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But ancient people observing a bright star has nothing to do with the birth myth or its alleged timing. Why do you think that scientists finding an event around the same time, and which could be what they saw, must be a rationalization of the whole myth? Some of the historical attempts clearly are, but all of them?
"People did see things that were real, and wove them into their myths." Agreed. One interpretation of the "floating rocks" seen by the Argonauts is that it was ice, a phenomenon unknown to the Greeks. "Walrus" means "foreign horse" and "hippopotamus" is "river horse" and the rhinoceros became the "unicorn." The historical Jesus is less well established than those.
"Real events from history that may be confirmed have no implications for a claimed validity of the rest ..." George Washington did not throw a silver dollar across the Potomac, but maybe he did throw a piece of slate across the Rappahnnock. In any case, we are pretty firm in our acceptance of the reality of George Washington. That brings us back to the historical Jesus. As far as I know, the only existing manuscripts - copies of copies - of Josephus Flavius's "History of the Jews" have been altered and re-altered so that no trace of the original can be detected. So, I have no opinion beyond that on the question of who was born when.
"Do you think they are all attempts at rationalization?" Yes. All kinds of things are always haopening in the sky. According to the two different accounts in the New Testament, the range of dates is 4 BCE to 6CE. Use your sky calendar to find your favorite interpretation. Note also, that astronomy aside, modern scientists offer different constellations as being indicative of the Jews: Aries or Pisces? Or was it in the constellation of the Virgin? Take your pick. The first "son of God" born on the Solstice was Octavius Caesar. That was just one element of pagan religion that was adopted into Christianity.
But for personal reasons, aesthetic reasons, from the context of an amateur astronomer who goes out in the backyard with his telescope, I found it more satisfying to write it as I did, versus saying "All you guys are wrong."
The "emerging consciousness" line is the usual meaningless New Age nonsense. Humans during that era already were fully conscious and aware of themselves. How else do you think they left a record of what they were thinking? But there is no record that they had any concept of or talked in terms of the "automatic brain"; they were torn in a false alternative between range of the moment irrational feelings and following their authoritarian duty because they had no understanding of Aristotelian rational thought and egoism that came later or not recognized or ignored. Today we know how the subconscious is 'programmed' by one's choices in thinking and that emotional reactions are responses to values accepted consciously or by default.
"The U.S. Supreme Court has heard several cases involving so-called “creation science.” Those rulings defined the limits of what is permissible for public funds and religion. In 1971, the Supreme Court created “The Lemon Test” named for the plaintiff in Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971). Writing for the Court’s unanimous (8 to 0) opinion, Justice William J. Brennan established a three-pronged test to determine whether or not government action in religious matters was allowable.
1. There must be no “excessive government entanglement” with religious affairs.
2. No law or action can either advance or inhibit religious practice.
3. Any government action must have a secular legislative purpose.
"The Supreme Court, and lower appellate courts, heard many such cases over the past 35 years. The Lemon Test stands the test of time. If your planetarium is publicly funded, then the “Star of Christmas” cannot be a December holiday show."
(2) Rather than attempting to force-fit various events in the sky as seen from Earth, just accept or reject the story on faith or lack of it.
As for the middle part. Since many people are intetested in astronomy, I thought that the many attempts at a natural explanation were interesting on their own merits. A lot of that early research was done by hand. Back in 2010, another graduate student and I placed a book review in the Newsletter of the British Association for the History of Astronomy. We had several software products, including NASA sites, with which we could "run the clock back." It is still not that easy to get the various models to agree at a detail level.
I attended a presentation at a local planetarium which presented the same theory and which went into detail as to the timing and what happened and why it was significant and even walked through the astronomical calculations as to time/place. It was fascinating. I don't remember all the details, but it happened to be the appearance and positioning of a specific planet within a specific constellation over the course of several days/weeks. The "wise men" were astronomers (outside the Roman Empire) who tracked the motions of the stars and planets and assigned significance to the various positionings as portents, omens, signs, etc. This is further supported because when one reads the accounts in the Bible, neither the common people nor the Jewish leadership (Herod et al) were familiar with "the sign" - meaning it couldn't have been something as ostentatious and obvious as either a comet or supernova.
Christmas was moved to December to coincide with pagan holidays during the reign of Constantine.
