You could spend all your life worrying about stuff like this.
You could spend all your life worrying about stuff like this.
"Mummy, when I grow up I want to be a bushcrafter."
"You can't do both son."
Pretty much yeah, along with everything else in the galaxy. The black hole in the centre they named hanaub ku. Funny how they knew about it in the first place eh?. They believe that every body ( planets etc) in our galaxy is born through it.
Heres the symbol for it.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=hun...w=1402&bih=876
I find it very interesting how closely the symbol resembles our present view of the galaxy ( to some extent)
Last edited by HillBill; 06-03-2012 at 19:24.
What have you been smoking, Bill? Maybe you should do a Group Buy on it.
The Mayans didn't know about any black hole at the centre of our galaxy. They didn't know that there were such things as galaxies, let alone have a name for the thing in the middle of the one we happen to live in. They thought the earth was flat, that above it were the heavens and below it was the underworld which could be reached through caves:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization#Religion
Apparently you're not the first to note the similarity, but to leap from there to claims about Mayan astronomy is to test limits of credibility which Argüelles himself would probably have wished to avoid.I find it very interesting how closely the symbol resembles our present view of the galaxy ( to some extent)![]()
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunab_K...b_Ku_as_Symbol
And incidentally the Mayan calendar had exactly 365 days, so it was 'out' by one day every four years, whereas the Gregorian calendar is only out by a day after about 3,000 years:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_ci...on#Mathematics
Yah, and a 'galactic year' is just a smidgen more than 25 000 years.
Can I have some of what you are drinking?
If they didn't know of our galaxy, how then did they produce the long count calendar, which represents a galactic year? and so accurately too.Cant produce an accurate calendar of something if you dont know it exists
You are correct in a way though. They didn't see it as we do. If you described our galaxy as best you could to an ancient mayan they probably wouldn't have a clue what you were saying. They knew it as the world tree.
Don't get your last point at all mate.The gregorian calendar is out by a day every 4 years. Hard to refute that one
BBC 2 now for a real and current threat to OUR forum![]()
Wiki is a great resource, but have you read widely from other sources? There is more accurate information to be found in many books on the subject...
Many other civilisations believe in a world within caves within our world. I find it interesting that so many seemingly unconnected civilisations share the same "myths".
Not saying they're true, but still fascinating
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James
I go to the woods, not to run away from life, but to connect with it.
Did I miss the end of the world?
The older I get, the better I was.
So instead we put all our faith in our current calender; printed on flimsy paper and still essentially based on the one developed by the Romans who also failed in said respects? Their civilization (the Roman's) was overturned and absorbed by barbarian (by comparison) cultures.
Let not a man guard his dignity, but let his dignity guard him - Emerson
my blog - getting there slowly