by Lloyd » Sat Jun 08, 2024 7:13 pm
264609
TURQUOISE SUN VIDEO TRANSCRIPT
Ev Cochrane: Turquoise Sun – Chronicle of Creation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1jc4lOCtK4
EV'S BOOK PROPOSITIONS. My most recent book, The Case of the Turquoise Son, summarizes nearly 1/2 century's worth of research into ancient myth and archeoastronomy. Our primary findings include the following basic propositions.
1. The first gods were the planets, pure and simple.
2. Myths of creation, inasmuch as they describe the deeds of the gods and ordering the cosmos, are best understood as eyewitness accounts describing extraordinary cataclysmic events involving the respective planets moving in close proximity to Earth and giving rise to the principal structures of the celestial landscape: ladder to heaven, the world tree, the luminous city on a hill, et cetera.
3. The earliest cosmogonic myths of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Meso-America encode the explosive birth of the turquoise sun, a sun which is clearly distinguishable from the present Sun.
4. The Queen of Heaven, referenced in the Old Testament and the countless other ancient texts around the globe, is to be identified with the planet Venus.
5. The warrior hero, represented by such familiar figures as Heracles, Gilgamesh, Samson, Cuchulainn and Batraz, is to be identified with the planet Mars.
6. The global myth of the sacred marriage, most familiar in Homer's account of the torrid love affair between Aphrodite and Aries, describes a close conjunction or union of Venus and Mars.
7. The origin of the primary institutions of human civilization, science, religion, philosophy, monumental architecture, drama, dance, music, sports, marriage ritual, etcetera, is firmly rooted in the catastrophic events involving the respective planets. To complete the basic propositions, here's #8.
8. The history of the solar system recounted in modern textbooks is utterly wrongheaded and divorced from reality.
THE TURQUOISE SUN. This is the initial episode of a series based on the Turquoise Sun. In the forthcoming episodes, I will present evidence in favor of each of these propositions. Suffice to say that proper documentation is to be found in my latest book, The Case of the Turquoise Son, The Natural History of Creation, within my entire collection of published material, beginning with the Aeon Journal in 1988. The Basic plot of the case of the Turquoise Sun revolves around the claim that the earliest remembered sun and human tradition presented a brilliant turquoise form at the time of creation. The Book of the Dead includes the following account. Quote, "When thou appearest in the horizon of heaven, hymns to thee are in the mouths of everyone. Thou being beautiful and youthful on the sun disk within the arms of thy mother Hathor. How thy shinest in every place, thy heart rejoicing forever, how thou shinest in the horizon of heaven. Thou hast strewn the two lands with turquoise. The primal Sun was elsewhere described as a sun of turquoise." End of quote. The primal Sun was elsewhere described as a Sun of turquoise. Indeed, as Jan Zandee pointed out in his commentary on this hymn, turquoise was deemed to be the very substance of which the sun was composed. The Cult of the Sun reached its greatest heights during the New Kingdom, roughly 1500 to 1200 BCE. Quote, "Hail to you who rises in turquoise" reads one Solar hymn. Such imagery is so commonplace in the solar hymns that Egyptologists readily concede the point, even though it stands in stark contradiction to empirical reality. Joris Borghouts emphasized the point. Quote, "In certain hymns the sun is said to strew the sky with turquoise." End of quote. What is true in ancient Egypt is also true in Meso-America. Thus it is that the Aztecs referred to the sun God by such epithets as turquoise child, turquoise prince. Although analogous traditions are to be found around the globe, they have never garnered serious attention from scholars.
THE FIRST GODS. That the planets were the first gods, while controversial at first sight, is readily demonstrable upon a critical analysis of the relevant evidence. In the earliest writing system of Sumer, for example, the concept of God was represented by the sign of a star. Already in the fourth Millennium BCE, Sumer's greatest goddess is explicitly identified with the planet Venus. What is true of ancient Mesopotamia is also true of Egypt, where the leading God Horus is explicitly identified with the prominent star in pictographs dating to 3000 BCE. So too in the earliest Indo-European pantheon, the supreme God Zeus and his various cognates in other languages is explicitly identified as being celestial in nature. The name Zeus, for example, derives from the Indo-European root t'yeu and denotes sun, sky, light. Simply stated, the earliest gods of which we have any knowledge could be securely identified with material bodies in the sky overhead, i.e. the stars and planets. The earliest extant literature to be found anywhere on Earth describes the gods as celestial agents. Sumerian hymns describing the goddess Inanna described her as a towering planet filling the sky. Quote, "She who fills heaven and earth with her huge brilliance." End of quote. The same goddess is elsewhere described as the "Holy torch who fills the heavens." So too, in texts from the third Millennium BCE, the Egyptian God Horus is described as a fiery star who implanted himself within the womb of Isis. A pyramid text invokes the star god as follows, quote, "There is tumult in the sky. 'We see something new', say the primeval gods. O you Ennead, Horus is in the sunlight. ... The King takes possession of the sky. He cleaves its iron." End of quote.