So, might this explain, Extended Cognition?...seems the information necessary to function is in the cell's membrane and the DNA only dictates what the parameters inwhich the cell exists...(purpose.)
But that doesn't explain how a like cell or species for that matter, on the other side of the planet picks up the new behaviors...for that, at least for now, we have the ether and quantumly entangled wave transfers to account for that.
We might observe similar behavior in preconscious man to some degree...a trait we may have lost or at least weakened extensively in most once we became Conscious or at least less dependent upon that connection and more individually competent...no longer part of the collective.
Sounds like natures rejection of "Liberation Theology"...laughing
Thanks to the Greeks.
So, I propose that we start calling these instances: "Absent Brainedness"!...laughing
Saved the article, but also skimmed it the once over. Similar, but perhaps better, to other articles I have read on animal evolution which seems to point to some connectedness, perhaps quantumly where a species, regardless of their distance, changes their behaviors. Two points, one, they are not aware of it, 2 it sure as hell didn't come from the brain as the article seems to point out. That observation for many is the dreaded "M" word, (mystical) but unless they have a "landline" connection, (laughing-reference-Avitar) there is no other way but the quantum, (ether) field that we know of.
Humans on the other hand, conscious ones anyway, are aware of these, let's say: Insights; and have a will to adapt or reject.
I will share if I have additional revelations when I properly digest the article.
Thanks again.
https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-th...
Have a good 2018. I am looking forward to, maybe, fewer doctor visits, but what can one expect while getting closer to 80.
Your hatred for religion, rooted though it may be in reason, eclipses too much, not the least of which is that your highly valued Greeks and Romans were just as religious as the people of the Middle Ages. For the Greeks from about 650 BCE to about 300 CE from the Crimea to Spain and from Egypt to England, traditional religion did not have a monopoly on customary ethics. However, remember that Anaxagoras, Aspasia, and Socrates were all tried for impiety. Even after 400 BCE, Diogenes the Cynic engaged and challenged pious people in the streets. That he got away with it marks a change, but that was one full generation maybe a lifetime after your "Golden Age of Athens" in the time of Pericles - when Anaxagoras and Aspasia were tried for impiety.
We call it the Roman Catholic Church for a reason. If you know anything about the sociology of republican Rome you can see the root and rock of the Christian Church in the Vestal Virgins, the elected priests, and the fact that one of the titles of the Pope is "Pontifex Maximus" i.e., the head guy in charge of maintaining all the bridges. (Later, they said that he was a "bridge" between God and man, but that was not the origin of the title.) The very word religion a Latin word has LEX and then legio as a root: to bind, as in ligature. Nothing says "Rome" like "legion" and "law." Roman lictors carried the fasces in ceremonies.
Compared to that, the high Middle Ages were a wild and heady time of new ideas, new customs, new words, new ideas... including the fact that Aristotlean argument moved into the mainstream of Church doctrine via Thomas Aquinas. But there were other people - largely anonymous; some not - who advanced real learning and real science.
And some of it was religiously motivated. After 1000 AD it was clear that Jesus was not coming back anytime soon. ... But they had the means to project the calendar centuries into the future. And centuries later they could see the drift in the numbers. By the time of Thomas Aquinas - who as far as I know did not write about Astronomy - they measured and remeasured the precession of the equinox and the distance to Saturn. They worried about that not because of Christmas, but because of Easter. Until about 1000 AD, the best advice the Church could give was to ask. your Jewish neighbors when Passover is.
I could go on all day about this. Ayn Rand blew through the Middle Ages in two paragraphs of FNI. She had a point to make. But just like her opinions on Darwin and the hemlines of skirts, not everything ex cathedra is error free.
"Objectivists value the scientific method as the cornerstone of the engineering achievements of our civilization from structural trusses and direct current to alternating current and cybernetics. We too easily see the Middle Ages as a time of ignorance and barbarism in which learning was chained to (and by) theology. The reality is more complicated." -- "Science in the Middle Ages" here: https://necessaryfacts.blogspot.com/2...
"In fact, because of the religious viewpoint, the very scale of the measurable universe and the comparatively small size of the (spherical; not flat) Earth, were substantiating evidence to the relative unimportance of Earthly affairs. Saturn's orbit was estimated to be 72 million miles from Earth. (McCluskey, page 203)."
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