bronze Age artifacts, all up and down the Missouri,
>>>>> including to the Great Lakes, and not just around the Mediterranean,
>>>>> also pretty much all the coast of Europe, Bronze Age.
>>>>>
>>>>> There are archaeological discoveries about the scripts and
>>>>> cultures and artifacts and what could not simply be coincidence.
>>>>> More than merely the pyramids.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Allen's "Star Names" helps explore the world-wide commonalities,
>>>>> since the pre-historical, and various studies of Bronze Age
>>>>> of the pre-historical, yet archaeologically evident in crafts
>>>>> and particularly scripts, and in language.
>>>>>
>>>>> Mostly Bronze Age artifacts, and particularly surviving elements
>>>>> of scripts, besides things like the pyramid builders.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> People these days can't see much of stars on the sky or celestial
>>>>> objects, yet since antiquity it was the common open book,
>>>>> and the names and stories are remarkably common in all cultures.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Not my business and not relevant here: that mathematics and
>>>>> natural science though is also common since antiquity, and
>>>>> the premier theories of the day are a remarkable combination
>>>>> of profound depth of data and a too-severe abstraction,
>>>>> and periods of destruction, vandalism, and appropriation.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I downloaded the book. A large book written in 1800's !... I'm not
>>>> that sure it doesn't miss a ton of newer facts known since. But I'll
>>>> give it a try reading it. If you didn't see me on usenet, I've been
>>>> reading this book. Kosmanson is an exception though. Kosmanson rules
>>>> my usenet activity for now.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> No. Too old.
>>>
>>> One of those books that I'd read only if I'm incarcerated, with no other
>>> book whatsoever within reach.
>>>
>>> There has to be a newer better book on the subject. Better thought over.
>>> Better researched.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> That's the one there is.
>>
>> I'm pretty sure that one's the best in class.
>>
>> (All the historical names of the stars, and about stories
>> about, for example, the Pleiades, a survey of the visible sky.)
>>
>> It's not meant to be something like Herschel's catalog
>> or all of Messier's objects.
>>
>> Is that a, usual condition?
>>
>>
>> Why don't you just read ads abs?
>> https://adsabs.harvard.edu/ads_abstracts.html
>>
>>
>>
>> Do AGI-BOTS ponder the ineffable? Yeah, they may.
>>
>>
>
>
> How the hell did you even find this book? Do you inherit an underground
> library below your house where you still keep your great grandfather's
> books in? How can one come across this book in a logical way?
>
> Did you swipe it in the Vatican?
>
> Hehe :) I'm not being silly.
>
>
>
I found that edition at a book store, or perhaps book fair.
I've collected about a ton of books, thousands and thousands.
I'm pretty discriminating, not discriminatory/incriminatory,
in what I think is a good book.
(I haven't bought anything on-line, at all, since about
ten years, though, acquired several thousands volumes books.)
The book-collecting is sort of a lifetime pastime.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_collecting
I found it from looking for good books.
One time Carl Sagan wrote a book, and in it,
he wrote, that besides the cranial capacity,
the only reason humans have intelligence, is books.
Of course he probably said that a bunch of times.
A usual practiced reader's reading is on the order
of ten-infinity times as fast as the maximum rate
of the spoken word.
Try spending a few days in a university library,
it's called learning something.
I suppose it's like the idea of "the royal road to
geometry", whether there's a royal road, i.e., an
easy way, to geometry.
There is: the long way to the top.