TUMULT IN THE ANCIENT SKY. Evident in the Mesopotamian and Egyptian texts alike is the fact that the epiphany of the great gods is something that takes place in the skies overhead and is of a tumultuous, catastrophic nature, marked by the shaking of heaven and earth, prodigious amounts of lightning, and earth-splitting thunder. This is nowhere better illustrated than in ancient descriptions of sunrise which speak of it as being marked by the shaking of heaven and earth. Of the numerous texts that could be cited in this regard, the following Sumerian hymn to the Sun god is representative in nature. Quote, "As my king comes forth, the heavens tremble before him, and the earth shakes before him." End of quote. Elsewhere in the same hymn, Utu is described as follows. Quote, "The lord, the son of Ningal ... thunders over the mountains like a storm." Now I ask, does this sound like a realistic description of the modern experience of sunrise? In what sense is a solar epiphany ever accompanied by thunder or the shaking of heaven on earth? Here too, the evidence of ancient language corroborates the testimony of the earliest written text with regards to the inherent relationship between the primal sun and lightning. Thus it is that around the globe, languages identify the sun as a locus of lightning or storm. The Sumerian logogram UD, for example, denotes Sun. Yet the same logogram denotes storm and constitutes a traditional epithet of the archaic Thunder-God. The same anomaly is to be found in the ancient Semitic language where umu denotes sun as well as storm. So too, in Meso-America the proto-Maya term k'uuh denotes sun god, divinity, while the cognate k'uh denotes lightning, thunderbolt. Encoded in such archaic terminology is a historical fact that the primal sun was a locus of intense electrical activity, likely plasma-based in nature, as per the theories of Anthony Peratt and Wal Thornhill.
LIGHTNING OF THE GODS. Early artworks allegedly depicting the sun are equally difficult to square with the familiar solar orb. These figures include three different so-called solar images commonly depicted on Mesopotamian cylinder seals. It will be evident at once that not one of them bears any resemblance to the familiar Sun. The current Sun does not appear in a crescent, for example, nor does it typically reveal a star like form in its center. Now consider the image depicted in this figure. A close variation on the previous image, representing an earlier phase in the evolutionary history of the polar configuration, in which fiery lightning-like filaments radiate across the disc of the sun. In our view, the global traditions of the lightning-discharging sun, or solar eye, likely find their origin here. An old Babylonian Hymn provides an archaic example of this idea. Quote, "May Utu at his rising from his chamber gaze with his favorable eye towards it. My king raised his head toward heaven there. May everyone praise him together when he raises his eyes, flashing like lightning." End of quote. Analogous traditions will be found seemingly everywhere. The very same idea appears among the indigenous tribes of the Amazonian jungle. Quote, "Lightning is also interpreted as a glance from the sun, a rapid twinkle." End of quote. So too, it will be remembered that Zeus's eye cast forth the thunderbolt in Greek tradition.
THE ANCIENT SUN WAS DIFFERENT. To summarize, the evidence of the ancient literary text, artworks and language speaks with one voice telling of a radically different sun prevailing in the relatively recent prehistoric past. It is at this point that the informed reader is confronted with certain fundamental questions of logic and common sense. At what point does the evidence become too compelling to be ignored? At what point can we expect a fruitful interface of ancient myth and modern science? In a recent discussion of scientific methodology, the astronomer John Steele pointed out the decisive role planetary observations played in the development of the respective physical and mathematical sciences. It was the Babylonian planetary observations, after all, that Ptolemy drew upon in order to place Greek astronomy and mathematics on a secure scientific foundation, after which the new science spread to India, China, Egypt and the four corners of the globe. Steele offered the following important observation. Quote, "Astronomy always has been and still is a science that relies on the use of past observations. Unlike most sciences, astronomy can never be truly experimental. Astronomers can only observe the astronomical phenomena that present themselves.... Perhaps uniquely in the sciences, astronomers therefore are forced to rely upon empirical data collected by their predecessors." End of quote. Yet, as we have documented in the case of the turquoise sun and other works, modern astronomers have almost uniformly ignored the astronomical observations included in ancient literary texts, pictographs and artworks. They do so at their own peril. For what could be more revolutionary than the possibility that wholly different Sun dominated the sky in the relatively recent prehistoric past?
