Anyone else find it interesting that the words "Temple" and "Template" come from the same Latin root?
The root is "Templum", meaning sacred space. Over time, "templum" came to refer to a pattern/design. Both Temple and Template convey the ideas of:
-Deliberate order
-Geometry + Sacred proportions, -Alignment with a higher logic or system
Ancient builders didn't construct temples randomly. They used repeated design principles and aligned these structures to the cardinal directions, solctices, equinoxes, celestial bodies, and sacred geometry. This can be seen all over Egypt, in the megalithic temples in Malta, Angkor Wat, Teotihuacan, and other ancient sites all over the world
“Non-technical teams are now shipping production code and many of our workflows are being automated.”
This is gonna keep happening all across tech for the next few years and every time a vast number of SWEs are gonna sit there shell-shocked, as if this wasn’t already happening
@ImJustAdam__ History will look back on @Graham__Hancock as a revolutionary thinker and a true intellectual giant
Science progresses one funeral at a time....
Anyone else find it interesting that the words "Temple" and "Template" come from the same Latin root?
The root is "Templum", meaning sacred space. Over time, "templum" came to refer to a pattern/design. Both Temple and Template convey the ideas of:
-Deliberate order
-Geometry + Sacred proportions, -Alignment with a higher logic or system
Ancient builders didn't construct temples randomly. They used repeated design principles and aligned these structures to the cardinal directions, solctices, equinoxes, celestial bodies, and sacred geometry. This can be seen all over Egypt, in the megalithic temples in Malta, Angkor Wat, Teotihuacan, and other ancient sites all over the world
8. Other Cool Stuff
There is an endless amount of stuff in the British Museum from all over the world, including Ancient Greece and India. Here are some more pictures. Hope you enjoyed this thread :)
Got to check out the @britishmuseum today and it was incredible. The museum is a vault of many of the worlds oldest civilizations, including Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece, and Easter Island. The thread below details some of the coolest things I saw, as well as where traditional narratives are being pushed (Egypt section of course)🧵🧵
7. The Moai of Rapa Nui
It was incredible to see one of Easter Island's legendary Basalt Moai up close. The Hoa Hakananai'a, which is one of the most famous of the Moai, was carved from volcanic basalt and has detailed inscriptions on the back. These inscriptions include the famous birdmen, which @RobertSchochPhD@CUlissey and others have associated with Solar Flares, Solar outbursts, and CME's
While I understand the sentiment of this article, it unfairly lumps in people challenging any aspect of the traditional narrative of history with believers in ancient aliens and other more out there topics and doesn't address many legitimate points made by those outside of academia and mainstream archaeology. My question for people like @FlintDibble@BAJRjobs and other archaeologists is this: Is anyone who is not an archaeologist capable of contributing to the story of our past? If so, how?
This is a genuine question that is not meant to start a debate or fight. History is the shared past of all humanity, so I would love to see if some of the more mainstream voices in archaeology can describe how those outside the field can contribute to the understanding our past, if it all.....
Fast, lift, sprint, stretch, and meditate.
Build, sell, write, create, invest, and own.
Read, reflect, love, seek truth, and ignore society.
Make these habits. Say no to everything else.
Avoid debt, jail, addiction, disgrace, shortcuts, and media.
Relax. Victory is assured.
@MoundLore Native agriculture in the Great Lakes was systematic and large scale. These "lost farms" help rewrite the myth that the land was just untouched wilderness before the arrival of Europeans
Two stories, yet they share one archetype: humanity once lived in paradise, aligned with the divine. Through pride & forbidden knowledge, that world was lost.
Could the Garden of Eden and Atlantis be the same echo of a forgotten past?
Some Common themes between the stories:
-A divinely designed, watery paradise (Eden rivers / Atlantis canals)
-A gift of forbidden knowledge (fruit/advanced technology)
-A fall into hubris (disobedience /greed + conquest)
-Punishment from above (exile/flood)
-Humanity is forced into the harder, fractured world we know today
-Hybrid bloodlines (Nephilim/Atlantean demigods)
-Preserved as a warning (Biblical morality / Plato’s cautionary tale)
Anyone else find it interesting that the words "Temple" and "Template" come from the same Latin root?
The root is "Templum", meaning sacred space. Over time, "templum" came to refer to a pattern/design. Both Temple and Template convey the ideas of:
-Deliberate order
-Geometry + Sacred proportions, -Alignment with a higher logic or system
Ancient builders didn't construct temples randomly. They used repeated design principles and aligned these structures to the cardinal directions, solctices, equinoxes, celestial bodies, and sacred geometry. This can be seen all over Egypt, in the megalithic temples in Malta, Angkor Wat, Teotihuacan, and other ancient sites all over the world