264609
[color=#FF0000]TURQUOISE SUN VIDEO TRANSCRIPT[/color]
Ev Cochrane: Turquoise Sun – Chronicle of Creation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1jc4lOCtK4
[color=#0000FF]EV'S BOOK PROPOSITIONS.[/color] My most recent book, The Case of the Turquoise Son, summarizes nearly 1/2 century's worth of research into ancient myth and archeoastronomy. Our primary findings include the following basic propositions.
1. The first gods were the planets, pure and simple.
2. Myths of creation, inasmuch as they describe the deeds of the gods and ordering the cosmos, are best understood as eyewitness accounts describing extraordinary cataclysmic events involving the respective planets moving in close proximity to Earth and giving rise to the principal structures of the celestial landscape: ladder to heaven, the world tree, the luminous city on a hill, et cetera.
3. The earliest cosmogonic myths of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Meso-America encode the explosive birth of the turquoise sun, a sun which is clearly distinguishable from the present Sun.
4. The Queen of Heaven, referenced in the Old Testament and the countless other ancient texts around the globe, is to be identified with the planet Venus.
5. The warrior hero, represented by such familiar figures as Heracles, Gilgamesh, Samson, Cuchulainn and Batraz, is to be identified with the planet Mars.
6. The global myth of the sacred marriage, most familiar in Homer's account of the torrid love affair between Aphrodite and Aries, describes a close conjunction or union of Venus and Mars.
7. The origin of the primary institutions of human civilization, science, religion, philosophy, monumental architecture, drama, dance, music, sports, marriage ritual, etcetera, is firmly rooted in the catastrophic events involving the respective planets. To complete the basic propositions, here's #8.
8. The history of the solar system recounted in modern textbooks is utterly wrongheaded and divorced from reality.
[color=#0000FF]THE TURQUOISE SUN.[/color] This is the initial episode of a series based on the Turquoise Sun. In the forthcoming episodes, I will present evidence in favor of each of these propositions. Suffice to say that proper documentation is to be found in my latest book, The Case of the Turquoise Son, The Natural History of Creation, within my entire collection of published material, beginning with the Aeon Journal in 1988. The Basic plot of the case of the Turquoise Sun revolves around the claim that the earliest remembered sun and human tradition presented a brilliant turquoise form at the time of creation. The Book of the Dead includes the following account. Quote, "When thou appearest in the horizon of heaven, hymns to thee are in the mouths of everyone. Thou being beautiful and youthful on the sun disk within the arms of thy mother Hathor. How thy shinest in every place, thy heart rejoicing forever, how thou shinest in the horizon of heaven. Thou hast strewn the two lands with turquoise. The primal Sun was elsewhere described as a sun of turquoise." End of quote. The primal Sun was elsewhere described as a Sun of turquoise. Indeed, as Jan Zandee pointed out in his commentary on this hymn, turquoise was deemed to be the very substance of which the sun was composed. The Cult of the Sun reached its greatest heights during the New Kingdom, roughly 1500 to 1200 BCE. Quote, "Hail to you who rises in turquoise" reads one Solar hymn. Such imagery is so commonplace in the solar hymns that Egyptologists readily concede the point, even though it stands in stark contradiction to empirical reality. Joris Borghouts emphasized the point. Quote, "In certain hymns the sun is said to strew the sky with turquoise." End of quote. What is true in ancient Egypt is also true in Meso-America. Thus it is that the Aztecs referred to the sun God by such epithets as turquoise child, turquoise prince. Although analogous traditions are to be found around the globe, they have never garnered serious attention from scholars.
[color=#0000FF]THE FIRST GODS.[/color] That the planets were the first gods, while controversial at first sight, is readily demonstrable upon a critical analysis of the relevant evidence. In the earliest writing system of Sumer, for example, the concept of God was represented by the sign of a star. Already in the fourth Millennium BCE, Sumer's greatest goddess is explicitly identified with the planet Venus. What is true of ancient Mesopotamia is also true of Egypt, where the leading God Horus is explicitly identified with the prominent star in pictographs dating to 3000 BCE. So too in the earliest Indo-European pantheon, the supreme God Zeus and his various cognates in other languages is explicitly identified as being celestial in nature. The name Zeus, for example, derives from the Indo-European root t'yeu and denotes sun, sky, light. Simply stated, the earliest gods of which we have any knowledge could be securely identified with material bodies in the sky overhead, i.e. the stars and planets. The earliest extant literature to be found anywhere on Earth describes the gods as celestial agents. Sumerian hymns describing the goddess Inanna described her as a towering planet filling the sky. Quote, "She who fills heaven and earth with her huge brilliance." End of quote. The same goddess is elsewhere described as the "Holy torch who fills the heavens." So too, in texts from the third Millennium BCE, the Egyptian God Horus is described as a fiery star who implanted himself within the womb of Isis. A pyramid text invokes the star god as follows, quote, "There is tumult in the sky. 'We see something new', say the primeval gods. O you Ennead, Horus is in the sunlight. ... The King takes possession of the sky. He cleaves its iron." End of quote.
[color=#0000FF]TUMULT IN THE ANCIENT SKY.[/color] Evident in the Mesopotamian and Egyptian texts alike is the fact that the epiphany of the great gods is something that takes place in the skies overhead and is of a tumultuous, catastrophic nature, marked by the shaking of heaven and earth, prodigious amounts of lightning, and earth-splitting thunder. This is nowhere better illustrated than in ancient descriptions of sunrise which speak of it as being marked by the shaking of heaven and earth. Of the numerous texts that could be cited in this regard, the following Sumerian hymn to the Sun god is representative in nature. Quote, "As my king comes forth, the heavens tremble before him, and the earth shakes before him." End of quote. Elsewhere in the same hymn, Utu is described as follows. Quote, "The lord, the son of Ningal ... thunders over the mountains like a storm." Now I ask, does this sound like a realistic description of the modern experience of sunrise? In what sense is a solar epiphany ever accompanied by thunder or the shaking of heaven on earth? Here too, the evidence of ancient language corroborates the testimony of the earliest written text with regards to the inherent relationship between the primal sun and lightning. Thus it is that around the globe, languages identify the sun as a locus of lightning or storm. The Sumerian logogram UD, for example, denotes Sun. Yet the same logogram denotes storm and constitutes a traditional epithet of the archaic Thunder-God. The same anomaly is to be found in the ancient Semitic language where umu denotes sun as well as storm. So too, in Meso-America the proto-Maya term k'uuh denotes sun god, divinity, while the cognate k'uh denotes lightning, thunderbolt. Encoded in such archaic terminology is a historical fact that the primal sun was a locus of intense electrical activity, likely plasma-based in nature, as per the theories of Anthony Peratt and Wal Thornhill.
[color=#0000FF]LIGHTNING OF THE GODS.[/color] Early artworks allegedly depicting the sun are equally difficult to square with the familiar solar orb. These figures include three different so-called solar images commonly depicted on Mesopotamian cylinder seals. It will be evident at once that not one of them bears any resemblance to the familiar Sun. The current Sun does not appear in a crescent, for example, nor does it typically reveal a star like form in its center. Now consider the image depicted in this figure. A close variation on the previous image, representing an earlier phase in the evolutionary history of the polar configuration, in which fiery lightning-like filaments radiate across the disc of the sun. In our view, the global traditions of the lightning-discharging sun, or solar eye, likely find their origin here. An old Babylonian Hymn provides an archaic example of this idea. Quote, "May Utu at his rising from his chamber gaze with his favorable eye towards it. My king raised his head toward heaven there. May everyone praise him together when he raises his eyes, flashing like lightning." End of quote. Analogous traditions will be found seemingly everywhere. The very same idea appears among the indigenous tribes of the Amazonian jungle. Quote, "Lightning is also interpreted as a glance from the sun, a rapid twinkle." End of quote. So too, it will be remembered that Zeus's eye cast forth the thunderbolt in Greek tradition.
[color=#0000FF]THE ANCIENT SUN WAS DIFFERENT.[/color] To summarize, the evidence of the ancient literary text, artworks and language speaks with one voice telling of a radically different sun prevailing in the relatively recent prehistoric past. It is at this point that the informed reader is confronted with certain fundamental questions of logic and common sense. At what point does the evidence become too compelling to be ignored? At what point can we expect a fruitful interface of ancient myth and modern science? In a recent discussion of scientific methodology, the astronomer John Steele pointed out the decisive role planetary observations played in the development of the respective physical and mathematical sciences. It was the Babylonian planetary observations, after all, that Ptolemy drew upon in order to place Greek astronomy and mathematics on a secure scientific foundation, after which the new science spread to India, China, Egypt and the four corners of the globe. Steele offered the following important observation. Quote, "Astronomy always has been and still is a science that relies on the use of past observations. Unlike most sciences, astronomy can never be truly experimental. Astronomers can only observe the astronomical phenomena that present themselves.... Perhaps uniquely in the sciences, astronomers therefore are forced to rely upon empirical data collected by their predecessors." End of quote. Yet, as we have documented in the case of the turquoise sun and other works, modern astronomers have almost uniformly ignored the astronomical observations included in ancient literary texts, pictographs and artworks. They do so at their own peril. For what could be more revolutionary than the possibility that wholly different Sun dominated the sky in the relatively recent prehistoric past?